A History of Reading
By (Author) Alberto Manguel
HarperCollins Publishers
Flamingo
2nd July 1997
21st April 1997
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Library and information sciences / Museology
418.409
Paperback
384
Width 159mm, Height 216mm, Spine 25mm
870g
This study of the history of reading goes from the earliest examples of the clay tablets and cuneiform of ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt via the invention of printing in the 15th century to the birth of a mass reading public and today's digital revolution. It argues that it is the demands and expectations of the reader, acting alongside the creative will of the writer, that is the evolutionary motor of literary forms and genres. From man's first use of the written word simply as a form of reference, to the emergence of the first holy or devotional texts, and onto the development of fictions, both poetic and novelistic, this work aims to both challenge and enlighten.
Alberto Manguel was born in Buenos Aires in 1948, and educated there. He has an international reputation as a polyglot anthopologist, translator and editor of great gifts (both enthusiastic and meticulouswith a brilliant strong natural taste, Guardian). His works in English include Black Water: the Flamingo Anthology of Fantastic Literature and (with Craig Stephenson) In Another Part of the Forest: the Flamingo Anthology of Gay Literature. His highly acclaimed novel, News from a Foreign Country Came, won the McKitterick Prize in 1992.