Readings
Literary Entertainments
Michael Dirda
The best of the column, "Readings," fromWashington Post Book
World, by Pulitzer Prize-winner Michael Dirda.
Since 1993Washington Post Book World has published a monthly
column by Michael Dirda called "Readings." Personal, erudite,
serious, and sometimes playful, these columns cover a variety of
subjects: classics in translation, intellectual history, children s
books, fantasy and crime fiction, American and European literature,
poetry, innovative writing, the joys of collecting first editions,
rediscovering neglected novels, ghost stories, teaching writing,
and the challenges of parenthood and life in general. Dirda is a
writer s reader and a reader s writer. He is an impeccable guide to
good reading from the light he loves P. G. Wodehouse to scholarly
esoterica. His columns are always worth a pause, always worth
reading, always worth coming back to. Readings presents his most
memorable essays, including "The Crime of His Life" (a youthful
caper), "Bookman s Saturday" (the scheming of a book collector),
"Weekend with Wodehouse," "Mr. Wright" (an exemplary high school
teacher), "Listening to My Father," "Turning Fifty," and
"Millennial Readings." This is a book to keep on your bedside for
ending the day with pleasurable reading.
Michael Dirda is a writer and senior editor forWashington Post Book
World. For three years he was a board member of the National Book
Critics Circle. His essays and reviews have appeared in numerous
publications. In 1993 Dirda received the Pulitzer Prize for
Distinguished Criticism.
Use one of these excerpts from book]
"Pleasures of a book reviewer: To open a new book tentatively,
with indifference even, and to find oneself yet again in thrall to
a writer s prose, to a thriller s plot, to a thinker s mind. Let
the whole wide world crumble, so long as I can read another page.
And then another after that. And then a hundred more."
"Book collecting is often a form of hero worship or heroine
worship (no one bows lower than I before the genius of Angela
Carter, Colette and Agatha Christie, to mention only three high
Cs). After a while, though, one yearns for more than first editions
and scholarly sets of an author s complete works. Enthusiasm
spreads, insidiously, into what one may call supplementary
areas.""
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