This came up in my memory deal for Facebook earlier this week and I
really liked this book. So, for this first Friday of April 2019, I remind you
again of this one. Make sure you check out the full list over at Todd Mason’s Sweet Freedom blog. Have a good
one.
“November in the anti-April:
gray and dreary, the beginning of the end of things rather than rebirth. It’s
the month you hunker down- that is if you don't give up entirely.” (Page 343)
The above comes from the
introduction to the month that also happens to be the month of my birth. I
looked this up following the pattern of many readers according to the author,
Tom Nissley in his introduction to his book, A Reader’s Book of Days. He
says most readers will investigate their own month and date of birth before
branching out via various means. That
was certainly my experience as I went to the chapter on November first upon
opening the book. In addition to short quotes from various pieces in the
introduction he suggests various books for reading that have links to November.
Bleak
House by Charles Dickens, New Grub Street by George Gissing, The
Death of Jim Loney by James Welch and The Ice Storm by Rick
Moody among other titles/authors are suggested.
Since nothing important ever
happened until the 20th (my birthday for you non-worshippers) I
looked there next. On the 20th of November Nadine Gordimer was born
in 1923 and Don DeLillo in 1936. Wolfgang Borchert died in 1947 and in 1995
Robie Macauley. On this date literary agent Marguerite E. Harper warned the 26
year old Elmore Leonard “DON’T GIVE UP YOUR DAY JOB TO WRITE. I say this very
seriously.” (Page 365) This was also the day in 1942 when Ernest Hemingway took
his sport fishing boat, Pilar, out of
Havana Harbor with a crew of five and few weapons to hunt for German
submarines. Other interesting items are mentioned on this date, but compared to
other dates in the book; this is one of the lighter days in literary history.
This same format is used for
each month throughout the book. A brief and interesting introduction to the
month with quotes from various books of note before a list of suggested reading
that relates to the month in some way. That is followed by the days of the
month with a list of births, deaths, and notable events for each day. Also
included are bits of trivia and the occasional and clever small black and white
drawn illustration. There are approximately 100 illustrations that bring
character and enjoyment to the book. A detailed list of acknowledgments along
with a 25 page index brings this 464 page book to a close.
As the subtitle makes clear this
book features True Tales From The Lives And Works Of Writers For Every Day Of The
Year. There is a wealth of interesting information in this book that
celebrates both the love of books as well as the writers who write them. Not
only can you learn new information --sometimes very funny--about some of your
favorite books and authors A
Reader’s Book of Days also provides numerous recommendations for a
lifetime of exceptional reading.
A Readers Book of Days: True Tales
From The Lives And Works Of Writers For Every Day Of The Year
Tom Nissley
Illustrated by Joanna Neborsky
W. W. Norton & Company
November 2013
ISBN# 978-0-393-23962-1
Hardback (e-book version available)
464 Pages
$24.95
Material supplied by the
good folks of the Plano Texas Public Library System.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2014, 2019
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