By Kate Phillips
We all
want to know more about our favorite authors and writers. What inspires them?
What are they reading? What books don’t they like? Who are their literary
idols? Which authors would they invite to a dinner party? And which three books
would they take to the proverbial deserted island?
By the Book: Writers on Literature and the
Literary Life from The New York Times Book Review Edited and with an
Introduction by Pamela Paul, editor of the Book
Review, answers these questions—and many more.
Sixty-five
authors, writers, and others with literary lives answer a variety of questions
giving fans and other writers not only insights but reading recommendations. If
you like a certain author, does it follow you will like whatever he or she
reads? It’s fun to find out.
I have
read books and pieces by over half of the writers. Naturally, I read their
interviews first.
I loved learning Pippi
Longstocking inspired Anne Lamott to become a writer. (However, Amy Tan found
Pippi too cheerful.) And that A Wrinkle
in Time, by Madeleine L’Engle, changed Lamott’s life. (Mine, too.) It’s
also Dan Brown’s favorite book of all time. He highly recommends What the Dog Saw by Malcolm Gladwell who
highly recommends Lee Child who plans on reading Emma by Jane Austen next. (That surprised me.)
I have not
read Lean In by Sheryl Sandberg, but
her favorite childhood character is Meg Murray, the heroine of A Wrinkle in Time. Sandberg highly
recommends books by Michael Lewis, as does Malcolm Gladwell, and she most wants
to meet JK Rowling—whose book The
Cuckoo’s Calling Gladwell chose not to finish.
This book
is a great version of “Six Degrees” usually of Kevin Bacon, but this time
with writers.
I also like
knowing more about where others write. However, only four writers had their
answers published:
Carl Hiaasen: The first thing you see outside my office
is a doormat that says: LEAVE…Inside, my so-called work space looks like it got
tossed by burglars. (page 26)
John Irving’s description on page 31 sounds to be the most
efficient and comfortable with two tables, a computer in a far corner, a couch,
and a chocolate Lab for company.
Sylvia Nasar’s office is very neat and colorful also with
a Lab for company—see page 50.
And PJ O’Rourke’s is a mess—see page 102.
Some of the other writers
included in this book are: David Sedaris, Neil Gaimen, Mary Higgins Clark,
Colin Powell, Junot Diaz, John Grisham, Dave Barry, Katherine Boo, James
McBride, Jhumpa Lahiri, Donna Tartt, Ann Patchett, Michael Connelly, Neil
DeGrasse Tyson, Chang-rae Lee, and dozens more.
While all of the answers to
the following question were enlightening, this one made me laugh aloud:
If you could meet any character from literature, who
would it be?
Isabel Allende: Zorro, of course. If possible, at night
and in bed, with the mask but not the whip.
Good to
know--as are all the revelations and recommendations in By the Book.
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