Reviews

A History of Reading by Alberto Manguel

iamnader's review

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3.0

Didn't quite meet my expectations. A little more self-possessed than I would have preferred

elisala's review against another edition

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4.0

Après quelques pages de lecture... j'ai soudain eu un doute affreux... est-ce que je n'aurais pas déjà lu ce livre?
Après vérification sur mon ancien site de suivi de lecture, il s'avère que si! Hop, trop de livres à lire pour que je le relise, alors voici ma note de lecture de l'époque:

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Comme son nom l'indique, ce livre passe en revue la lecture à travers les âges, mais aussi les habitudes de lecture qu'on peut avoir.
Je reprocherai à l'auteur d'avoir peut-être voulu en dire trop, ça part dans tous les sens, je n'y vois pas trop de fil conducteur, comme un fourre-tout géant.
Par ailleurs, c'est très orienté bible et écrits religieux. ça peut s'expliquer bien sûr par le fait que bien souvent à certaines époques le livre number one voire unique c'est la bible. Il n'en reste pas moins que ça ne me passionne pas vraiment.
Mais, car il y a un mais, ça reste bien sympathique d'avoir ce regard sur la lecture, sur son évolution au cours des âges, sur nos petites habitudes de lecteurs, sur ce que la lecture peut représenter dans une vie, ainsi que dans la vie de tous les jours. Hé ben ça peut représenter beaucoup. et ça c'est cool, on ne le dira jamais assez.

soniateles's review against another edition

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5.0

Alberto Manguel é argentino mas já viveu em inúmeros países. Trabalhou como escritor, tradutor, editor e foi director da Biblioteca Nacional da Argentina. Desde criança que os livros ocupam um grande espaço na sua vida. Da sua biblioteca pessoal fazem parte mais de 40000 livros que foram oferecidos, recentemente, à cidade de Lisboa onde darão origem ao Centro de Estudos da História da Leitura do qual será director. Já ouvi falar dele há algum tempo e achei que este livro se enquadrava muito bem no tema do mês de Abril do clube de leitura a que aderi este ano, "Um livro que fala de livros".

Não é o livro mais fácil de ler já que não se trata de um romance. Não é um livro que se leia por distracção, embora ler seja uma excelente distracção. Também não é uma História exaustiva da leitura. A meu ver, é a História que resultou da investigação que o autor fez sobre a leitura ao longo dos tempos e dos diferentes caminhos a que essa investigação o foram conduzindo. Para além disso, o livro é enriquecido pela própria experiência, ao longo da vida, do autor enquanto leitor. 

Através desta obra confrontei, igualmente, a História da Leitura da Humanidade com o percurso que eu própria tenho feito enquanto leitora. Por exemplo, no capítulo "Ler imagens" regressei aos anos 70 quando ainda não sabia ler e inventava histórias enquanto olhava para os desenhos dos meus livros.

Esta obra está dividida em 4 partes mas há 2 partes principais. A primeira grande secção aborda vários aspectos da leitura, daquilo que pode dificultar ou facilitar este acto, de como a leitura começou por ser uma actividade de elites e de como evoluiu até ser acessível a todos. A outra grande parte baseia-se no leitor e na maneira como o leitor se relaciona com os livros, como escolhe o que lê e como interpreta aquilo que lê.

A maneira como este livro está construído faz-nos perceber porque é que Alberto Manguel escolheu chamar-lhe "Uma História da Leitura" e não "A História da Leitura". Esta a História de Manguel mas se fosse a minha História, ou de outro amante dos livros, seria muito diferente, com toda a certeza.

jmiae's review

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4.0

Not as good as The Library at Night, but still a lovely read with lots of great tidbits of information and the same feeling of camaraderie with a fellow book-lover and avid reader. My main point of contention is the abundance of pages that revolved around reading the Bible and the Book of Hours and other religious texts. But at the same time, I have to concede the fact that much of the history of reading is rooted in religious texts because of the fact that people didn't really read much else until fairly recently (with the exception of the women of the Heian court in Japan, and probably a few other cultures). Still, that doesn't change my undeniable preference for Manguel's chapters that focused on those Heian court women, Franz Kafka, Rainier Marie Rilke, Colette, and the Author as Reader.

Much like The Library at Night, this is a borderline reference book, as its rather large index and end notes sections indicate. But if you love books and you love books about readers or reading or both, and you are willing to tough it out through some drier sections, I would highly recommend this. I was skeptical about finding it as enjoyable as The Library at Night, and in the end that was the case but I absolutely adored The Library at Night in a way that only occurs once every 100 books. That's why I decided to read this collection of essays one year later, even knowing it probably would not deliver the same punch. If I had read A History of Reading first, I have no doubt that it would have piqued my interest enough to seek out Manguel's other writing in the same fashion.

katherinevarga's review

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I couldn't decide what I was in the mood to read during that liminal final week of the year, but figured I couldn't go wrong with reading about reading. This was delightful to curl up with by the electric fire with some tea. I probably won't remember 95% of the interesting things I learned while reading, but I enjoyed the descriptions of the joys and power of reading.

elusivesue's review

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4.0

3.5 stars
A collection of essays on reading that generally goes chronologically, this History looks at many of the different aspects of reading/being a reader - stealing books, needing glasses, finding symbolism, the structure of books themselves. There were a lot of interesting tidbits that I learned, and books to read that I would not have learned about. However, the writing was pretty dense in some parts, and the author is assuming that you have a pretty conversant relationship with Classical Literature, and not everyone does.

joeybiscuit's review

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challenging informative reflective relaxing medium-paced

5.0

kahale's review

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2.0

This was an OK book but not one to sit down and read all at one time.

lastmohik's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

3.25

joanne_is_from_canada's review

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4.0

Wow, this was very educational, a bit overwhelming. I learned a lot but also skimmed a few chapters that just had too much information for me. Overall though, there were plenty of interesting topics covered, from the origins of reading and writing, reading aloud, banned books and even the history of eyeglasses and rise of anti-intellectualism. Glad I decided not to give up!