Summary
My mother always had a deep dislike of books. They were dusty things that got in the way. They had to be stuffed from sight into the backs of cupboards. In the front room bookcase was a set of china dancing ladies, a carriage clock and a fruit bowl with no fruit. My books were upstairs, under my bed, in a box. How reading became my lifetime's obsession I'll never know. It could have been my uncle, who each Christmas gave me books about Poland. Or my father who'd offer me Dickens when no-one was looking. Or maybe it was the local library where out of nowhere I found choice and freedom and endless science fiction.
How you decide on what to read next is, of course, a matter of enormous interest to publishers. Do you pick your reading matter by reputation of the author, because you've read about the book in the papers, heard about it on TV, liked the sound of title, or seen it in the hands of others, intently being read on the train? "I can't understand why THE INSIDER Peter Finch Once this road had been embarked on there was, of course, no end. It was never a battle between reading or not reading but always one of what to select next. The massively politically incorrect Henry Miller, when I discovered him, offered a panoply of directions. Barely a chapter of any of his books went by without the author coming up with long lists of recommended works and the names of great authors that readers should follow.See the full content of this document
Extract
Books ; the Insider
In a dark corner I found the great fantasist John Cowper ...
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