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A Reader's Delight by Noel Perrin β€” book cover

A Reader's Delight

by Noel Perrin
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Overview

One of America's finest essayists writes about 40 literary masterpieces that have been wrongfully forgotten or were ignored in the first place.

Synopsis

One of America's finest essayists writes about 40 literary masterpieces that have been wrongfully forgotten or were ignored in the first place.

Publishers Weekly

In this collection of elegant, affectionate and informative essays, originally published in the Washington Post Book World, Perrin, professor of English at Dartmouth and a noted author, unearths 40 diverse, largely unknown works of fiction and fact, prose and poetry, by all varieties of writers. These short, brisk pieces were produced both by and for the kind of person who boasts an unabashed love of the written word, for whom the artfully constructed phrase evokes ``shudders of pleasure.'' Perrin places each work in its historical and literary context, provides a tantalizing synopsis and offers stylistic analyses, reminiscences and personal reflections. He also takes pains to demonstrate how these books might be relevant to our time and place, even if only as a diversion from mundane contemporary cares. Unfamiliar works are given a familiar footing, e.g., ``a French equivalent of Huckleberry Finn,'' ``the Catch-22 of the American Revolution'' and ``the book you go on to when you have run out of Jane Austen's novels.'' Obscure or forgotten writers, such as the author's mother, Blanche C. Perrin, take their deserving place alongside such luminaries as Stendhal, Howells and C. S. Lewis. Here is a literary menu that truly whets the curious reader's appetite. (April)

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Editorials

From the Publisher

"As benefits a book about delight, this collection is a joy to read." --New York Times Book Review

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

In this collection of elegant, affectionate and informative essays, originally published in the Washington Post Book World, Perrin, professor of English at Dartmouth and a noted author, unearths 40 diverse, largely unknown works of fiction and fact, prose and poetry, by all varieties of writers. These short, brisk pieces were produced both by and for the kind of person who boasts an unabashed love of the written word, for whom the artfully constructed phrase evokes ``shudders of pleasure.'' Perrin places each work in its historical and literary context, provides a tantalizing synopsis and offers stylistic analyses, reminiscences and personal reflections. He also takes pains to demonstrate how these books might be relevant to our time and place, even if only as a diversion from mundane contemporary cares. Unfamiliar works are given a familiar footing, e.g., ``a French equivalent of Huckleberry Finn,'' ``the Catch-22 of the American Revolution'' and ``the book you go on to when you have run out of Jane Austen's novels.'' Obscure or forgotten writers, such as the author's mother, Blanche C. Perrin, take their deserving place alongside such luminaries as Stendhal, Howells and C. S. Lewis. Here is a literary menu that truly whets the curious reader's appetite. April

Book Details

Published
March 1, 1988
Publisher
University Press of New England
Pages
228
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780874514322

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