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October 11, 2007
[Books] [Autistic] "The Fiction Editor" and the reader A book without a reader doesn't exist This morning I received The Fiction Editor, the Novel, and the Novelist book that I ordered on a recommendation of a precious dervish of Blogostan the LanguageLog. On the cover there is a quote from the book's opening pages: The hook intro: The greatest secret factor in American fiction in the past half-century has been the fiction editor, and, by a huge margin, his history has been one of opportunity either lost or actively destroyed. I read about twenty pages so far, and I am frantic. Its effect, like an effect of any really good book, can be compared to a mind-altering drug -- the world starts look different and unfamiliar. On the twenty first page I realized that while reading I think on background to whom of my friends I can recommend it. Next I realized that I *always* go that when I read a book I like. And if I really, really like a book, I think to whom of my friends I can send a copy, which is the next best thing I can do to persuade to read it after tying them to a three and holding a book in front of them. "Finished? Next page?" Why I am doing this? The more I think about it, the more natural it seems. A book without a reader is incomplete, deficient, waiting, like a spy without a mission. And if to think properly, it doesn't even exist. |
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