How to Talk About Books You Haven't Read
 

How to Talk About Books You Haven't Read

by Pierre Bayard

The runaway French bestseller hailed by the New York Times as “a survivor’s guide to life in the chattering classes.”



If civilized people are expected to have read all important works of literature, and thousands more books are published every year, what are we supposed to do in those awkward social situations in which we’re forced to talk... (read more)

Top tags: literary criticismnonfictionbooks about booksbayardnon-fiction (all tags)

 

Member Reviews

  • TheophileEscargot
    • Rated 0 stars

    Irony-drenched book by a French literature professor.

    Not much actually helpful advice on the subject, as you'd find in a Bluffer's Guide or Molesworth. Instead he wants the reader to consider books as social objects, existing in a web of associations in people's minds. Seems like a limited version of Baudrillard: even if you can't accept that reality isn't real, you might accept that books are just mental constructs.

    Hard to know how serious he is about there being a cultural pressure to appear to have read Important Works of Literature. Presumably it exists amongst literature professors; not sure if he seriously thinks it exists in the rest of the world.

    If only it were true that people respected reading, rather than thought of it as unbearably pretentious, effete and boring. For one thing I could give up this blog and just talk to people in real life about it, instead of huddling on the Internet with the other perverts who share the vice.

    Does have some interesting metafictional anecdotes, where he describes various satirical setups relating to unread books.

    Overall, seems a bit pointless. Doesn't seem to consider that anyone could have an individual response to a book, appreciating a point, event, character or theme that hasn't made it into the collective consciousness.

    TheophileEscargot wrote this review 2 weeks ago. ( reply | permalink )
  • jasonpettus
    • Rated 4 stars

    This is one of four newish books I recently read mostly so I could finally get them off my queue list, all of which were actually pretty good but are mere wisps of manuscripts, none of them over 150 pages or so in length. This one is the surprisingly thoughtful How to Talk About Books You Haven't Read, by a hip French literature professor named Pierre Bayard; because make no mistake, this is not exactly a practical how-to guide to faking your way through cocktail parties, but more a sneaky examination of what it means to "read" a book anyway, if by "read" you mean "understand, relate to, can recall details of, and can discuss with others." After all, if we read a book as a child and then completely forget its story as an adult, do we still get to count that as a "read" book? Bayard gets into all kinds of interesting questions like this, ultimately arguing that the most important thing we can do as readers is understand the entire time period that book is a result of; in the goal of accomplishing that, then, he argues that it's perfectly okay to just read the Cliff Notes of famous huge books you know you're never going to get around to actually reading, perfectly okay to discuss a book at a cocktail party you're familiar with but haven't actually sat down and scanned each and every page. This is how we learn, he argues, how we grow as both humans and patrons of the arts; every Wikipedia entry we read, every conversation we fake our way through, every BBC adaptation we check out, ultimately helps us understand the full-length books we do sit and closely read from the beginning to the end, which is why we shouldn't be ashamed of any of these activities but rather proud of them. Funny, smart, and very French; a very fun afternoon of reading.

    Out of 10: 9.2

    jasonpettus wrote this review Saturday, May 3 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • JennyIL
    • Rated 4 stars

    Using examples from books and author's lives, Pierre Bayard presents a theory of reading that does not necessarily involve actually reading every word in a book. He discusses several ways of not reading a book including skimming, hearing of a book, and forgetting what you have read; explains how to talk about books you haven't read with different audiences; and even how to invent books.

    JennyIL wrote this review Thursday, April 3 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Becky S.
    • Rated 3 stars

    I listened to this book in January of 2008 and posted a review on my blog at [a href="http://raforall.blogspot.com/2008/01/what-im-reading-january-2008.html"]

    Becky S. wrote this review Monday, March 31 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • John R
    • Rated 0 stars

    Read the Epilogue first. It makes the whole thing much more worthwhile.

    John R wrote this review Monday, February 18 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Zot79
    • Rated 4 stars

    This is a very fun book. The (English) audio version, especially, reminded me at times of the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy. More to the point it helps one think about what it means to read (or not read) a book. The overall conclusion is that there is not that much difference, in the long run, between reading and not reading a book. I have to agree, to a point. Of all the books I have read, I probably have a distinct memory of only a few. And of those I probably have only a hazy impression.

    Zot79 wrote this review Sunday, February 17 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Parisa S
    • Rated 0 stars

    Haven't read this one, but I'll soon!

    Parisa S wrote this review Friday, January 18 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Tiffania
    • Rated 0 stars

    The DCPS had decidely mixed (am I being too generous?) about this one!

    Tiffania wrote this review Friday, January 11 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Sreenivas P
    • Rated 0 stars

    Have it in German translation!

    Sreenivas P wrote this review Wednesday, December 19 2007. ( reply | permalink )
Displaying 1-10 of 11 reviews
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