Maybe You Can Judge a Book by its Cover
“There is more than one way not to read, the most radical of which is not to open a book at all.” Thus begins Pierre Bayard’s witty and provocative meditation on the nature, scale and necessity of non-reading. It’s the latest sort of business book tell-all tale; how to seem like a reader without really reading.
Posted by: Economist.com
| How To Talk About Books You Haven’t Read By Pierre Bayard. Translated by Jeffrey Mehlman ![]() Bloomsbury; 208 pages; $19.95. To be published in Britain by Granta in January Buy it at Amazon.com Amazon.co.uk |
The first section explores the four categories of unread books, into at least one of which Mr Bayard places every book he mentions. These are the “books unknown to me”, the “books I have skimmed”, the “books I have heard about” and the “books I have forgotten”. No exceptions are admitted, even for books he himself wrote.
Each category is illustrated with an example from literature. The librarian in Robert Musil’s The Man Without Qualities explains that reading any particular book distracts from what is truly important: the relationship between all books. Paul Valéry, who eulogised Marcel Proust despite brazenly admitting he had only skimmed the writer’s work, claimed this critical distance better enabled him to comment on it. Umberto Eco structured The Name of the Rose around a lost book which none of the characters had read, but about which each nonetheless had strong views. Montaigne, who was so forgetful that he took to annotating each book he read with a brief summary, felt that this passage to oblivion was an essential part of making a book’s contents his own.




