6/23/2023 0 Comments Every last one quindlenHer analysis of the limitations of the computer screen is another rebuttal of those who predict the imminent demise of the book. She compares reading books to intimate friendship-both activities enable us to deconstruct the underpinnings of interpersonal problems and relationships. Quindlen (One True Thing) recalls her own early love affair with reading writes with unabashed fervor of books that shaped her psychosexual maturation (John Galsworthy's The Forsyte Saga, Mary McCarthy's The Group) and discusses the books that made her a liberal committed to fighting social injustice (Dickens, the Bible). To these ends much of the book forms a plea for intellectual freedom as well as a personal paean to reading. In this pithy celebration of the power and joys of reading, Quindlen emphasizes that books are not simply a means of imparting knowledge, but also a way to strengthen emotional connectedness, to lessen isolation, to explore alternate realities and to challenge the established order.
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