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19 Reviews
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41 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Must-Read Book of Essays,
By
This review is from: At Large and At Small: Familiar Essays (Hardcover)
Anne Fadiman in one of her essays says that a key question in the culture wars is: "Should we read great books because of their literary value or because they . . . teach us how to live?" I am not much interested in the culture wars. I read books, great and small, for pleasure. I do not remember when I have read a book with greater pleasure than this small, beautifully written, book of essays. The subjects range from butterfly collecting to ice cream to Coleridge to flying the flag after 9/11 to unexpected death. The author reveals herself as learned, loving and at times very funny. Give yourself a treat. Read this book.
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
write stuff,
By
This review is from: At Large and At Small: Familiar Essays (Hardcover)
Anne Fadiman's prose is as good as it gets, even if the subjects of her essays are not always as interesting to the rest of us as they are to her. Never afraid to use a large word when a diminutive one might do, an occasional trip to the dictionary may be necessary. But the trip is always informative, and my brain was grateful for the exercise.
16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
this book will make you smarter,
By
This review is from: At Large and At Small: Familiar Essays (Hardcover)
Really, it will. In this collection of essays (available separately in other venues, but nestled together with great mutual congeniality in this book), Fadiman begins with her own confessed interests and obsessions--Charles Lamb and Coleridge, ice cream and coffee, arctic exploration and mail delivery, mounting butterflies and flying the flag--and traces a patient, curious path through all sorts of trackless wildernesses (ancient literature, Romantic poetry, familiar essays and out-of-print tomes) to piece together observations that are quietly illuminating not just of the subject matter but the ways Fadiman--quietly, subtly--suggests that books are to read, loves are to be cherished, life is to be lived. The clarity and precision of her prose are breath-taking; readers would never guess that Fadiman's process could entail, as she reveals in one essay, moving paragraphs about in the manner that a pet hamster transports food from one side of his cage to the other. Surprising, rewarding, and deeply interesting, this book is a necessary addition not just to your library but your experience, as it will make you want to read more widely, look more closely, and think more deeply about things, just as Fadiman does.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Anne Fadiman is a national treasure.,
By
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This review is from: At Large and At Small: Familiar Essays (Hardcover)
Over the last several years, I must have given close to a dozen copies of Anne Fadiman's previous essay collection, "Ex Libris", to various friends. It's the kind of book you just have to share with others. It didn't seem possible that another collection could match the perfection of the first, but this one comes pretty close.
Essays in the first collection focused on topics related to books and reading; the author's lifelong passion for reading shone through on every page and should resonate with any reader sharing her addiction to books. In this new collection, Fadiman demonstrates an ability to write engagingly on a wide variety of topics. Coffee, ice-cream, moving, the life of Coleridge, the essays of Charles Lamb - Fadiman expounds charmingly on these topics, and several others, making it seem easy. Like Malcolm Gladwell, she can make any topic she writes about fascinating. Of course, writing essays so polished they sparkle like gems is anything but easy. It is a testament to Fadiman's skill as a writer that she makes it seem effortless.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Writer's Writer,
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This review is from: At Large and At Small: Familiar Essays (Paperback)
This book makes one thing abundantly clear: Ann Fadiman is a great essay writer. Each of these essays does everything good essays should. (1) They are concise. None of them takes longer than a half hour to read. (2) The language is crafted expertly. An astute reader will revel at the word choice and sentence structure, crafted with the painstaking detail of an artist with great felicity with English. (3) The author loves her subject matter. Although coffee and Coleridge and bug collecting may not seem to have much in common, Ms Fadiman infuses them with passion and curiosity and makes them her own. (4) Personality. In short, Ann Fadiman writes powerful, purposeful prose, adorned with wit, humor and pathos. I highly recommend this collection. Fadiman is a writer's writer.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Another Fadiman book--hooray!,
By MW (Portland, ME) - See all my reviews
This review is from: At Large and At Small: Familiar Essays (Hardcover)
I did the dance of joy (literally) when I walked into Longfellow Books and found a new book by Anne Fadiman. Her prose is so good I want to EAT it. EX LIBRIS is a perennial fave, and now here is another dose of her wit and intelligence and interest in life and living. Her take on everything from the essayist Charles Lamb to her nutty brother's method for making ice cream with liquid nitrogen(possible side effect is frostbite of the throat)will leave you feeling engaged and smart and grateful. Thank you, Anne Fadiman. Please write faster. -- Monica Wood
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Delightful Read,
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Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: At Large and At Small: Familiar Essays (Paperback)
Ann Fadiman writes beautifully and brings us into her personal world with warmth. I savored each essay, reading just one a day to make them last. Suzanne Love Harris, Wilson, Wyoming
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
coffee, the mail, and Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
By
This review is from: At Large and At Small: Familiar Essays (Paperback)
A dozen exceptionally well-written essays on disparate subjects such as coffee, mail and a biography of Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
In "A Piece of Cotton," an essay on the American flag, Fadiman writes, "In the weeks after September 11, I saw for the first time that the flag...has multiple meanings....The red, white, and blue turban worn by the Sikh umbrella vendor a friend walked past in Dupont Circle, not far from the White House, meant Looking like someone and thinking like him are not the same thing....The flags brandished by two cowboy-hatted singers at a country fair we attended on the day the first bombs fell on Afghanistan meant Let's kill the [...]....The flag in our front yard meant We are sad. And we're sorry we've never done this before. In "Moving" she writes, "We move more than anyone else. In a typical year, one in five Americans relocates, whereas in Japan it's one in ten, in Britain one in twelve, and in Germany one in twenty-five....(Traveling is always thought to be more enjoyable than moving: we envy foreign correspondents but pity army brats)." In "Procrustes and the Culture Wars" she writes, "If I had to step into a polling booth and vote on Homer's sexual politics, I'd pull the NO lever strenuously. I am therefore very glad that the Odyssey is a poem, not a referendum." I read the Iliad last year for the first time since college. Me, too. I skipped over the one on catching butterflies but the rest are informative and very enjoyable. A good read.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Would she come for dinner at my house? ;-),
By Lauren B. Davis (Princeton, New Jersey) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: At Large and At Small: Familiar Essays (Paperback)
I loved Fadiman's other book, Ex Libris, and At Large continues to delight. Fadiman has a relentlessly curious mind and a terrific writing style. I felt as though I'd had a series of scintillating conversations with a brilliant, generous, funny friend. I can't recommend this book enough. The bibliography alone is worth the price. I fear my already groaning shelves will have to accommodate even more new books.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
In good company,
By
This review is from: At Large and At Small: Familiar Essays (Hardcover)
A rich, erudite, and warm collection of beautifully composed and written essays. I don't know that they will make one smarter, as another reviewer suggests, but they will engage your mind as only the company of an intelligent conversationalist can. The "personal" essay succeeds to a great extent on the person authoring it; Fadiman is not overbearing or self-congratulatory, and though she needs to research her topics and present a learned perspective - is not pedantic. Her prose as a different reviewer suggests, is "edible". This was the best comfort food I had over 2007. Put it on your bedstand. Savor it.
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At Large and At Small: Familiar Essays by Anne Fadiman (Hardcover - June 12, 2007)
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