Ratings2
Average rating3.5
Oo, I had a tough time with this one for two (petty?) reasons 1) there seemed to be a greater usage of male pronouns for the abstract author/writer than female (I noticed she/her twice and he/him 5-7 times and after the 3rd time in a row it is jarring)
2) Lesser describes the unsuspicious reader a reader who is just filling time with book “trash reading”pp99 which I grew incandescent thinking about.
I think these things distracted from what the book is trying to do, which is describe why Lesser reads and all the lovely things she's read (largely classic canon but also genres like SciFi and Mysteries, however she sticks mostly to dead writers it still feels very much like she doesn't like things that aren't capital L literature.) Not that I didn't want to run out and read all the books mentioned anyway. While her list of 100 books to read for pleasure only has maybe a 1/4 women writers, Lesser's focus is on promoting older works that are not going to show up on the bestseller list and I'm a both/and kinda reader (read the our-voices that is new and the old stuff when you feel like it)
Written in 2014, Lesser includes a bit grappling with the rise of the eBook, where we all were thinking maybe the eBook would be the last word on book format. I think we've landed at an equilibrium now.