I cannot travel on a train without a book. I used to commute 3 hours a day, 5 days a week. This meant I read about 2 books a week. The last time I was on a train, I looked down the compartment and nobody was reading a physical book. Perhaps some were reading on their phones but their expressions suggested otherwise. For me, a book is a refuge and a time machine.
(more…)Author: Alex White writes
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My reading life as a book reviewer, 1985 to 1992
When I left university, I thought, “Great. I will never have to read what other people want me to read.”
No more Walter Scott’s Waverley and no need to finish Nostromo.
Life is too short to finish books you are not enjoying.
Then I started Shelf Life, a book section on Channel 4’s teletext service, created with the sole purpose of allowing me to get free books.
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My reading life as a student, 1978 to 1985
In this series of posts, I am reviewing my reading life (not my Reading life).
Since my early reading life, I have kept a list of nearly 1,500 books I’ve read since 1978. Each year, I choose my book of the year.
At roughly 25 books a year with an average life expectancy, I might read another 425 books.
What must I read before I go to the library in the sky?
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My early reading life
On Friday afternoons at Middle Street School, our headmaster would smoke his pipe and do a general knowledge quiz with us.
I liked the sweet smell of his pipe smoke (this was the 1970s) and of success: I was good at quizzes.
“It’s not fair, Miss. Alex has got books!” complained a classmate to our teacher.
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Interview with William Horwood on Skallagrigg
William Horwood is probably best known for his Duncton Wood books. But for me, his novel Skallagrigg, based on his experiences as a father of a child with cerebral palsy, is his masterpiece.
(more…)It gets the most regular and deepest and most moving correspondence. It was the book I was most pleased to write. Skallagrigg is different; I feel it’s an important subject.
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Through The Eyes of Me: writing a book for an autistic daughter
Jonathan Roberts has written a storybook about his daughter, Kya, who was diagnosed with autism. After a great reaction to his book from Kya’s family and the professionals who work with her, Jon’s book was published by Graffeg.
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