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A working father whose life no longer feels like his own discovers the transforming powers of great (and downright terrible) literature in this laugh-out-loud memoir.
Andy Miller had a job he quite liked, a family he loved and no time at all for reading. Or so he kept telling himself. But, no matter how busy or tired he was, something kept niggling at him. Books. Books he’d always wanted to read. Books he’d said he’d read, when he hadn’t. Books that whispered the promise of escape from the 6.44 to London. And so, with the turn of a page, began a year of reading that was to transform Andy’s life completely.
This book is Andy’s inspirational and very funny account of his expedition through literature: classic, cult and everything in-between. Crack the spine of your unread ‘Middlemarch’, discover what ‘The Da Vinci Code’ and ‘Moby-Dick’ have in common (everything, surprisingly) and knock yourself out with a new-found enthusiasm for Tolstoy, Douglas Adams and ‘The Epic of Gilgamesh’. ‘The Year of Reading Dangerously’ is a reader’s odyssey and it begins with opening this book…
337 pages, Kindle Edition
First published April 1, 2012

"So one of us goes to work in London, sometimes two of us. If it's me, I make sure I have enough time to eat breakfast, which is the same breakfast I eat every day except Sunday. Half a grapefruit, a glass of orange juice from a carton, a slice of whole meal toast and marmite, and a mug of strong black coffee, brewed in a one-person cafetiere. On Sundays, I have good coffee, warm croissants, and strawberry jam. [...]
*Footnote: In the interests of full Patrick Bateman-like disclosure, here are the brands which make up this breakfast. Grapefruit - Jaffa(?), pink, organic. Orange juice - Grove Fresh Pure, organic. Bread - Kingsmeal, whole meal, medium sliced. [Continues for ALL ingredients.]
"هل يُعتبر هذا خاطئاً؟ أن أفضّل الكتب على البشر؟"
"لكن لا تقرأي، كما يقرأ الأطفال، لأجل المتعة، أو كما يقرأ المتفائلون، لأغراض التعلم. لا، اقرأي لإنقاذ حياتك."
-غوستاف فلوبير، رسالة إلى الآنسة لوغوير دو شانتبي
