Paf! I close a book at any page, because it failed to catch my interest or meet my expectations. Other works are reread many times I feel that I have written myself and recommend it to everyone.
is precisely what happens to me "As a novel," the Moroccan author and professor of literature in France, Daniel Pennac. Done in a simple and infectious, and first published in French in 1992 and in Castilian in 1993 by Standard Publishing and Anagram, the scope of "Like a novel" is universal. Read why.
The English edition is pointed out that "This work proposes a simple task as necessary in our days: that the teenager lost the fear of reading, read for pleasure, to embark on a book like a personal adventure and freely chosen. " Meanwhile
Pennac says "In reality, there is a book of reflection on the reading, but an attempt at reconciliation with the book." That is why it exposes what I believe is the essence of content of its text, the "indefeasible rights of the reader": 1. The right not to read. 2. The right to skip pages. 3. The right not to finish a book. 4. The right to reread. 5. The right to read anything. 6. The right to bovarysme (textual transmitted disease) 7. The right to read anywhere. 8. The right to browse. 9. The right to read aloud. 10. The right to remain silent
I have nothing to add, for now. So I'll shut up and look for a book.
lil m. c. herrera
is precisely what happens to me "As a novel," the Moroccan author and professor of literature in France, Daniel Pennac. Done in a simple and infectious, and first published in French in 1992 and in Castilian in 1993 by Standard Publishing and Anagram, the scope of "Like a novel" is universal. Read why.
The English edition is pointed out that "This work proposes a simple task as necessary in our days: that the teenager lost the fear of reading, read for pleasure, to embark on a book like a personal adventure and freely chosen. " Meanwhile
Pennac says "In reality, there is a book of reflection on the reading, but an attempt at reconciliation with the book." That is why it exposes what I believe is the essence of content of its text, the "indefeasible rights of the reader": 1. The right not to read. 2. The right to skip pages. 3. The right not to finish a book. 4. The right to reread. 5. The right to read anything. 6. The right to bovarysme (textual transmitted disease) 7. The right to read anywhere. 8. The right to browse. 9. The right to read aloud. 10. The right to remain silent
I have nothing to add, for now. So I'll shut up and look for a book.
lil m. c. herrera