So Many Books

GABRIEL ZAID

SYNOPSIS
"This small book is a gem: an absorbing conversation
about the whole point of reading, the surplus of titles,
and our own lack of time."


Alasdair Palmer, Sunday Telegraph
So Many Books is not so much a book as a conversation: about books, about reading, about the mad business of how a book is born every 30 seconds. It is a book of proposals and arguments and debate about books, from the age of Socrates to our own. Join the conversation.
FROM SO MANY BOOKS

"Humankind writes more than it can read."

"If not a single book were published from this moment on, it would still take 250,000 years for us to acquaint ourselves with those books already written."

"Maybe the measure of our reading should therefore be, not the number of books we’ve read, but the state in which they leave us. . . whether the street and the clouds and the existence of others mean anything to us; whether reading makes us, physically, more alive"


AUTHOR NOTES

GABRIEL ZAID lives in Mexico City with the artist Basia Batorska, her paintings, three cats, and ten thousand books.

KEY POINTS

BOOKSELLER STAR CHOICE

PUBLISHING NEWS BOOK OF THE MONTH

THIS IS A BOOK FOR EVERYONE WITH A PASSION FOR READING

A very special book promising intellectual debate for all book-buyers

Critically acclaimed in the US, Mexico and Spain, when published last year

Beautifully packaged hardback at an impulsive gift price

Excerpts will be published in a major national newspaper

Follows in the tradition of books such as Ex Libris ... and Eats, Shoots and Leaves

REVIEWS - Advance Quotes
"Gabriel Zaid is a marvelously elegant and playful writer --a cosmopolitan critic with sound judgment and a light touch. He is a jewel of Latin American letters, which is no small thing to be. Read him-- you'll see."
Paul Berman, Author of Terror and Liberalism

"Gabriel Zaid's defense of books is genuinely exhilarating. It is not pious, it is wise; and its wisdom is delivered with extraordinary lucidity and charm. This is how Montaigne would have written about the dizzy and increasingly dolorous age of the Internet. May So Many Books fall into so many hands."
Leon Wieseltier, Literary Editor of the New Republic

"With cascades of books pouring down on him from every direction, how can the twenty-first-century reader keep his head above water? Gabriel Zaid answers that question in a variety of surprising ways, many of them witty, all of them provocative."
Anne Fadiman, Editor of the American Scholar, Author of Ex Libris

"Zaid traces the preoccupation with reading back through Dr. Johnson, Seneca, and even the Bible ("Of making many books there is no end"). He emerges as a playful celebrant of literary proliferation, noting that there is a new book published every thirty seconds, and optimistically points out that publishers who moan about low sales "see as a failure what is actually a blessing: The book business, unlike newspapers, films, or television, is viable on a small scale."
The New Yorker

"The human race publishes a book every thirty seconds," observes Mexico City-based poet and essayist Zaid, and therefore "how is a single book among the millions to find its readers?" This is the conundrum upon which Zaid builds his incisive, wry, ultimately celebratory meditation on the chaotic and wasteful, yet exciting and felicitous world of books…Zaid's treatise will engage every serious reader." American Library Association''Our universal graphomania produces a million titles a year, in printings of several thousand copies,'' writes Zaid, a Mexican poet, critic and business writer. He adds that technology already gives us access to whatever book we want, though publishing and bookselling conglomerates tend to ensure that like the rich, best sellers get benefits denied to others -- to struggling midlist books. But Zaid doesn't waste time being sanctimonious about a more refined gentlemanly past. What matters most to him (and us) is how technology and business can better serve readers and how readers can help define culture in fluid, inventive ways.

…I like his approach to our more predictable snobberies too. How often do we scan best-seller lists, lamenting the debased level of mass taste? But for Zaid, ''the great barrier to the free circulation of books is the mass of privileged citizens who have college degrees but never learned to read properly.'' Too often, universities teach students to labor over books rather than devour and glory in them, and ''college graduates are more interested in publishing books than reading them.''

One of the pleasures of ''So Many Books'' is that its content and form are perfectly synchronized. Zaid makes his points in a vivid, concise way; his text is a compactly designed 144 pages. Each chapter could be a separate essay, but there is a clear overview; ''So Many Books'' is a whole with an air of improvisation."

The New York Times Book Review
RIGHTS

For details of rights available please email Natania Jansz at Sort Of

PUBLISHING INFORMATION
Pub date Mid-October 2004
ISBN 09542217-8-8
Price £8.99

Format Hardback
Size 117mm x179mm
Extent 144pp

PUBLICITY RESOURCES

Hi-Resolution publicity images to download:
Front cover image
| Back and front cover image

PDF samples:
3 Sample chapters
|

Sort Of Books [about us] are distributed worldwide, excluding
North America by the
Penguin Group. For editorial, publicity
and rights enquiries please email
Natania Jansz