Вы здесьHow to Live : A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at an AnswerFrom Starred ReviewIn a wide-ranging intellectual career, Michel de Montaigne found no knowledge so hard to acquire as the knowledge of how to live this life well. By casting her biography of the writer as 20 chapters, each focused on a different answer to the question How to live? Bakewell limns Montaigne’s ceaseless pursuit of this most elusive knowledge. Embedded in the 20 life-knowledge responses, readers will find essential facts — when and where Montaigne was born, how and whom he married, how he became mayor of Bordeaux, how he managed a public life in a time of lethal religious and political passions. But Bakewell keeps the focus on the inner evolution of the acute mind informing Montaigne’s charmingly digressive and tolerantly skeptical essays. Flexible and curious, this was a mind at home contemplating the morality of cannibals, the meaning of his own near-death experience, and the puzzlingly human behavior of animals. And though Montaigne has identified his own personality as his overarching topic, Bakewell marvels at the way Montaigne’s prose has enchanted diverse readers — Hazlitt and Sterne, Woolf and Gide — with their own reflections. Because Montaigne’s capacious mirror still captivates many, this insightful life study will win high praise from both scholars and general readers. -Bryce ChristensenReview“This charming biography shuffles incidents from Montaigne’s life and essays into twenty thematic chapters… Bakewell clearly relishes the anthropological anecdotes that enliven Montaigne’s work, but she handles equally well both his philosophical influences and the readers and interpreters who have guided the reception of the essays.” —The New Yorker “Serious, engaging, and so infectiously in love with its subject that I found myself racing to finish so I could start rereading the Essays themselves… It is hard to imagine a better introduction — or reintroduction — to Montaigne than Bakewell’s book.” —Lorin Stein, Harper’s Magazine “Ms. Bakewell’s new book, How to Live, is a biography, but in the form of a delightful conversation across the centuries.” —The New York Times “So artful is Bakewell’s account of [Montaigne] that even skeptical readers may well come to share her admiration.” —The New York Times Book Review “Extraordinary… a miracle of complex, revelatory organization, for as Bakewell moves along she provides a brilliant demonstration of the alchemy of historical viewpoint.” —Boston Globe “Well, How to Live is a superb book, original, engaging, thorough, ambitious, and wise.” —Nick Hornby, in the November/December 2010 issue of The Believer “In How to Live, an affectionate introduction to the author, Bakewell argues that, far from being a dusty old philosopher, Montaigne has never been more relevant — a 16th-century blogger, as she would have it — and so must be read, quite simply, ‘in order to live’… Bakewell is a wry and intelligent guide.” —The Daily Beast “Witty, unorthodox… How to Live is a history of ideas told entirely on the ground, never divorced from the people thinking them. It hews close to Montaigne’s own preoccupations, especially his playful uncertainty — Bakewell is a stickler for what we can’t know… How to Live is a delight…” —The Plain Dealer “This book will have new readers excited to be acquainted to Montaigne’s life and ideas, and may even stir their curiosity to read more about the ancient Greek philosophers who influenced his writing. How to Live is a great companion to Montaigne’s essays, and even a great stand-alone.” —San Francisco Book Review “A bright, genial, and generous introduction to the master’s methods.” —Kirkus Reviews “[Bakewell reveals] one of literature's enduring figures as an idiosyncratic, humane, and surprisingly modern force.” —Publisher’s Weekly (starred) “As described by Sarah Bakewell in her suavely enlightening How to Live, or A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at an Answer Montaigne is, with Walt Whitman, among the most congenial of literary giants, inclined to shrug over the inevitability of human failings and the last man to accuse anyone of self-absorption. His great subject, after all, was himself.” —Laura Miller, Salon.com “Lively and fascinating… How To Live takes its place as the most enjoyable introduction to Montaigne in the English language.” —The Times Literary Supplement “Splendidly conceived and exquisitely written… enormously absorbing.” —Sunday Times “How to Live will delight and illuminate.” —The Independent “It is ultimately [Montaigne’s] life-loving vivacity that Bakewell succeeds in communicating to her readers.” —The Observer “This subtle and surprising book manages the trick of conversing in a frank and friendly manner with its centuries-old literary giant, as with a contemporary, while helpfully placing Montaigne in a historical context. The affection of the author for her subject is palpable and infectious.” —Phillip Lopate, author of The Art of the Personal Essay “An intellectually lively treatment of a Renaissance giant and his world.” —Saturday Telegraph “Like recent books on Proust, Joyce, and Austen, How to Live skillfully plucks a life-guide from the incessant flux of Montaigne’s prose… A superb, spirited introduction to the master.” —The Guardian In a wide-ranging intellectual career, Michel de Montaigne found no knowledge so hard to acquire as the knowledge of how to live this life well. By casting her biography of the writer as 20 chapters, each focused on a different answer to the question How to live? Bakewell limns Montaigne’s ceaseless pursuit of this most elusive knowledge. Embedded in the 20 life-knowledge responses, readers will find essential facts — when and where Montaigne was born, how and whom he married, how he became mayor of Bordeaux, how he managed a public life in a time of lethal religious and political passions. But Bakewell keeps the focus on the inner evolution of the acute mind informing Montaigne’s charmingly digressive and tolerantly skeptical essays. Flexible and curious, this was a mind at home contemplating the morality of cannibals, the meaning of his own near-death experience, and the puzzlingly human behavior of animals. And though Montaigne has identified his own personality as his overarching topic, Bakewell marvels at the way Montaigne’s prose has enchanted diverse readers — Hazlitt and Sterne, Woolf and Gide — with their own reflections. Because Montaigne’s capacious mirror still captivates many, this insightful life study will win high praise from both scholars and general readers. -Bryce Christensen Named one of Library Journal’s Top Ten Best Books of 2010 In a wide-ranging intellectual career, Michel de Montaigne found no knowledge so hard to acquire as the knowledge of how to live this life well. By casting her biography of the writer as 20 chapters, each focused on a different answer to the question How to live? Bakewell limns Montaigne’s ceaseless pursuit of this most elusive knowledge. Embedded in the 20 life-knowledge responses, readers will find essential facts — when and where Montaigne was born, how and whom he married, how he became mayor of Bordeaux, how he managed a public life in a time of lethal religious and political passions. But Bakewell keeps the focus on the inner evolution of the acute mind informing Montaigne’s charmingly digressive and tolerantly skeptical essays. Flexible and curious, this was a mind at home contemplating the morality of cannibals, the meaning of his own near-death experience, and the puzzlingly human behavior of animals. And though Montaigne has identified his own personality as his overarching topic, Bakewell marvels at the way Montaigne’s prose has enchanted diverse readers — Hazlitt and Sterne, Woolf and Gide — with their own reflections. Because Montaigne’s capacious mirror still captivates many, this insightful life study will win high praise from both scholars and general readers. —Bryce Christensen Named one of Library Journal’s Top Ten Best Books of 2010
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tvv про Kīns: Slepkavas kundze [lv] (Классический детектив)
14 05 Автор этой книги Дэй Кин, а не Дональд
mysevra про Быченин: Оружейники [litres] (Космическая фантастика, Научная фантастика)
12 05 Много лишнего, от этого становится скучно. Оценка: плохо
mysevra про Кетчам: Мертвый сезон. Мертвая река [сборник litres] (Триллер, Детективы: прочее)
12 05 Неловко об этом упоминать, но почему-то в процессе чтения именно этой книги я постоянно засыпала. Оценка: неплохо
mysevra про Бернетт: Маленькая принцесса [A Little Princess ru] (Детская проза)
12 05 Внутренний стержень, формирование собственной вселенной. Книга на все времена. В детстве понимаешь смысл этой истории совсем иначе. Оценка: отлично!
Lan2292 про Билик: Царь царей (Юмористическая фантастика, Городское фэнтези, Самиздат, сетевая литература)
11 05 Что можно сказать о серии, мне понравилось, есть конечно недочеты и к слогу можно предъявить небольшие претензии, но я прочитала все рассказы до девятой включительно и не было желания прекратить, рекомендую любителям сказок Оценка: отлично!
DMcL про Михаил Дорин
11 05 Авиатор - дневник молодого лётчика. Просто проза про лётную работу. Может кому и понравится. Мне нет - очень Скучно!
Barbud про Порошин: Гость из будущего. Том 1 [СИ] (Юмор: прочее, Самиздат, сетевая литература)
10 05 В качестве прикола над попаданцами в совок сойдет. Автор, судя по возрасту, с реалиями СССР немного знаком, успел захватить по краешку, но тут он точно какой-то альтернативный мир изображает. Хотя если без претензий на серьезность ……… Оценка: неплохо
Belomor.canal про Врангель: Воспоминания. От крепостного права до большевиков (История, Биографии и Мемуары)
10 05 Это великолепный автофикшн - с диалогами, сценами... читается как роман! Всем советую! Оценка: отлично!
Олег Макаров. про Дашко: Москва [СИ] (Альтернативная история, Исторический детектив, Попаданцы, Самиздат, сетевая литература)
09 05 > kappa1 есть такое слово "походу". Мне оно тоже не нравится, но ничего с этим не поделать, русский язык не обязан развиваться так, чтобы нам с вами нравилось. И, кстати, "похоже" это не совсем (совсем не) точный "перевод" .
kappa1 про Дашко: Москва [СИ] (Альтернативная история, Исторический детектив, Попаданцы, Самиздат, сетевая литература)
09 05 Уважаемый автор! Нет такого слова "походу", есть "похоже", ... , "похоже". Ещё песня есть такая у Агутина: "Не похожий на тебя, не похожий на меня, Просто так прохожий парень чернокожий...". Прослушай её пару раз, может быть ……… Оценка: хорошо
msnaumov про Фреймане: Прощай, Атлантида [Ardievu, Atlantīda! ru] (Биографии и Мемуары)
08 05 Исправлены ошибки в тексте, добавлены недостающие 4 страницы |