Prize-winning critic Michael Dirda took your questions and comments concerning literature, books and the joys of reading.
Each week Michael Dirda’s name appears — in attractively large type — in The Post’s Book World section, where he writes about new novels, neglected classics, fat biographies, European literature, fantasy, science fiction, thrillers, poetry, works of scholarship, the occasional children’s book, almost anything under the rubric of “arts and letters.” Although he earned a Ph.D. in comparative literature from Cornell, Dirda has somehow managed to retain, well into middle age, a myopic 12-year-old’s exuberant passion for reading.
As he has for the past 40 years, Dirda says he still spends inordinate amounts of time mourning his lost youth, listening to music (classical, jazz, oldies, country and western), and daydreaming (”my only real hobby”). He claims that the happiest hours of his week are spent sitting in front of a computer, writing. His most recent books include “Readings: Essays and Literary Entertainments” (Indiana hardcover, 2000; Norton paperback, 2003), his self-portrait of the reader as a young man, “An Open Book” (Norton, 2003) and a collection of his essays and reviews titled “Bound to Please” (Norton, 2005) Last year he brought out “Book by Book: Notes on Reading and Life” (Henry Holt, 2006) and this fall Harcourt will publish “Classics for Pleasure.”
Dirda joined The Post in 1978, having grown up in the working-class steel town of Lorain, Ohio and graduated with highest honors in English from Oberlin College. His favorite writers are Stendhal, Chekhov, Jane Austen, Montaigne, Evelyn Waugh, T.S. Eliot, Nabokov, John Dickson Carr, Joseph Mitchell, P.G. Wodehouse and Jack Vance. He thinks the greatest novel of all time is either Murasaki Shikubu’s “The Tale of Genji” or Proust’s “A la recherche du temps perdu.” In a just world he would own Watteau’s painting “The Embarkation for Cythera.” Dirda is a member of several literary associations, including the Baker Street Irregulars and The Ghost Story Society. Despite a penchant for quiet and solitude, he enjoys giving talks, teaching, and traveling. People tell him that he can be pretty funny for a guy who usually has his nose in a book.
Michael Dirda: Welcome to Dirda on Books! Once again, I come to you from rainy, gray, cloudy Oberlin! Sigh. I had so looked forward to this visit back to my alma mater, but the weather has been horrible: snow, then cold, then rain and more rain. Apart from these dispiriting meterological conditions, –my two weeks have been busy but wonderful. Still, it has disrupted my work routines more than I expected and I should be spending more time with my mother than I have.
jane austen,new novel,Novel
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