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5.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful Collection by a Gifted Author, Mar 10 2012
I'm not sure why my mother gave me a copy of this book for Christmas last year. She reads mysteries and I write them, so a literary essay collection was a surprise. Perhaps she'd been intrigued by the caption inside: "This is a perfect book for life's passionate obsessives." Mom knows I'm far more obsessed with writing than cooking and cleaning. Author Anne Fadiman maintains that, although there are plenty of critical and personal essays to read, the familiar essay is a dying art form. She's probably right, as I didn't even understand the term at first. She defines critical essays as containing more brain than heart, while personal essays have more heart than brain. The familiar essay, Fadiman says, is equal measures of both and, in this book she delivers exceptionally well. At Large and At Small is a terrific collection, not only because Fadiman is a gifted writer, but because she chooses an eclectic mix of topics. The dozen essays cover everything from butterfly collecting in childhood, to a fondness for Charles Lamb and Samuel Coleridge. The essays are informative, entertaining, poignant, and sometimes funny. Her piece about her and her brother's lifelong passion for ice cream is hilarious. Perhaps the most important purpose of this collection is to help readers appreciate the familiar essay, and want to read more of them. Fadiman has certainly succeeded with me.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Love to invite her for dinner!, Nov 11 2008
I loved Fadiman's other book, Ex Libris, and At Large continues to delight. Fadiman has a relentlessly curious mind and a terrific writing style. I felt as though I'd had a series of scintillating conversations with a brilliant, generous, funny friend. I can't recommend this book enough. The bibliography alone is worth the price. I fear my already groaning shelves will have to accommodate even more new books.
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41 of 43 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Must-Read Book of Essays, Jun 14 2007
By Alan Naftalin - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: At Large And At Small (Hardcover)
Anne Fadiman in one of her essays says that a key question in the culture wars is: "Should we read great books because of their literary value or because they . . . teach us how to live?" I am not much interested in the culture wars. I read books, great and small, for pleasure. I do not remember when I have read a book with greater pleasure than this small, beautifully written, book of essays. The subjects range from butterfly collecting to ice cream to Coleridge to flying the flag after 9/11 to unexpected death. The author reveals herself as learned, loving and at times very funny. Give yourself a treat. Read this book.
16 of 18 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
this book will make you smarter, Nov 8 2007
By Raya Madison "lifelong lit lover" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: At Large And At Small (Hardcover)
Really, it will. In this collection of essays (available separately in other venues, but nestled together with great mutual congeniality in this book), Fadiman begins with her own confessed interests and obsessions--Charles Lamb and Coleridge, ice cream and coffee, arctic exploration and mail delivery, mounting butterflies and flying the flag--and traces a patient, curious path through all sorts of trackless wildernesses (ancient literature, Romantic poetry, familiar essays and out-of-print tomes) to piece together observations that are quietly illuminating not just of the subject matter but the ways Fadiman--quietly, subtly--suggests that books are to read, loves are to be cherished, life is to be lived. The clarity and precision of her prose are breath-taking; readers would never guess that Fadiman's process could entail, as she reveals in one essay, moving paragraphs about in the manner that a pet hamster transports food from one side of his cage to the other. Surprising, rewarding, and deeply interesting, this book is a necessary addition not just to your library but your experience, as it will make you want to read more widely, look more closely, and think more deeply about things, just as Fadiman does.
15 of 17 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
write stuff, July 5 2007
By A. Fine - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: At Large And At Small (Hardcover)
Anne Fadiman's prose is as good as it gets, even if the subjects of her essays are not always as interesting to the rest of us as they are to her. Never afraid to use a large word when a diminutive one might do, an occasional trip to the dictionary may be necessary. But the trip is always informative, and my brain was grateful for the exercise.
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