
Ex Libris
Confessions of a Common Reader
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Narrated by:
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Suzanne Toren
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By:
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Anne Fadiman
About this listen
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Critic reviews
"Fadiman's writing...is lively and sparkling with earthy little surprises." (Publishers Weekly)
"Fadiman writes with an appealing warmth and humor." (Library Journal)
What listeners say about Ex Libris
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
- Diana
- 04-14-05
Reading IS fun!
This is a book I will listen to again. I thoroughly enjoyed getting to know Ms. Fadiman's quirky family. I vicariously searched used book stores with her and polled my own reading friends regarding what they would consider to be their "odd shelf." The reader, Suzanne Toren, adds just the right touch of humor and sophistication to make this book a very enjoyable listen! Listening to this book reminded me of the common bonds among readers and at the same time, the uniqueness of our own stories.
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7 people found this helpful
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- Marj
- 02-25-18
Proofreader Humor
You must be an inveterate proof reader to like it...Wonderful!! English language lovers preferably!
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- Kindle Customer
- 06-24-14
Wishing for more..... or less
Any additional comments?
This book is a collection of essays by an obviously intelligent, well-read writer. For the most part, I found her observations amusing, touching, and completely relatable. However, there were a couple of the essays that had a certain tone of "I'm-so-much-smarter-than-you-are" which took away from the utter enjoyment of the whole book. However, overall, I loved the passion for books and reading that she so powerfully shared and I think all avid-readers will feel somewhat of a kinship in her stories because they too love books.
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- M. Gray
- 03-24-25
A modern classic
A master class in literary reflection. What I loved most was how passionately, but indirectly, the author advocated for making literacy a part of your life, and yet she never sounded preachy.
There is a thrill in listening to the way she combines prose. A lover of any literary classic would find this book a welcome addition to their library.
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- Robert B Lower
- 03-14-20
The narrator does her no favours
The essays are generally excellent. The reading is clear,lively and carefully enunciated, although calling British navy officers “lootenants” clangs as offensively on the ear as a Brit calling an American a “leftenant”would. But my more serious objection is to the reader’s tone. She gives Ms Fadiman a supercilious and self-congratulatory voice which never and must never come across in print. Pleasure, yes, superior self-satisfaction, no.
Still, the essays are worth it.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Blue Canary
- 01-19-12
A Must for Lovers of the Written Word
This book has long been a favorite of mine, and I was delighted to find it here, not only in a clear and crisp audio format, but also narrated beautifully by a reader who not only clearly understands the wonderful humor of the book, but even proves herself more than up to the challenge of Ms. Fadiman's globe-trotting, century-hopping, sesquipedalian vocabulary. And yes, this was the book that first taught me "Sesquipedalian." Anne Fadiman's joyful tribute to bibliophiles everywhere is as delightful here as it was the first (and second, and third...) time that I read it.
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1 person found this helpful