On Rereading

On Rereading by Patricia Meyer Spacks, published by Harvard University Press on November 18, 2013, explores the nuances of rereading literature through a year-long personal project. Spacks reflects on her experiences with a variety of novels, including childhood favorites and canonical works, examining the motivations behind the act of revisiting these texts. This edition comprises 304 pages and is presented in English.
Readers will find Spacks addressing intriguing questions about the reasons for rereading, such as the emotional and psychological needs it fulfills. She delves into the pleasures associated with revisiting beloved stories and the complexities of guilt that can arise from choosing to reread over exploring new literature. Through her exploration, Spacks reveals how rereading can illuminate personal growth and self-understanding, making connections between the reader’s evolving identity and the texts they cherish.
Official synopsis Publisher
After retiring from a lifetime of teaching literature, Patricia Meyer Spacks embarked on a year-long project of rereading dozens of novels: childhood favorites, fiction first encountered in young adulthood and never before revisited, books frequently reread, canonical works of literature she was supposed to have liked but didn’t, guilty pleasures (books she oughtn’t to have liked but did), and stories reread for fun vs. those read for the classroom. On Rereading records the sometimes surprising, always fascinating, results of her personal experiment.
Spacks addresses a number of intriguing questions raised by the purposeful act of rereading: Why do we reread novels when, in many instances, we can remember the plot? Why, for example, do some lovers of Jane Austen’s fiction reread her novels every year (or oftener)? Why do young children love to hear the same story read aloud every night at bedtime? And why, as adults, do we return to childhood favorites such as The Hobbit, Alice in Wonderland, and the Harry Potter novels? What pleasures does rereading bring? What psychological needs does it answer? What guilt does it induce when life is short and there are so many other things to do (and so many other books to read)? Rereading, Spacks discovers, helps us to make sense of ourselves. It brings us sharply in contact with how we, like the books we reread, have both changed and remained the same.
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