DISCUSSION: A Book Uncovered

I have had this book for as long as I could remember. I have kept it only because I love books and I am incapable of throwing a book away, not because I wanted to read it. In fact, I did not even know the author. Neither did it occur to me to google his name. All that I knew of the book was its strange title. The closest I had come to glancing through is flipping the pages at a speed no one can read.

However, everything changed when on May 15th or thereabout I went on my usual blog-reading. There is this blog dedicated solely to reviewing books by individuals who have won the Nobel Laureate in Literature. It is there that I discovered that Elias Canetti, the author of Auto-da-fe, the book in question, was the 1981 Nobelist. I was shocked that I have never discovered this all this while. My happiness arose not because Elias Canetti won the Nobelist but that the book was worth the keep. With this information I embarked on a search on my copy of this old book. And read it.

Have you experienced a similar situation before? Have you had a book whose value only became apparent after a number of years?

Comments

  1. Nana, how can one know the value of a book until one's read it? The Nobel--or any other prize--is no guarantee of value; in fact, I'd much prefer to read a book by a non-Nobel winner vs. a Nobel winner given my experience reading books by each class of author.

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    Replies
    1. I agree with you. Personally I don't peg my readings to a Nobel. However, here I never gave the book a glance. I thought it was one of those books my parents read for grammar class.

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  2. The whole thing is interesting. Kind of bordering on weird. I'd be interested to read how the book affected you. If it did. Such a thing has never happened to me with a book (even though there are a couple that I have yet to read after sitting on my bookshelf for many years).

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    Replies
    1. I can say it is a great read; very illuminating.

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