The Browser's Ecstasy: A Meditation on Reading
Louis Menand, writing in The New Yorker, called Geoffrey O'Brien's The Phantom Empire "a prose poem about the pleasures and distractions of movie-watching", "an ambitiously literary attempt to write about the (mystery of the) medium as though it were a dream the author had just awakened from". Now, in Tbe Browser's Ecstasy, O'Brien has written a prose poem about reading, a playful, epigrammatic nocturne upon the dream-state one falls into when "lost in a book", upon the uncanny, trancelike pleasure of making silent marks on paper utter sounds inside one's head.We call The Browser's Ecstasy a "Meditation on Reading", but like any truly original book — and especially the short book that goes both far and deep — it resists easy summary and classification. As Luc Sante once wrote, "The density of O'Brien's work makes word count irrelevant as an index of substance; he is seemingly capable of compressing entire encyclopedias into his parenthetical asides. I defy you to name any precedent for what he does. He's a school unto himself".
- Author
- Geoffrey O'Brien
- Format
- hardcover
- Pages
- 153
- Publisher
- Counterpoint LLC
- Language
- english
- ISBN
- 9781582430560
- Release date
- 2000
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