Book description
The Complete Polysyllabic Spree is Nick Hornby's wickedly funny
journey through reading
This is not a book of reviews. This not a book that sneers at other
books. This is a book about reading - about enjoying books wherever
and however you find them.
Nick Hornby, author of the bestsellers About a Boy and
Fever Pitch - takes us on a hilarious and perceptive tour
through the books he bought, the books he read and his thoughts on
literature. He is first and foremost a reader and he approaches books
like the rest of us: hoping to pick up one he can't put down. The
Complete Polysyllabic Spree is a diary of sorts, charting his
reading life over two years. It is a celebration of why we read - its
pleasures, its disappointments and its surprises. And above all, it is
for you - the ever hopeful reader.
For fans of Bill Bryson and Stephen Fry, and for bookworms eveywhere,
this witty, passionate book will make you cherish the world of letters
anew.
'An engaged and engaging ramble around one reader's mind' The Times
'Not only does it make you want to read more but, like all great
books, it's also terrific company' Metro
'For anyone whose idea of a good time is arguing with friends about
their favourite books...amusing and contagiously enthusiastic' Big Issue
Nick Hornby has captivated readers and achieved widespread critical
acclaim for his comic, well-observed novels About a Boy,
High Fidelity, How to be Good, A Long Way Down
(shortlisted for the Whitbread Award), Slam and Juliet,
Naked. His two additional works of non-fiction, 31 Songs
(shortlisted for the National Book Critics Circle Award) and Fever
Pitch (winner of the William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award)
are also available from Penguin.
Nick Hornby is the bestselling author of
High Fidelity, About a
Boy, How to be Good
and
A Long Way Down
(shortlisted for the 2005 Whitbread Novel of the Year Award), as well as
the non-fiction
Fever Pitch
and
31 Songs.
He is the recipient of the E. M. Forster Award, the W. H. Smith Award
for Fiction and the Writers' Writer Award at the Orange International
Writers' Festival. He lives in Highbury, North London.