Skip to content
INTERNATIONAL DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.
INTERNATIONAL DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.

Why Read

Selected Writings 2001 – 2021

Will Self
Barcode 9781611856613
Hardback

Sold out
Original price £16.99
Original price £16.99 - Original price £16.99
Original price £16.99
Current price £15.92
£15.92 - £15.92
Current price £15.92

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Out of stock

Release Date: 03/11/2022

Edition: Main
Genre: Literary Criticism
Sub-Genre: Biography
Label: Grove Press / Atlantic Monthly Press
Language: English
Publisher: Grove Press / Atlantic Monthly Press

Selected Writings 2001 – 2021

From the Booker-shortlisted author of Umbrella, a world-girdling collection of writings inspired by a life lived in and for literature.


'Will Self may not be the last modernist at work but at the moment he's the most fascinating of the tradition's torch bearers.' New York

From one of the most unusual and distinctive writers working today, dubbed 'the most daring and delightful novelist of his generation' by the Guardian, Will Self's Why Read is a cornucopia of thoughtful and brilliantly witty essays on writing and literature.

Self takes us with him: from the foibles of his typewriter repairman to the irradiated exclusion zone of Chernobyl, to the Australian outback and to literary forms past and future. With his characteristic intellectual brio, Self aims his inimitable eye at titans of literature like Woolf, Kafka, Orwell and Conrad. He writes movingly on W.G. Sebald's childhood in Germany and provocatively describes the elevation of William S. Burroughs's Junky from shocking pulp novel to beloved cult classic. Self also expands on his regular column in Literary Hub to ask readers how, what and ultimately why we should read in an ever-changing world. Whether he is writing on the rise of the bookshelf as an item of furniture in the nineteenth century or on the impossibility of Googling his own name in a world lived online, Self's trademark intoxicating prose and mordant, energetic humour infuse every piece.