Every Day I Read by Hwang Bo-Reum, translated by Shanna Tan (Bloomsbury) ~Janet Brown
Reading might be the most solitary action we undertake. We talk about what we read, why we read, and where we read, but how we read remains undiscussed. Book clubs, silent reading gatherings, and acknowledgements of reading as therapy are all places of common ground but when we sit with a book, whether it's in paper or on a screen, nothing comes in between our page-turning and the words on those pages. Perhaps someone comments on how rapidly or slowly we move on to the next book, but nobody knows how we absorb its words in the moment of reading. It's an action that's as private as prayer and as individual as grief.
Every Day I Read, Hwang Bo-Reum says and my first reaction was "So what?" That's like saying "Every Day I Breathe.” Even people who aren't bibliophiles are readers; my years of working in bookstores taught me that. Everybody reads: comic books, instruction manuals, cookbooks, the Bible, the Koran, first aid instructions. Books are part of everyone's lives even if they never read for pleasure.
But still I bought Hwang's book because of the incomprensible hubris of its subtitle: 53 Ways to Get Closer to Books. What could she possibly tell me that would increase the intimate and essential relationship I've had with words on a page for the past 73 years?
She hooked me with her first paragraph because she asks the same questions I did as a bookseller. Tell me who you are and I'll tell you what you might want to read. Then she intrigued me by espousing the universal appeal of books on the bestseller lists. Clearly this reader was more democratic and pragmatic than my snobbish literary self.
As it turns out, she's a much more adventurous reader too. She's taught herself how to read translated literature that native speakers (and by that I mean me) shy away from after encountering the first sentence.
"Don't we love a good challenge," a friend asks Hwang when she's surprised that a 600-page book on art history is one of the most popular offerings at a book exchange. Hwang certainly does. Her reading ranges from Anne Fadiman's delightful essay collection, Ex Libris to Ideas and Opinions by Albert Einstein. She quotes from a book written by a Korean bartender called How to Drink a Novel, and later admits "It was only after reading Aristotle that I've never sought out happiness." How did she achieve this wide-ranging and fearless approach to reading?
Although she chooses a book based on how it makes her feel when she first picks it up, Hwang is a fervent advocate of going beyond her comfort zone, be it emotionally or intellectually. She quotes Kafka's advice, "We ought to read only the books that wound or stab us," while refusing to be limited by those words, and when she's daunted by a book, she'll read a sentence over and over until she understands it. Only then will she move on to the next and the next, until she’s finally reached the last page. (She also espouses reading more than one book at a time. No wonder!)
While many of her essays concentrate on why she reads, the most compelling pieces tell us how she does this. Will I use her method and follow her into Nichomachean Ethics? Will I finally pick up Flaubert's Parrot? Only Hwang Bo-Reum has made me wonder "Why not?"
Where will she take you? Go beyond the cute cover filled with cats and bookshelves to find out.