First, an understatement: “I enjoyed
reading Alan Bennett’s “The Uncommon
Reader “(A Novella) which tells
of the Queen of England’s late-flowering enthusiasm for reading”. This is an understatement
since this little book offered more than sheer enjoyment over the entire course
of reading it. It is an Apology for Readers and who else is more fitting to
defend us mere lover of books than the Queen of England herself? As a reader,
mere reader, I felt my status “raised” after reading this little book. The
story started when the Queen discovered a van (The City of Westminster’s travelling library) parked at the rear
end of the Royal House where she met a ginger-head boy, Norman who works at the
kitchen and with whom she took a certain liking for and therefore improved his
station of being a dishwasher to a sort of “literary adviser”, an amanuensis. Discovering the delightful
pull of books, the queen attends to her public duties but not without a book at
hand and was either pestering her subjects about certain authors or dishing
them books to read. But as good stories are, this book didn’t run out of people
to antagonize on her enthusiasm. Sir Kevin Scatchard, the queen’s private
secretary, is one of those who’s determined to turn the queen from her reading
saying that it is nothing but a withdrawal or an act of selfishness, something
done for pleasure and therefore not an obligation. This is a little book fraught
with British humour; dry, ascerbic, guaranteed to bring out a laugh from its
sheer frankness and thoughtfulness. It is about one who loves books and about
one who finds an importance in reading, be it for pleasure or enlightenment or
a self inflicted duty. It is a journey of a bibliogamist and with mentions of
names like Proust, Vikram Seth, Alice
Munro, Cecil Beaton, it promises of a delightful and comical telling of an
opsimath (one who learns only late in life) against those who finds reading a
complete waste of one’s time.
****
“Books are wonderful, aren’t they?” she smiled to the vice-chancellor,
who concurred.
At the risk of sounding like a piece of steak,’ she said, ‘they
tenderise one.’
p. 105
****
She
switched off the light on again and reached for her notebook and wrote: “You
don’t put your life into your books. You find it there.”
Then she went to sleep.
p. 101
****
“Once I start a book I finish
it. That was the way one was brought up. Books, bread and butter, mashed potato
- one finishes what's on one's plate. That's always been my philosophy.”
****
“Who is above literature? You might as well say one was above humanity.
But, as I say, my purpose is not primarily literary: analysis and reflection.
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