The Uncommon Reader is none other than HM the Queen who drifts accidentally into reading when her corgis stray into a mobile library parked at Buckingham Palace. The Uncommon Reader Summary SuperSummary, a modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, offers highquality study guides that feature detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, quotes, and essay topics. A site dedicated to book lovers providing a forum to discover and share commentary about the books and authors they enjoy. Author interviews, book reviews and lively book commentary are found here. Content includes books from bestselling, midlist and debut authors. When the Queen chases a straying corgi through the grounds of Buckingham Palace, she happens upon the City of Westminster travelling library, and begins a journey of discovery. 3 million books, saving over 12, 500 tonnes of books a year from going straight into landfill sites. The queen in The Uncommon Reader is very much that same woman: not remotely intellectual, but inquisitive and intelligent and quite impatient with overly longwinded or. The Uncommon Reader audiobook, by Alan Bennett It was the corgis' fault. When they strayed through the grounds of Buckingham Palace, the Queen discovered the City of Westminster travelling library. The Queen has never had much time for reading pleasure's always come second place to duty though now that one is here I suppose one ought to The Uncommon Reader: A Novella by Alan Bennett is novella. The Uncommon Reader: A Novella The protagonist of the story is Queen Elizabeth II, and it chronicles her journey to becoming a serious reader, and discovering the joys and dangers of reading. The author, Alan Bennett, is a playwright. As The Uncommon Reader shows, books have the power to inspire, to provoke, to send ripples through a monarchy, and, of course, if they are good, to make us talk about them. Praise for The Uncommon Reader Bennetts deadpan, selfdeprecating humor translates perfectly. The Uncommon Reader is an appreciation of reading not out of obligation, but purely for pleasure, without being preachy and pretentious. Bob Minzesheimer, USA Today For all its hilarity The Uncommon Reader has a heartfelt tone. It offers a lament on old age, some thoughts on reticence and a backward glance at a life wasted. Sunday Times An exquisitely produced jewel of a book. FreeBookNotes found 12 sites with book summaries or analysis of The Uncommon Reader. If there is a The Uncommon Reader SparkNotes, Shmoop guide, or Cliff Notes, you can find a. With The Uncommon Reader, he brings us a playful homage to the written word, imagining a world in which literature becomes a subversive bridge between powerbrokers and commoners. By turns cheeky and charming, the novella features the Queen herself as its protagonist. The Uncommon Reader is a political and literary satire. But it's also a lovely lesson in the redemptive and subversive power of reading and how one book can lead to another and another and another. added by DieFledermaus edit USA Today, Bob Minzesheimer (Oct 1, 2007) 3. Content by Alan Bennett The Uncommon Reader by Alan Bennett. Posted on December 16, 2013 Leave a comment. I discovered this wicked little gem on a table display in the library labelled Feel Good Reads. It is a comedic fantasy and looked like it would be fun, but I found it to be much more than that. The Uncommon Reader is a political and literary satire. But it's also a lovely lesson in the redemptive and subversive power of reading and how one book can lead to another and another and another. The Uncommon Reader is a gloriously entertaining comic narrative, but it is also much more: a deadly serious manifesto for the potential of reading to change lives, for its ability to broaden. Several people had recommended The Uncommon Reader to me over the last year, but somehow I only got around to it this morning. The idea is very simple the Queen gets hooked on reading but Bennett handles it perfectly. It's a delight, and takes about an hour to read. The Uncommon Reader is none other than HM the Queen who drifts accidentally into reading when her corgis stray into a mobile library parked at Buckingham Palace. She reads widely ( JR Ackerley, Jean Genet, Ivy Compton Burnett and the classics) and intelligently. The Uncommon Reader isn't a novel, it's more a short story or a novella. It has a whimsical pretext, the lead character is The Queen. Not some fictional queen our current queen, and yet it is a fictional story that Bennett has written about her, and a fictional portrait of her as a person, which makes it slightly odd yet interesting: It makes. With wit and humor, The Uncommon Reader explores the world of books and reading and provides wonderful insight into how books can create new worlds, introduce new types of people, and change lives. What is especially wonderful about the audio version is that the author reads his own work. The reader in Alan Bennetts hilariously and pointed novella, The Uncommon Reader, is a modernday queen of England who happens upon a mobile library outside Buckingham Palace. The Uncommon Reader is a political and literary satire. 3 5 10 At Windsor it was the evening of the state banquet and as the president of France took his place beside Her Majesty, the royal family formed up be An absorbing and masterfully researched portrait of a man who was a defining influence on the modern literary landscape, An Uncommon Reader asks us to consider the. The Uncommon Reader by Alan Bennett review This little gem is the best thing about the jubilee Nicholas Lezard. 00 EDT First published on Tue 29 May 2012 07. The Uncommon Reader is a novel by Alan Bennet. The book was initially published by The London Review of Books and then was released as a book by Faber and Faber. The Uncommon Reader is a celebration of both reading and its counterpart, independent thinking. In this age of corporate politics, Bennett suggests, even a monarch may have greater potential for empathy with her fellow man than does the machine of democratic government. I had of course heard no end of excellent things about 'The Uncommon Reader' and even picked it up a few times but had one big reservation about it. I don't on the whole like books that take a real personpersonality and put them in a fictional setting, I feel the same way when authors borrow other writers characters too, regardless of the quality of the writing. 0 out of 5 stars Uncommon insights into the mind of a reader A concise, entertaining example of how reading offers rewarding, equalizing experiences to all who take the journey, independent of caste. The Uncommon Reader Alan Bennett. At Windsor it was the evening of the state banquet and as the president of France took his place beside Her Majesty, the royal family formed up behind and the procession slowly moved off and through into the Waterloo Chamber. However, this uncommon reader creates an uncommon problem. The royal household dislikes the Queens new interest; it makes them uneasy. Books are devices that ignite the imagination. And devices like that are likely to explode. Alan Bennett reads his new story about HM the Queens allconsuming new interest, as heard on BBC Radio 4. Die souverne Leserin (englischer Originaltitel: The Uncommon Reader) ist eine Novelle des englischen Schriftstellers, Dramatikers, Regisseurs und Schauspielers Alan Bennett. Sie erzhlt die fiktive Wandlung der britischen Knigin von der Frau der Tat zur Liebhaberin schngeistiger Literatur. At Windsor it was the evening of the state banquet and as the president of France took his place beside Her Majesty, the royal family formed up behind and the procession slowly moved off and. At the same time, The Uncommon Reader is a wonderful parable about the value of literature, and its ability to transform people, perceptions and the world itself. Date published: Rated 3 out of 5 by piafinn from Cute This is a cute little book and not a big investment in time. The Uncommon Reader by Bennett, Alan: and a great selection of similar Used, New and Collectible Books available now at AbeBooks. The Uncommon Reader: A Novella by Alan Bennett From one of England's most celebrated writers, a funny and superbly observed novella about the Queen of England and the subversive power of reading When her corgis stray into a mobile library parked near Buckingham Palace, the Queen feels dutybound to borrow a book. The Uncommon Reader is a political and literary satire. But it's also a lovely lesson in the redemptive and subversive power of reading and how one book can lead to another and another and another. The Uncommon Reader is an appreciation of reading not out of obligation, but purely for pleasure, without being preachy and pretentious. Bob Minzesheimer, USA Today The Uncommon Reader, by Alan Bennet; published 2007 by Picador. The Uncommon Reader is an uncommon book. First of all, its technically a novella. Its only 120 pages, so if you wanted to, you could read it easily in one sitting. The Uncommon Reader is not an insiders look into the life of the person best known as the Queen of England but rather an opportunity for Bennett to play around with the caricature of the Queen, familiar to most of us from comedy sketches and news reels. Book Review: The Uncommon Reader My sisters and I are beginning our own little private book club. We are all readers, some of us enthusiastically avid readers, and one sister suggested we start out with a little book called The Uncommon Reader. AN UNCOMMON (ROYAL) READER In many ways The Uncommon Reader is the perfect book for modern times. Its short, funny and very entertaining. Best of all its a readers book. That may sound a bit odd I mean, arent all books for readers? The Uncommon Reader Quotes (showing 130 of 62) What she was finding also was how one book led to another, doors kept opening wherever she turned and. Our Reading Guide for The Uncommon Reader by Alan Bennett includes a Book Club Discussion Guide, Book Review, Plot SummarySynopsis and Author Bio. An Uncommon Reader: A Life of Edward Garnett, Mentor and Editor of Literary Genius, by Helen Smith, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 440 pages, 35. In the 1980s, for reasons that are still open to debate, there was a palpable uptick of interest in the literary landscape of findesicle and Edwardian England, a boomlet registered in forms both high and low, from academic studies to the sudden. THE SUNDAY TIMES LITERATURE BOOK OF THE YEAR 2017. Over a career spanning nearly fifty years Edward Garnett editor, critic and publishers reader would become one of the most influential men in twentiethcentury British literature..