Sven Birkerts quotes:

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  • I read books to read myself.

  • If literature survives at all, it is as retreat for those who refuse to assimilate to American mass culture.

  • The books that matter to me...are those that galvanize something inside me. I read books to read myself.

  • Where am I when I am involved in a book?

  • To achieve deep focus nowadays is also to have struck a blow against the dissipation of self; it is to have strengthened one's essential position [in life].

  • A book is solitude, privacy; it is a way of holding the self apart from the crush of the outer world.

  • A poem is a construction of inner space. Language is to inner space as light is to material space.

  • Every place, once unique, itself, is strangely shot through with radiations from every other place. "?There' was then; "?here' is now.

  • I speak as an unregenerate reader, one who still believes that language and not technology is the true evolutionary miracle. I have not yet given up on the idea that the experience of literature offers a kind of wisdom that cannot be discovered elsewhere; that there is profundity in the verbal encounter itself, never mind what further profundities that author has to offer; and that for a host of reasons the bound book is the ideal vehicle for the written word.

  • If anything has changed about my reading over the years, it is that I value the state a book puts me in more that I value the specific contents.

  • Language is the soul's ozone layer and we thin it at our peril.

  • Poetry springs directly from our primal need and capacity for communication[Poetry] mobilizes such a concentration of devices, such an intensification of language via rhythm, syntax, image and metaphor. Reading it-the best of it-can create another, very different kind of perpetual present, an awareness that can be as ongoing in the soul as the stop-time of trauma.

  • Reading, because we control it, is adaptable to our needs and rhythms. We are free to indulge our subjective associative impulse; the term I coin for this is deep reading: the slow and meditative possession of a book. We don't just read the words, we dream our lives in their vicinity. The printed page becomes a kind of wrought-iron fence we crawl through, returning, once we have wandered, to the very place we started.

  • What reading does, ultimately, is keep alive the dangerous and exhilarating idea that life is not a sequence of lived moments, but a destiny.

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