Every Day I read by Hwang Bo-Reum
Korean Non-fiction
Original title -매일 읽겠습니다 Maeil ilgkesseumnida
Translator by Shanna Tan
Source – Personal copy
I think, as a reader and compulsive book buyer, this is one of those books I hadn’t heard of. I heard of the writer’s novel, I think I may have. brought it, but haven’t found it if I did. There have been a lot of similar title books, bookshops, etc., in the last few years. But I happened on this collection of essays by her by chance I was looking for the Han Kang Collection of essays that came out earlier this year but couldn’t find it in my local waterstones. But this caught my eye, and when I saw it was a collection of essays around books and reading, I picked it up. It consists of 53 essays on books and reading.
Last year, my friends and I had a simple year-end gathering.
The most extroverted person among us suggested that we do a gift exchange with a twist. Let’s each bring something from home that we don’t use, but that’s still good to be given as a present.
For an entire week, I mulled over what to bring.
Something in good condition and makes for a meaningful gift? I could only think of one thing: books.
Then came the harder question, which one? Because we planned to do a random draw, I had no idea who would get my present and what the person might enjoy.
Thinking that Id better avoid something overly niche, I ended up picking a 600-page art history book. It’d be interesting, I was sure, but then again, it was 600 pages.
All my friends had busy careers. Would they find the gift ridiculous? Or worse, think that I was ridiculous? Who would have the time for a thick book like that?
From the essay on big boks made me laugh it could been Bottoms dream as the book !
This is one of those books that is a mix of different things, part biography, it follows the writer’s life as a reader and also as a writer over the 53 essays. But it also shows how we, as readers, make a journey from what we do to what we start to read. Well, as she says, in the most part, the Best sellers are those books that most people read, those holiday books, or in a wider sense, I’d say 8-% of the books you see on the internet, most content creators or circle around the most popular books. As I never consider myself a content creator, I can say this. Then how do we read where, when an essay about train reading on her journey home after doing insane Korean working Hours. A book on the train. Tacking Big books, something I still struggle with over time. The subjects are all ones, as a reader, we know keeping lists, classics, Bookshops, and difficult books. It follows her Arc as a reader alongside her own life.
The other day, I was talking to a friend who had just finished reading Hermann Hesses Demian.
‘I think authors who come after Hesses time are incred-ible, she said.
‘Oh, why so?’ I asked.
‘After reading this masterpiece, how can anyone think of writing their own book? Demian already tells us everything about life!’
Talk about being a fan. I first read Demian many years ago, but when I turned thirty sometime back, I decided to reread it. I loved it even more, so that I went around urging everyone to read it.
Italo Calvino, in his book Why Read the Classics?,
says this:
The classics are those books about which you usually hear
People saying : “I’m rereading …, never T’m reading…?!”
I think Classics is my one weakness as a reader !!
I read reviews of this book, and I agree with some of the things people say. It is a book for maybe a newer reader, not a person like me, someone soaked in books and reading. But that isn’t to say I didn’t enjoy it. I loved it, and I saw a few Korean and other books mentioned that I will be keeping an eye out for. For me, this is the perfect gift for the young reader, probably into Korean fiction, everyone seems to be reading these days. It is a sort of book that would inspire someone that age to discover books. I think the world of books is so much easier to access these days. There are so many post-reading books from around the world on social media platforms; people seem to read so much faster than I do. But yes, this is perfect for the 20-something reader or anyone like me who will happily spend an evening devouring a book about books and reading, as it is that sort of book. Once you start, you need to finish in a sitting. Well, I felt that. Have you read this fun book?













