The Man Within My Head

Author:   Pico Iyer
Publisher:   Random House USA Inc
ISBN:  

9780307387561


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   22 January 2013
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Man Within My Head


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Overview

Ever since he first discovered Graham Greene's work, Pico Iyer has felt a haunting closeness with the English writer. In The Man Within My Head, Iyer follows Greene's trail from his first novel, The Man Within, to such later classics as The Quiet American, examining Greene's obsessions, his elusiveness, and his penchant for mystery. The deeper he plunges into this exploration, the more Iyer begins to wonder whether the man within his head might not be Greene but his own father, or perhaps some more shadowy aspect of himself. Drawing upon experiences across the globe, from Cuba to Bhutan, and moving, as Greene would, from Sri Lanka in war to intimate moments of introspection, this is the most personal and revelatory book yet from one of our most astute observers of inner journeys and crossing cultures.

Full Product Details

Author:   Pico Iyer
Publisher:   Random House USA Inc
Imprint:   Vintage Books
Dimensions:   Width: 13.30cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 20.30cm
Weight:   0.238kg
ISBN:  

9780307387561


ISBN 10:   0307387569
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   22 January 2013
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

-Resonates deeply...In the hands of a lesser writer, the dueling father figures would dissolve into melodrama, but Iyer weaves them brilliantly.- -Publishers Weekly -[Iyer] is a wonderful wordsmith, and he provides engaging stories.- -Kirkus -It may be that Iyer's beautifully contoured sentences embody all the landscapes he's absorbed as he's traveled the world, pen in hand. Iyer is always present in his celebrated books, but never to the extent he is here in this captivating memoir of an unsought, often unnerving affinity...Iyer's deep-diving expedition also illuminates the mystery and spirit of the literary imperative: 'A writer is a palmist, reading the lines of the world.'- -Booklist -A contemplative, idiosyncratic book, a kind of side trip that diverges from the routes of Iyer's usual writing...as -The Man Within My Head- demonstrates, there's fellowship to be found in the community of eloquent strangers, an eternal literary companionship.- -The New York Times Book Review -A courageous, intriguing book, perhaps better described generically not as a memoir but a confession.- -The New York Review -As Iyer investigates Greene's life, he finds more parallels with his own, some superficial and some profound, which Iyer susses out in his usual composed, flowing prose.- -The Daily Beast -Iyer's rich and provocative book invites us to see the world in which we find ourselves today in a new and revealing light, and that's the real measure of his accomplishment. 'A writer is a palmist, reading the lines of the world, ' Iyer says of Greene, but he could be describing himself just as well.- -JewishJournal.com -[Iyer] is masterful at describing travel...a rewarding read.- -Livemint.com -This book is an original, a literary feat, a kind of counter-biography and shadow-autobiography. I can't think of another quite like it...The Man Within My Head is Iyer's richest, wisest book to date.- -The Hindu -Iyer writes admiringly and persuasively about Greene in ways that the novelist may have approved...an engrossing read.- -Commenweal Magazine


Resonates deeply...In the hands of a lesser writer, the dueling father figures would dissolve into melodrama, but Iyer weaves them brilliantly. - Publishers Weekly <br> [Iyer] is a wonderful wordsmith, and he provides engaging stories. - Kirkus <br> It may be that Iyer's beautifully contoured sentences embody all the landscapes he's absorbed as he's traveled the world, pen in hand. Iyer is always present in his celebrated books, but never to the extent he is here in this captivating memoir of an unsought, often unnerving affinity...Iyer's deep-diving expedition also illuminates the mystery and spirit of the literary imperative: 'A writer is a palmist, reading the lines of the world.' - Booklist <br> A contemplative, idiosyncratic book, a kind of side trip that diverges from the routes of Iyer's usual writing...as The Man Within My Head demonstrates, there's fellowship to be found in the community of eloquent strangers, an eternal literary companionship. - The New York Times Book Review <br> A courageous, intriguing book, perhaps better described generically not as a memoir but a confession. - The New York Review <br> As Iyer investigates Greene's life, he finds more parallels with his own, some superficial and some profound, which Iyer susses out in his usual composed, flowing prose. - The Daily Beast <br> Iyer's rich and provocative book invites us to see the world in which we find ourselves today in a new and revealing light, and that's the real measure of his accomplishment. 'A writer is a palmist, reading the lines of the world, ' Iyer says of Greene, but he could be describing himself just as well. -JewishJournal.com <br> [Iyer] is masterful at describing travel...a rewarding read. -Livemint.com <br> This book is an original, a literary feat, a kind of counter-biography and shadow-autobiography. I can't think of another quite like it... The Man Within My Head is Iyer's richest, wisest book to date. - The Hindu


“Resonates deeply…In the hands of a lesser writer, the dueling father figures would dissolve into melodrama, but Iyer weaves them brilliantly.” –Publishers Weekly    “[Iyer] is a wonderful wordsmith, and he provides engaging stories.” –Kirkus   “It may be that Iyer’s beautifully contoured sentences embody all the landscapes he’s absorbed as he’s traveled the world, pen in hand. Iyer is always present in his celebrated books, but never to the extent he is here in this captivating memoir of an unsought, often unnerving affinity…Iyer’s deep-diving expedition also illuminates the mystery and spirit of the literary imperative: ‘A writer is a palmist, reading the lines of the world.’” –Booklist   “A contemplative, idiosyncratic book, a kind of side trip that diverges from the routes of Iyer’s usual writing…as “The Man Within My Head” demonstrates, there’s fellowship to be found in the community of eloquent strangers, an eternal literary companionship.” –The New York Times Book Review   “A courageous, intriguing book, perhaps better described generically not as a memoir but a confession.” –The New York Review  “As Iyer investigates Greene’s life, he finds more parallels with his own, some superficial and some profound, which Iyer susses out in his usual composed, flowing prose.” –The Daily Beast “Iyer’s rich and provocative book invites us to see the world in which we find ourselves today in a new and revealing light, and that’s the real measure of his accomplishment. ‘A writer is a palmist, reading the lines of the world,’ Iyer says of Greene, but he could be describing himself just as well.” –JewishJournal.com  “[Iyer] is masterful at describing travel…a rewarding read.” –Livemint.com    “This book is an original, a literary feat, a kind of counter-biography and shadow-autobiography. I can’t think of another quite like it...The Man Within My Head is Iyer’s richest, wisest book to date.” –The Hindu  “Iyer writes admiringly and persuasively about Greene in ways that the novelist may have approved…an engrossing read.” –Commenweal Magazine


Author Information

Pico Iyer has written nonfiction books on globalism, Japan, the Fourteenth Dalai Lama, forgotten places, and novels on Revolutionary Cuba and Islamic mysticism. He regularly writes on literature for The New York Review of Books, on travel for the Financial Times, and on global culture and the news for Time, The New York Times, and magazines around the world.

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