The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

oh my word!

- sfinan@dctmedia.co.uk Steve Finan in defence of the English language

Out of every setback comes opportunit­y. If we are to stay indoors for months, then how can we use that to our advantage? One way is to improve ourselves by reading at least one good book.

I was about 20, I think, when I resolved to work my way through “the classics”. Naively, I thought there might be a dozen, or so, books that would make me “well read”.

It became apparent that there are thousands of good books and no agreement on what a “classic” is.

Some say Dickens and the Brontes, some say Cormac McCarthy and Ernest Hemingway. Some say the Hitchhiker’s Guide or Harry Potter.

I tried hard. I greatly enjoyed Orwell, was moved by Steinbeck, but couldn’t understand Faulkner. I’ve little idea what anyone sees in The Catcher In The Rye, was confused by Catch-22, but The Scarlet Letter left an indelible mark.

The biggest thing I discovered, though, is that I haven’t scratched the surface. There are libraries full of books I’ve not got to yet. I’ve never read a Salman Rushdie book, or Jane Austen.

And lately I’ve been choosing history books or popular science books, and there are a lot of good ones, too. Try Beevor’s Stalingrad or Bill Bryson’s A Short History Of Nearly Everything.

I sometimes look at the popular science section and feel embarrasse­d by how much I clearly don’t know about, well, everything.

Get a Kindle, or download the Kindle app on your phone or tablet. There are gems for 99p.

If you do read a good book during this virus confinemen­t, then I have a tip. Don’t read it alone. Get a friend to read it too. Or, better still, a relative. Then talk about it when you phone, skype or communicat­e by other electronic whizzmagig­gery.

I promise, discussing the adventures of Hester Prynne or Rose of Sharon will make a better conversati­on than: “Have you got enough toilet roll?”.

If you have no one to discuss books with then tell me about it, or recommend a book to me. I might even be able to persuade The Courier editor to print some recommenda­tions.

Best of all, if you can get a young person interested in a good book, then you’ll be giving a gift that will be an advantage to them for the rest of their lives.

You’ll come out of these troubled times having made the world a better place.

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