What makes Slightly Foxed: The Real Reader’s Quarterly so great? As I perused the latest issue, I realized that in many ways it’s exactly what I wish my blog to be, and what I appreciate about other blogs. Each issue contains around a dozen and a half essays in which readers of many stripes celebrate books that have moved, enlightened, impressed, or astonished them. The selection of titles is wonderfully eclectic, blithely leaping over barriers of genre, subject matter, language, geography, target age, and publication date.
The current issue, for example, includes pieces on the journal written by Sir Walter Scott as he teetered on the brink of bankruptcy; Alison Lurie’s Los Angeles novel The Nowhere City; exploring Athens with a nineteenth-century Murray guide (better than Baedecker); a novel of women’s rights by a famous suffragette (and discarded lover of H.G. Wells); Spanish poet Juan Ramon Jimenez’s prose ode to his donkey; and many more. With some well-known classics, some obscure and forgotten titles, and some overlooked contemporary gems, it’s a good representation of the kind of assortment to be found in each quarterly issue, though the actual content is always delightfully unexpected. Whether or not I would previously have thought to be interested in such topics, I always read each issue from cover to cover with unabated joy in the expansion of my reading horizons.
Though the authors of these pieces are often celebrated writers and scholars themselves, their tone is unstuffy, generous, and never, ever pretentious. (You can tell that they don’t take themselves too seriously from the amusing biographical snippets at the end of each essay.) They frequently include anecdotes of how a book came into their lives or what role it played for them personally. Yet their writing is always intelligent, discerning, and considered, as they bring subjective interest to their topics without losing their objective critical eyes.
Bloggers have gotten some bad press lately for not being “real readers,” not qualified to pass judgment on the books they discuss. When the name-calling gets ugly, put down your weapons and pick up an issue of Slightly Foxed. It will remind you of what it really means to be a reader: to be endlessly intrigued and delighted by what we can learn from books, and how they can both challenge and console us. It’s an inspiration to me in my own small efforts to share one reader’s journey, and I hope will be to you as well.
As well as their quarterly publication in print and digital form, Slightly Foxed also offers their own line of beautifully produced books and runs a London bookshop.
Digital-only subscriptions are available from Exact Editions, by the quarter or the year (subscriptions include access to all back issues).
A copy was received from the publisher for review consideration. No other compensation was received, and all opinions expressed are my own.
sound intriguing!
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Addictively so.
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Sounds marvelous! I wish they offered digital-only subscriptions, though. The overseas price is a little hefty for me at this point.
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You can get one from Exact Editions: http://www.exacteditions.com/read/slightly-foxed?sid=356 — and it’s actually an excellent deal because with your current subscription you get access to ALL the back issues! I’ll edit the post to include that option.
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This sounds great. It seems like the kind of stuff that I like to devour.
You comments about bloggers coming under criticism is interesting. I will be shortly posting on the subject of what I think blogging is about for me as I have been thinking about these subjects.
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That is a very interesting topic as well. I look forward to reading your thoughts.
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This sounds so fun! I love the idea of a magazine like a book blog 🙂
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That’s just how I think of it — but it does have a lot in common with my favorite blogs.
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I love Slightly Foxed. I buy it most quarters from my local indie bookshop. It’s so different in its unstuffiness, and if you ever get to South Kensington, the bookshop is a treat.
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I’m dying to go to the bookshop too! I think I’m going to give myself a trip to England for my next big birthday.
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