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Bibliophobia
Bibliophobia by ​Sarah Chihaya
by ​Sarah Chihaya
 
Hardback.
Price: $29.00

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New York, NY: Random House (February 4, 2025)

Hardback.

New in dust jacket.

"A must for the obsessive reader." Elif Batuman, author of Either/Or and The Idiot

A "soul-baring, witty, and slyly provocative"* memoir about reading, writing, and depression (Whiting Foundation)

"Bibliophobia: occasionally manifests as an acute, literal fear of books, though more frequently develops as a generalized anxiety about reading in patients who have previously experienced profound—perhaps too profound—attachments to books and literature… You may have bibliophobia if you frequently experience intense reactions to books that somehow act on you, or activate you, in ways that you suspect are unhealthy or hurtful—or at times, simply bad for you. And yet, they are necessary; you would not be you without them.”

Have you ever read a book and felt so gutted by it that you knew you’d never recover? That it made you sit differently in your own skin? A book that complicated everything you believed in and changed the way you read the world around you forever? This is what Sarah Chihaya calls a “Life Ruiner”. Sarah’s Life Ruiner was The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison. When she read it in her high school English class, she could no longer pretend not to notice how alien she felt as a Japanese American in a predominantly White suburb of Cleveland. Shaken, she set out on a quest—for the book that would show her who she was and how to live in an inhospitable world.

There were lots of scripts available, and she tried to follow them—skinny athlete, angsty artist, ambitious academic. But a lifelong struggle with depression thwarted the resolution to every plot, and when she was hospitalized for a nervous breakdown, the world became an unreadable blank page. In the aftermath, she was faced with a question: can we ever truly rewrite the stories that govern our lives?

Alternately searing and laugh-out-loud funny, Bibliophobia is a deft combination of memoir and criticism in the vein of Geoff Dyer and Olivia Laing. Through a series of books, including The Bluest Eye, Anne of Green Gables, Possession, A Tale for the Time Being, and The Last Samurai, Sarah Chihaya interrogates her cultural identity, her relationship with depression, and the necessary and painful ways that books can push back on the readers who love them.

Sarah Chihaya is a critic and essayist, and is the recipient of a 2023 Whiting Creative Nonfiction Grant. Her work has appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Review of Books, The Nation, New York magazine, and The Yale Review, among other places, and she is the co-author of The Ferrante Letters: An Experiment in Collective Criticism. She lives in Queens, New York.

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