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Book Reviews of Dear Fahrenheit 451: Love and Heartbreak in the Stacks

Dear Fahrenheit 451: Love and Heartbreak in the Stacks
Dear Fahrenheit 451 Love and Heartbreak in the Stacks
Author: Annie Spence
ISBN-13: 9781250106490
ISBN-10: 1250106494
Publication Date: 9/26/2017
Pages: 256
Rating:
  • Currently 4.1/5 Stars.
 14

4.1 stars, based on 14 ratings
Publisher: Flatiron Books
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

3 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

debbiemd avatar reviewed Dear Fahrenheit 451: Love and Heartbreak in the Stacks on
Non-fiction quick read by a librarian in the form of letters to books. Each chapter was a letter to a different book. Love letters. Break up letters. Relatable since I felt the same way about many of the books or types of books. Some quirky book choices. Some letters were laugh out loud funny. Others made me think or want to re-read. And at the end were lists of books. I died and went to heaven! Added a few titles to my TBR list. Some favorites letters:
(1) Russian literature - check out to look well read and worldly but can't seem to actually pick it up and start reading. Check!
(2) The Time Traveler's Wife. Loved this book. Need to re-read!
(3) Fancy bookshelf at a party - LOL!
(4) Saw Frog and Toad by Lobel in a whole new way. Food and procrastination. Need to look at this one again too!
(5) Color Me Beautiful - beauty color advice book from the 80s. How could I forget this one? Brought back so many high school memories. And when she says she's never worn certain colors in the decades since? Check!
(6) Another children's book to re-read - Yertle the Turtle by Seuss. Is this really about the little people getting a little mad and overthrowing a dictatorship?!
Readnmachine avatar reviewed Dear Fahrenheit 451: Love and Heartbreak in the Stacks on + 1477 more book reviews
This quirky little book takes a unique idea and develops it with verve and affection. In large part, it is precisely what it says it is â a series of letters to books, as if they were people â love letters, thank-you notes, quick apologies, and Dear John missives, using the point of view of either a librarian or an avid reader (both of which describe the author). In saying goodbye to an outdated, no longer popular cookbook, Librarian Spence writes âYou are delightful and you're going to make a swell book â for someone else. At the used book sale.â In a thank-you letter to a favorite children's book, Reader Spence writes âI've wanted to write you for so long. Since I was just a kid â before I had the right words to tell you how much I loved your dark humor, or thank you for making a bookish girl with DIY bangs like me the hero of a story.â

Most readers will probably find at least one of their favorites mentioned here, and most will come away with a list of titles to be added to their TBR stack or authors to be sampled â my score was eight. It doesn't hurt that many of her favorites are also in my permanent collection. You may find yourself nodding when Spence praises a favorite title or looking askance and thinking âDid we read the same book?â when she disses one.

Spence winds up the book by reverting to librarian-ism and compiling several recommended reading lists, but again she manages to do it with her own special flair. We have a list of book pairs that deal with essentially the same concept but from radically different viewpoints, books that deal with alternate realities, books to lure non-readers into reading, and my favorite â books that lead to more books â e.g. those reading adventures in which perhaps a book set in a certain locale leads you to reading up on that area which drags you into the biography of someone important in its history which plunks you down in the middle of a book about a political or technological revolution, wondering how you got there.

She also graces us with a âRecovery Readingâ list â âbooks that you turn to when you're on the mend from a book that gave you nightmares or left you in a dark headspace and you need some lighter fare but don't want to give up quality.â

This breezy little book can be read in an afternoon, or it can lead directly down the rabbit-hole of bibliophilia. You might want to pack a lunch and maybe take a sweater, just in case.
officerripley avatar reviewed Dear Fahrenheit 451: Love and Heartbreak in the Stacks on + 258 more book reviews
Just amazing; the first book that's made me laugh out loud in years. You are an amazing writer, Ms. Spence and I hope Sarah Shahi plays you in the movie version.