"[Davis] is our Vermeer, patiently observing and chronicling daily life but from angles odd and askew. These piecesexalt clear language and the complicated work of looking and seeing. Davis takes pure pleasure in the muscular act of looking, and invites us to look alongside her. 'Read the best writers from all different periods,' she says. She's right. Begin here." --Parul Sehgal, The New York Times " She's so deeply cerebral it's perhaps counterintuitive that Davis is a companionable presence. She's erudite, with catholic interests, and earnest but not humorless.
This is the kind of book you could read alone in a restaurant and feel you're lost in a stimulating conversation . I covet her ability to write and to commit to the work at hand. I spent two weeks with Essays One ; Davis would probably have spent much longer with a book she meant to review. Alas, we can't all be Lydia Davis, but thank god we have her." --Rumaan Alam, The New Republic "The first in a planned two-volume collection of the nonfiction of short story author Davis (Samuel Johnson Is Indignant) proves a cornucopia of illuminating and timeless observations on literature, art, and the craft of writing . Fans of Davis's unfailingly clever work should add this volume to their collection, and creative writers of every genre should take the opportunity to learn from a legend." -- Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) " One gets the impression that even the most fleeting of pieces in "Essays One," such as a few paragraphs about her favorite short stories, written for a British tabloid, has been given the precise and playful Lydia Davis treatment: "'Subtly, or less subtly, you always want to surprise a reader.'"-- Brian Dillon, The New York Times Book Review "Lively essays bound to stimulate debate among readers of global literature.
" -- Kirkus Reviews "Davis, an innovative fiction writer, is also an erudite essayist, critic and translator, with an ever-questing mind evident in these 33 essays . An essential literary companion." --Jane Ciabattari, BBC "Lydia Davis is immensely learned; that is clear not only from her translation work but also from her distinguished discussions of the works she has translated. But in much of her nonfiction, she is also a master of the energies that drive her fiction, with its plain style, irony, sensitivity, and elegantly subdued power." --Sandra M. Gilbert, The American Scholar "Davis is putting her more than 30 years of experience into a selection of essays on the craft of reading and writing; the first of the two-volume set comes out this fall. Don't expect run-of-the-mill advice like "show don't tell" here, though; Davis has made a career out of breaking the established rules ." -- The Week.