A Spectator Best Book of the Year and a charming, eloquent love letter to the stories we adore
Richard Cohen is the former publishing director of Hutchinson and Hodder & Stoughton and the founder of Richard Cohen Books. A five-time national sabre champion, he has represented Britain in fencing at four Olympics. The author of Chasing the Sun and By the Sword, he lives in New York.
‘Provides amazing insight into the working methods, techniques,
tricks and flaws of some of the greatest writers in literary
history…An engrossing read for bibliophiles and lovers of
literature as much as aspiring writers.’
*New European*
‘This book is a wry, critical friend to both writer and reader. It
is filled with cogent examples and provoking statements. You will
agree or quarrel with each page, and be a sharper writer and reader
by the end.’
*Hilary Mantel*
‘A glorious patchwork of quotation and anecdote. It is a true
commonplace book, the homage of a passionate reader to the writers
who have provided his “main pastime”.’
*Sunday Times*
‘Welcome, wise and witty…Aspiring writers will glean excellent
advice here.’
*Literary Review*
‘I very much enjoyed Richard Cohen’s How to Write Like Tolstoy’
*Spectator, Books of the Year*
‘An anecdotal, breezy and comprehensive approach…an entertainingly
slick read.'
*Herald*
‘The highest compliment one can pay How to Write Like Tolstoy is
that it provokes an overwhelming urge to read and write.’
*Wall Street Journal*
‘A book for the general reader as much as the aspiring
novelist.’
*Tablet*
‘Interesting, charming, and engaging…Cohen reveals the
possibilities that lie in wait when authors practice selection and
intention, sparking the literary imagination.’
*Library Journal, starred review*
‘An inspiring book! It makes one glad to be a writer.’
*Fay Weldon*
‘Elegant... Cohen [tells] amusing, often discursive stories about
great literature and authors, mixed with the writers’ own
observations, which he hopes will further inspire readers and
would-be writers. The advice is pleasant, and sometimes wise.’
*Publishers Weekly*
‘Insightful… [Cohen] escorts his readers to Iris Murdoch for sage
counsel on launching a novel, to Salman Rushdie for shrewd guidance
on developing an unreliable narrator, to Rudyard Kipling for a
cagey hint on creating memorable minor characters, and to Leo
Tolstoy for a master’s help in transforming personal experience
into fictional art. Even readers with no intentions of writing a
novel will relish the opportunity to join their favourite authors
at the workbench.’
*Booklist*
‘Cohen’s myriads of examples are lush and instructive... he is a
generous tour guide through his literary world’
*Kirkus Reviews*
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