Praise for Why Read: "Whether book or restaurant reviews, travelogues, or articles on prison, politics, and penis extensions, Self's think pieces are, for the most part, informed, acerbic, and refreshingly opinionated. A reason, then, to cheer the arrival of his latest collection . . . At routine junctures, we discern a fierce intelligence and an inquiring mind at work. Even seemingly innocuous or frivolous pieces turn out to yield deep truths and surprise delights . . . Yes, the finest essays here are incisive, perceptive, and provocative. But they are also wildly entertaining."–Malcolm Forbes, Washington Examiner"Whether he's writing stylistically innovative fiction or expanding the boundaries of what nonfiction can do, Will Self has established himself as a singular and influential writer over the last few decades. The new collection Why Read offers readers highlights from 20 years of his work, with Self covering subjects ranging from George Orwell to Chernobyl. It's a fine introduction to a major literary voice."–Tobias Carroll, InsideHook"Sharp, trenchant essays from an enfant terrible of modern letters . . . Plenty to ponder in this energetic, opinionated collection."–Kirkus Reviews "Idiosyncratic . . . Taken together, the candid musings are a fine mix of practicality and nostalgia. Self's fans will relish having these wide-ranging reflections in one place."–Publishers WeeklyPraise for Will Self: "Will Self may not be the last modernist at work but at the moment he's the most fascinating of the tradition's torch bearers."–New York"Self is the most daring and delightful novelist of his generation, a writer whose formidable intellect is mercilessly targeted on the limits of the cerebral as a means of understanding. Yes, he makes you think, but he also insists that you feel."–Guardian"Mr. Self often enough writes with such vividness it's as if he is the first person to see anything at all."–New York Times"Self writes in a high-modernist, hallucinatory, stream-of-consciousness style, leaping between sentences, time periods, and perspectives . . . The reward is a strange, vivid book."–New Yorker"Self's prose demands real attention, but is never less than sharp, biting and incisive. Prepare to be eaten whole."–Independent"Like the work of the great high modernists from the 1920s, like Joyce, Woolf and Eliot, there is a kind of chaotic beauty in Self's unrestricted writing . . . You'll be simultaneously entertained, mesmerized, intellectually stimulated, baffled–and laugh your ass off."–NPR"Will Self's Phone will be one of the most significant literary works of our century . . . Over and above the intellectual sprezzatura of the work, there is, at its heart, an emotional core, a profound sense of grief."–New Statesman"Self has indeed been a goat among the sheep of contemporary English fiction, a puckish trickster self-consciously at odds with its middle-class politeness . . . Writers, too, as Self so wonderfully proves, can awaken the half-dead and reanimate that which has been sunk in oblivion."–New York Review of Books