An O Magazine Top 10 Pick!
From bestselling author Michael McGirr comes Snooze, a revised edition of the entertaining and enlightening The Lost Art of Sleep (2009).
Michael always had trouble sleeping, but the arrival of twins made him realise he’d never known true exhaustion. While he celebrated these small children who brought him so much joy, he also found himself desperately searching for a few extra winks a night.
In Snooze, McGirr delves into the mysterious world of sleep: its many benefits, its stubborn elusiveness and what our brains get up to while we’re in bed. He takes readers on a tour through the odd sleep patterns of some of history’s greatest figures, including Plato and Homer, Shakespeare and Dickens, Florence Nightingale (who slept a great deal) and Thomas Edison (who hardly slept at all). He looks at the demise of sleep in our ever more fragmented world, and what that means for everyone from average sleepers to those with serious sleep disorders. And he describes his own family’s quest to master the ancient art of getting a decent kip.
A profound and humorous exploration of the precious resource of sleep—and the causes and consequences of getting too little of it—Snooze is the perfect book for sleepless nights.
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New York Times
Times
‘Amid the stories of famous sleepers and famous insomniacs, McGirr has interspersed personal tales, where he captures a young household very much in need of sleep…A lovely readable tone, highly recommended!’
‘McGirr is an inspired synthesiser, serious in intent even while riotous in execution. You could call The Lost Art of Sleep volume three of a complex autobiography (with Things You Get for Free and Bypass). But if the central character embodies the quandaries, the delight of the writing lies in the world around him.’
‘Although this book is about insomnia and sleep, it will not send the reader off to sleep… It is a happy book. It is a compendium of anecdote about living with small, sleepless children and of moving house.’
‘An eyes-wide-open look at the penumbral world of sleep, where we spend so much of our time without quite knowing why…Lively…A good book to curl up with while pondering the mysteries of Morpheus.’
‘With Snooze, Michael McGirr has, pardon the pun, produced a wake-up call about the fascinating yet little known history and science of sleep. A delightful read, Snooze takes on the one activity we spend the most time doing, yet still manages to surprise. It’s one bedtime read that won’t put you to sleep.’
‘A delightful eye-opener. [McGirr’s] loving account of life with his family—including the years of sleep deprivation he and his wife dealt with when raising young children—gives Snooze: The Lost Art of Sleep its big heart…The book’s prose can be both enjoyably fanciful (“A horse at sleep is a statue of itself”) and soberly poetic…Its blend of memoir, science history, mythological lore and cultural commentary is a constant delight.’
‘Readers have McGirr’s tossing and turning to thank for a dynamic, multifaceted book that serves as an entertaining, philosophical lullaby for the deprived.’
‘This revised and expanded edition offers a broader base of experience to share with readers…It reads like chapters of a one-sided conversation with an amiable, liberal-minded man-of-the-world, who thinks fondly of the almost unattainable—the undisturbed night of blissful sleep.’
‘A former priest examines the way shut-eye—or lack there of it—affects us on and off the pillow. If you’re among the flock who count sheep most nights, these pages reassure.’
‘McGirr is a good writer who is able to share information in an entertaining way…His anecdotes will make you out laugh out loud. If you haven’t read any books by him before, seek them out.’
‘An exploration of and reassurance for our overloaded century. McGirr’s journey through this “profound form of absence” is spirited, sympathetic and commendably non-soporific.’
‘Michael McGirr takes the serious subject of sleep and whimsically reflects on its mysteries; at the same time amusing us with stories from the past and present…A wise and witty book.’