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On Not Being Someone Else: Tales of Our Unled Lives by Andrew H. Miller

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"To be someone-to be anyone-is about...not being someone else. Miller's amused and inspired book is utterly compelling."
-Adam Phillips


"A compendium of expressions of wonder over what might have been...Swept up in our real lives, we quickly forget about the unreal ones. Still, there will be moments when, for good or ill, we feel confronted by our unrealized possibilities."
-New Yorker

We live one life, formed by paths taken and untaken. Choosing a job, getting married, deciding on a place to live or whether to have children-every decision precludes another. But what if you'd gone the other way?

From Robert Frost to Sharon Olds, Virginia Woolf to Ian McEwan, Jane Hirshfield to Carl Dennis, storytellers of every stripe consider the roads not taken, the lives we haven't led. What is it that compels us to identify with fictional and poetic voices tantalizing us with the shadows of what might have been? Not only poets and novelists, but psychologists and philosophers have much to say on this question. Miller finds wisdom in all of these, revealing the beauty, the allure, and the danger of sustaining or confronting our unled lives.

"Miller is charming company, both humanly and intellectually. He is onto something: the theme of unled lives, and the fascinating idea that fiction intensifies the sense of provisionality that attends all lives. An extremely attractive book."
-James Wood

"An expertly curated tour of regret and envy in literature...Miller's insightful and moving book-both in his own discussion and in the tales he recounts-gently nudges us toward consolation."
-Wall Street Journal

"I wish I had written this book...Examining art's capacity to transfix, multiply, and compress, this book is itself a work of art."
-Times Higher Education



About the Author
Andrew H. Miller is the author of The Burdens of Perfection and Novels behind Glass. A Professor of English at Johns Hopkins University, he has received fellowships from the National Humanities Center and the American Council of Learned Societies.

Reviews
An expertly curated tour of regret and envy in literature...By approaching regret and envy from multiple angles, Miller's insightful and moving book-both in his own discussion and in the tales he recounts-gently nudges us toward consolation. Yes, we might live only one among countless possible lives, and those we haven't lived will haunt us. But, as Miller notes in conclusion, at least we have had the chance to live the one life that has been given to us. * Wall Street Journal *
Counts the ways in which narratives of unlived lives can examine or come to terms with the present...Miller believes, in short, that stories of unled lives make real life livelier...[A] capacious book. -- Daisy Hildyard * Times Literary Supplement *
Miller is charming company, both humanly and intellectually. He is onto something: the theme of unled lives, and the fascinating idea that fiction intensifies the sense of provisionality that attends all lives. An extremely attractive book. -- James Wood
On Not Being Someone Else reminds us just how alluring and confounding our singularity is and how, through literature, we make sense of being ourselves. To be someone-to be anyone-is about being someone and not being someone else. Miller's amused and inspired book is utterly compelling about this, and about so much else. -- Adam Phillips, author of One Way and Another: New and Selected Essays
A compendium of expressions of wonder over what might have been...We have unled lives for all sorts of reasons: because we make choices; because society constrains us; because events force our hands; most of all, because we are singular individuals, becoming more so with time...Swept up in our real lives, we quickly forget about the unreal ones. Still, there will be moments when, for good or ill, we feel confronted by our unrealized possibilities. -- Joshua Rothman * New Yorker *
I wish I had written this book-a wish that is surely the best response to reading it... Cosmic metaphysical speculation is combined with, and conveyed through, meticulous analysis of pictures, poems, novels and films...Examining art's capacity to transfix, multiply, and compress, this book is itself a work of art. -- Jane O'Grady * Times Higher Education *
Excellent...For Miller, imagining who we might have been or once were, or who we might yet become, is anything but frivolous...In spirited and incisive close readings of texts like Robert Frost's 'The Road Not Taken,' Carl Dennis's 'The God Who Loves You,' and Ian McEwan's Atonement (among many, many others), Miller pursues this slippery, elusive meaning and the many questions it leaves unanswered...The idea of unled lives could hardly be more resonant...How many literary scholars today write so engagingly? -- Morten Hoi Jensen * Commonweal *
Shows that the idea of lives unled is stitched into works of art across genres and across centuries, making clear that the stories we tell are often rooted in considering alternatives to the choices we've made. -- Linda Levitt * PopMatters *
A book of admirable insight and sensitivity...Throughout this quiet, engrossing book, Miller aptly reveals the uncanny mesmerism of the unlived life, of the untaken road-our very modern preoccupation with who we are not...This is a text fresh and alive with the power and mystery of art, steeped in feeling, and, like life itself, resplendent with possibilities as yet unrealized, with knowledge not yet known. -- Alexandre Leskanich * Philosophy Now *
Wonderfully lucid about murky questions of what might have been...Both literature specialists, who will appreciate Miller's breadth of examples, and general readers, who can enjoy the universal topics he explores, will find much food for thought in this pleasant work. * Publishers Weekly *
A strong, pleasing work that is as much about living as about reading and writing. * Kirkus Reviews *
Fascinating. -- David Aaronovitch * The Times *
What a provocative book! It is interesting and alive on every page, and entertaining the idea of a different life is a profound experience. -- Michael Gorra, author of Portrait of a Novel: Henry James and the Making of an American Masterpiece
Miller's book is a poetics of the unled life, a poetics of 'what if...' Through poems, novels, films, philosophy, and psychoanalysis-the texts of our modernity-Miller leads us to profound questions about the imagination, the self and identity, history, marriage, children, regret, atonement, storytelling, and the ethics of choice. Above all, he makes us feel the pressure and immediacy of possibility, the road not taken. -- Isobel Armstrong, author of Novel Politics: Democratic Imaginations in Nineteenth-Century Fiction
A one-of-a-kind book that is at once literary and personal, drawing us into a world of reflection about lives we have not lived. Why do we return to the past to understand who we are now? This is a profound question, and this book explores possible answers more acutely than anything I have seen on the subject. -- Garry L. Hagberg, author of Describing Ourselves: Wittgenstein and Autobiographical Consciousness
A thoughtful, generous, amusing, tender, meandering, self-deprecating, wistful, even reverent style of thinking about our lives in relation to the stories we read. -- Matthew Rubery * Public Books *
Blend[s] literary criticism and personal essay into a beguiling hybrid...Will remain widely compelling for a long time to come, not only because of [its] many discrete merits, but because of [its] readership's new intimacy with the 'unled lives' of lockdown and quarantine. -- Elizabeth Brogden * Journal of Victorian Culture *
Deeply reflective and at the same time uncommonly readable...Although no book of literary criticism can be accused of being a page turner, On Not Being Someone Else comes close. * Choice *
[A] marvelous, melancholic, middle-aged meditation on the meaning of lives unled...Miller is a profoundly gifted close reader-someone whose company one would like to keep, and return to again and again. -- David LaRocca * Victorian Studies *



Book Information
ISBN 9780674271180
Author Andrew H. Miller
Format Paperback
Page Count 232
Imprint Harvard University Press
Publisher Harvard University Press

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