Tessa Hadley: ‘Uneasy books are good in uneasy times’
The author on Anna Karenina, the brilliance of Anita Brookner and finally getting Nabokov
My earliest reading memory
I acquired from somewhere, in my more or less atheistic family, a Ladybird Book of the Lord’s Prayer, whose every page I can recover in all its lurid 1960s naturalism. “As they forgive us our trespasses against them …” The horrified boy leaves a hand mark on the wall his father has just painted.
My favourite book growing up
One of my favourites was E Nesbit’s The Wouldbegoods. The lives of those Edwardian children seemed as rich as a plum pudding, with their knickerbockers and their ironies, their cook and their sophisticated vocabulary. I didn’t understand, in my childhood, that they were separated from me by a gulf of time and change. Because of books, the past seemed to be happening in the next room, as if I could step into it effortlessly.
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Asahi Confirms Cyberattack Exposed Data of 1.5M Customers
The incident occurred in September, and the Japanese firm has now released its full internal investigation results.
The post Asahi Confirms Cyberattack Exposed Data of 1.5M Customers appeared first on TechRepublic.

