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  • Published: 24 September 2019
  • ISBN: 9781912559145
  • Imprint: Notting Hill Editions
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 120
  • RRP: $39.99

What Time Is It?



Booker Prize-winner John Berger's final work, a profound and playful meditation on the ephemeral nature of time, with brilliant illustrations by Selçuk Demirel, available for the first time.

“Patience, patience, because the great movements of history have always begun in those small parenthesis that we call ‘in the meantime.’” —John Berger
 
The last book that John Berger wrote was this precious little volume about time titled What Time Is It?, now posthumously published for the first time in English by Notting Hill Editions. Berger died before it was completed, but the text has been assembled and illustrated by his longtime collaborator and friend Selçuk Demirel, and has an introduction by Maria Nadotti.
 
What Time Is It? is a profound and playful meditation on the illusory nature of time. Berger, the great art critic and Man Booker Prize–winning author, reflects on what time has come to mean to us in modern life. Our perception of time assumes a uniform and ceaseless passing of time, yet time is turbulent. It expands and contracts according to the intensity of the lived moment. We talk of time “saved” in a hundred household appliances; time, like money, is exchanged for the content it lacks. Berger posits the idea that time can lengthen lifetimes once we seize the present moment. “What-is-to-come, what-is-to-be-gained empties what-is.”

  • Published: 24 September 2019
  • ISBN: 9781912559145
  • Imprint: Notting Hill Editions
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 120
  • RRP: $39.99

About the author

John Berger

John Berger was born in London in 1926. He is well known for his novels & stories as well as for his works of nonfiction, including several volumes of art criticism. His first novel, 'A Painter of Our Time', was published in 1958, & since then his books have included the novel 'G.', which won the Booker Prize in 1972. In 1962 he left Britain permanently, & he now lives in a small village in the French Alps.

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Praise for What Time Is It?

Praise for John Berger and Selçuk Demirel:

"John Berger writes about what is important, not just interesting. In contemporary English letters he seems to me peerless; not since Lawrence has there been a writer who offers such attentiveness to the sensual world." --Susan Sontag

"In his ceaselessly inventive work, Selçuk often uses parts of the body in ways that are characteristically Turkish...as if the comedy of the human condition were there in the human body, in the melancholy of anatomy." --John Berger

Praise for Cataract:

"I love this small book of intricate insight." --Michael Ondaatje