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Is that A Fish in Your Ear? by David Bellos [Read This Next]

This week’s title is David Bellos’s Is That a Fish in Your Ear?: Translation and the Meaning of Everything, which is coming out in late October from Faber and Faber.

As I mentioned on a couple of our Three Percent podcasts, this is one of the fall books that I’ve been looking forward to for a long time. And now that I’ve had a chance to read it in full, I feel confident in saying that this is a perfect book for anyone involved or interested in translation. It’s wide-ranging, very readable, filled with fascinating anecdotes, and very thought-provoking. You can read my full review by clicking here.

Over at you can read three chapters from the book: “Global Flows: Center and Periphery in the Translation of Books,” “Match Me If You Can: Translating Humor,” and “Style and Translation.”

In addition, you can read about how Bellos came to write this book.

But when in June 2009 a plump, pink-faced person offhandedly remarked at some academic party that 鈥渁 translation is obviously no substitute for the original鈥, I pedaled straight home, sat down at my desk and dashed off a squib against that thoughtless clich茅.

It struck me that other translation clich茅s deserved similar treatment. I sketched out short essays against “making it sound like the original,” “traitor, translator,” and “les belles infid猫les.” It was good to get them off my chest.

A few weeks later my son came to visit, and I showed him my pages. 鈥淒ad,鈥 he said, 鈥渋f you could stop writing like an academic, you could make a living out of this.鈥

There’s also a really great interview with David over at the

How would someone keen to work in the field of translation be best able to develop the required skills?

Go to university. Read lots of books. Write. Then read some more. Live in the country. Get married, have children and learn their nursery rhymes. Watch television. Read some more. Write. Then try your hand at translating. Best to start with a book you feel passionately interested in. But actually, there is no ‘main’ or ‘direct’ route into a career as a translator into English. Most of my colleagues in the field got into it by happenstance. Just don’t expect it will ever pay your rent.

And if you want a different sort of intro to the book, watch this video:



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