Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Saturday, 4 February 2017

The zulu principle



The Zulu Principle

“This [was]… an idea I had after observing my wife read a four-page article in Reader’s Digest on the subject of Zulus. As a result, within a few minutes she knew more than I did about Zulus and it occurred to me that, if she had then borrowed all the available books on Zulus from the local library, she would have become the leading expert in the county.

If she has subsequently been invited to stay on a Zulu kraal (by an unsuspecting chief) and read about the history of Zulus at Johannesburg University for another six months, she would have become one of the leading experts in the world.

The key point is that my wife would have applied a disproportionate effort to becoming relatively expert in a very narrow subject. She would have used a laser beam rather than a scattergun and her intellectual and other resources would, in that narrow context, have been used to maximum advantage…

That way, you will become relatively expert in your chosen area. It is only necessary to be six inches taller than the other people in a room to see above everyone’s heads. Applying The Zulu Principle helps you grow these extra six inches.” 

Thursday, 21 April 2016

Materiality of Communication



My 'preferred' reading has to be surface or 'materiality of communication.
 
There are 3 reasons for this:
 
1. A high quality book triggers an emotional response. Once all five of your senses kick in, arguably a sixth sense of knowing you have a work of beauty in your hands, you are filled with an intoxicating euphoria that allows you to drift off to a safe, kind, warm and inviting place away from all your worries.
 
2. You can access complete immersion. Your brain switches off all external stimuli, phone's ringing, doors knocking, neighbours fighting, outside dogs barking, it all melts away when holding a high quality book in your hands.
 
3. It just feels right to hold a physical book. The textures, the knowing it has been created, bound, put together, ink spilled on it's pages, minor scuffs, damage, bumps, scratches, woodlice if you don't care for them properly, a spine that can be broken if you disrespect the book, all this comes from owning and reading a book of quality, which is worth every penny.

Thursday, 10 October 2013

Literature's return on investment



It was Montaigne that said when he has one of his black dog days, he would sit and read a book for an hour and find the darkness had passed.
 
I had a conversation with a young lady on Tuesday about the books we read during our various life cycles. During my childhood years I grew an addiction to fantasy genre literature, this was highly likely triggered by reading Greek Mythology and watching the 'Sinbad' movies alongside classics such as 'clash of the Titans'. Being a young boy I lapped up all those fantastical monsters, Gods and heroes that saved the day. Every little boy wants to be a hero and deep down I probably still feel the same way. I also read because it was a way of escaping the harsh realities of my world and as Montaigne pointed out, it can work for adults also.
 
Then this lady said, you know, I used to read all the time, but then came college and university and I switched to knowledge books. And I said that's such a shame, because I used to read fiction with a passion, but I got to a certain age, where self imposed expectations saw me taking up 'knowledge books' as a sort of, 'You have to grow up at some point'. That point was me saying I need to learn something that will get me a job that pays good money, gains me respect, status and enough time to take a holiday so I can relax and read some fiction! I also wanted to beat lesser beings in intellectual argumentation, not just beat people, in Economic discussions I openly and publicly destroyed their puny arguments, I smashed them for daring to contradict the power of my self earned and hard won knowledge!
 
I regret that now, feel guilty in fact and If I could turn back the clock or even apologise to those people I smashed...
 
Now the lady in question is reading 'knowledge' books about her passion and I would never dissuade any one from that, hypocrite would spring to mind. What I would say is, I personally have enjoyed fiction and I have pushed myself to master a knowledge subject for status, respect and power, but have now returned to reading great literature and occasionally fantasy fiction, because I have learned a valuable lesson, something I told a person last week who put herself down for not being intellectual enough in her mind.
 
'Knowledge is a fleeting and ever changing topic'. Ideas, which she has by the bucket load, ideas can change humanity forever. The wheel was an idea, so was fire, so on throughout history, Ideas are most important, not knowledge. Aristotle was a very knowledgeable man on a variety of topics, but most would reach for Richard Dawkins if they wanted an easy read on Evolution, not Aristotle.
 
Fiction, the great works of literature can feed our brains, especially if we take something we enjoy reading and there's nothing wrong with reading 'children's' fiction as an adult. I have learned more philosophy and moral compassion from Alice's adventures in wonderland that from reading war and peace!
 
The bonus is we can have a face to face discussion about the latest novel we read. Who wants to sit and listen to me espouse the delights of the 8th edition of David Beggs' 'Economics'? However If I am at a coffee table with a couple of fellow readers and I mention I have just finished Kafka's great 'Metamorphosis', no doubt we could spend hours getting lost in the meaning behind that story.
 
Fiction will not give you a monetary return on your time perhaps, but it will make you more friends, make you a more interesting person to be around and hopefully make you a happier person in the process.
 
All that non-fiction can do is answer questions. It's fictions business to ask them. - Richard Hughes
 


Friday, 14 December 2012

the 50 best books in the world... Probably

Repeat after me, "There is no Canon"! Sick of people telling you what you need to read? I prefer fantasy fiction, Warhammer series, The Hobbit, Lord of the Rings, etc. I also enjoy the works of Poe and H.G.Wells and any decent dystopian novel goes down a treat.

But, for those of us that want to put ourselves through the furnace of quality literature that will hopefully pass on good lessons, here are my top 50 picks:
So there we have a fine starting point for anyone that wants to up their reading game. What do you think about the selection? Feel free to leave your comments, what to add/remove,

Cheers,

Den.