#Top10Summer2023Reads
3 nonfiction
1 memoir
2 fiction
2 historical fiction
2 mysteries
#Top10Summer2023Reads
3 nonfiction
1 memoir
2 fiction
2 historical fiction
2 mysteries
Each chapter or essay in this book took me time to process-had to take notes,reread tabbed pages-too many books, ideas! swirling in my brain…The author‘s last sentence in the book states that his argument “is a argument for a genealogy of love.” His love for books, ideas, is evident in every page. He speaks to how frenetic are lives are, how we are inundated all day with information all day, so that it is impossible to process beyond the present🔽
Starting my morning with this very meaty book. Jacobs combines ideas from Philosophy, literature, & history, into an enriching whole as he makes the case for reading, especially “old books.” #tranqilityinafranticworld #booksbridgepastandpresent #14books14weeks #3 #TBR #crumpetsandmarmalade #bookandcoffee
#14books14weeks #week3
Had to post this- while this is college 2020, it is so High School 2023!
#coverlove
#MMDBookClub pick for September 2022
Today we are battling too much information in a society changing at lightning speed, with algorithms aimed at shaping our every thought—plus a sense that history offers no resources. The modern solution to our problems is to surround ourselves only with what we know and what brings us instant comfort. Jacobs's answer is the opposite: to be in conversation with, and challenged by, those from the past.
We can read old books by authors that have outdated values and still appreciate what they have to say while still being critical of their views. Author talks about people exploiting classics for their political agenda and that you can still enjoy misogynistic Victorian novels while being a feminist by understanding it was a different time and enjoy making comparisons from their time period to present day.