非文学
Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother 豆瓣
所属 作品: 虎妈战歌
6.6 (7 个评分) 作者: Amy Chua Penguin Press HC, The 2011 - 1
An awe-inspiring, often hilarious, and unerringly honest story of one mother's exercise in extreme parenting, revealing the rewards-and the costs-of raising her children the Chinese way.
All decent parents want to do what's best for their children. What Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother reveals is that the Chinese just have a totally different idea of how to do that. Western parents try to respect their children's individuality, encouraging them to pursue their true passions and providing a nurturing environment. The Chinese believe that the best way to protect your children is by preparing them for the future and arming them with skills, strong work habits, and inner confidence. Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother chronicles Chua's iron-willed decision to raise her daughters, Sophia and Lulu, her way-the Chinese way-and the remarkable results her choice inspires.
Here are some things Amy Chua would never allow her daughters to do:
have a playdate
be in a school play
complain about not being in a school play
not be the #1 student in every subject except gym and drama
play any instrument other than the piano or violin
not play the piano or violin
The truth is Lulu and Sophia would never have had time for a playdate. They were too busy practicing their instruments (two to three hours a day and double sessions on the weekend) and perfecting their Mandarin.
Of course no one is perfect, including Chua herself. Witness this scene:
"According to Sophia, here are three things I actually said to her at the piano as I supervised her practicing:
1. Oh my God, you're just getting worse and worse.
2. I'm going to count to three, then I want musicality.
3. If the next time's not PERFECT, I'm going to take all your stuffed animals and burn them!"
But Chua demands as much of herself as she does of her daughters. And in her sacrifices-the exacting attention spent studying her daughters' performances, the office hours lost shuttling the girls to lessons-the depth of her love for her children becomes clear. Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother is an eye-opening exploration of the differences in Eastern and Western parenting- and the lessons parents and children everywhere teach one another.
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我在美国做妈妈:耶鲁法学院教授的育儿经
我的奋斗 豆瓣
7.4 (85 个评分) 作者: 罗永浩 云南人民出版社 2010 - 4
《我的奋斗》是老罗写的一本极具语言才华的自传,也是他给剽悍的人生一个解释。作者他是一个走路都往下掉个性的胖子。他上幼儿园的时候,就被老师描述成一个“思想特别复杂的孩子”;他在学校里跟愚蠢的制度对抗了九年,成为一个高中没毕业的小混混,然后,一直混到“中国第二著名的英语教师”、百度年度风云人物、牛博网创办人、“老罗培训”学校的校长。
读“老罗式”的幽默,可以感知他的诚恳和热情;读老罗的传奇经历, 可以领悟如何用剽悍的内心创造传奇。
《我的奋斗》读者对象:中学生、大学生;老罗在新东方和老罗培训学校的学生;都市里奋斗的年轻人;15-40岁的读者。
《我的奋斗》附赠品:罗永浩全国高校巡回演讲DVD光盘。
2011年12月31日 已读 起這麼個容易混淆視聽的名字...在廣告中插播電視劇的時候看完了,明年廣告中就插不了電視劇了呢QwQ [後半句跑題了好麼
下书如山倒读书如抽丝 社会 非文学
我的抑郁症 豆瓣
所属 作品: 我的抑郁症
6.9 (32 个评分) 作者: [美] 伊丽莎白·斯瓦多 译者: 王安忆 新星出版社 2007 - 1
《我的抑郁症》以独特个性的语言和极富感染力的素描,讲述了一个抑郁症患者如何与这种最常见的疾病作斗争的经历。全书真情流露,又不失幽默风趣,在美国出版后引起轰动,被誉为“一部让人摆脱抑郁的杰作”。
腐女子使用说明书 豆瓣
2009
何謂腐女?愛看描寫男男戀愛的漫畫或小說等創作(Boy’s Love / BL / Yaoi)的女性就稱為「腐女子 (腐女)」。此一名詞是由日文同音異字的「婦女子」轉化而來,如今已是廣為人知的用語了。儘管有很多人常誤以為「宅女=腐女」,但正確來說,腐女專指喜歡BL的女性。
此外,腐女還有幾種比較不常見的稱呼,例如:年紀稍大的腐女稱為「貴腐人」;而已經腐到極致的就稱為「污超腐人」。話說至此,想必各位已經了解腐女的基本生態了吧?
The Universal Code of (Formerly) Unwritten Rules 豆瓣
作者: Quentin Parker Adams Media 2011 - 8
Never hog both armrests when you fly.
Doorways, staircases, and elevator entrances are inappropriate spots to stop and chitchat.
Always remember that one's own poop does, in fact, stink.
When you borrow someone's car, fill it up with gas before you give it back.
These are the unwritten rules of life. Observe them, and one rises above the great unwashed. Observe them not, and one goes straight to trailer trash.
In this hilariously civil guide, you'll learn all of the principles of politesse our mothers tried to teach us--but some of us just weren't listening. So listen up, because our mothers were right: Handsome is as handsome does. If you never really understood what that meant--and who did?--then this book is for you.
The Universal Code of (Formerly) Unwritten Rules: Because some rules should never be broken.
啊哈,灵机一动 豆瓣
Aha! Insight 所属 作品: 啊哈,灵机一动
9.3 (6 个评分) 作者: [美] 马丁·伽德纳 译者: 李建臣 / 刘正新 科学出版社 2007 - 8
20世纪科普经典特藏。瞬间闪光的妙想称为“啊哈反应”。《啊哈,灵机一动 (中文版)》精选了貌似复杂,实际若循规蹈矩去做也确实很困难,但要是能放开思路,跳出常规解题的模式,或许能蓦然发现问题的答案何其简单。《啊哈,灵机一动 (中文版)》谈到的奇思妙想,与科学、艺术、商业、政治及其他人类所从事的各项活动的创造力有着密不可分的联系。《啊哈,灵机一动 (中文版)》包括“组合:关于排列的谜题”、“几何:关于图形的谜题”、“数字:关于算术的谜题”、“逻辑:关于推理的谜题”、“程序:关于操作设计的谜题”和“文字:关于字、词、句的谜题”。
Where Children Sleep 豆瓣
作者: James Mollison Chris Boot 2010
Where Children Sleep presents English-born photographer James Mollison's large-format photographs of children's bedrooms around the world--from the U.S.A., Mexico, Brazil, England, Italy, Israel and the West Bank, Kenya, Senegal, Lesotho, Nepal, China and India--alongside portraits of the children themselves. Each pair of photographs is accompanied by an extended caption that tells the story of each child: Kaya in Tokyo, whose proud mother spends $1,000 a month on her dresses; Bilal the Bedouin shepherd boy, who sleeps outdoors with his father's herd of goats; the Nepali girl Indira, who has worked in a granite quarry since she was three; and Ankhohxet, the Kraho boy who sleeps on the floor of a hut deep in the Amazon jungle. Photographed over two years with the support of Save the Children (Italy), Where Children Sleep is both a serious photo-essay for an adult audience, and also an educational book that engages children themselves in the lives of other children around the world. Its cover features a child's mobile printed in glow-in-the-dark ink.
A Dictionary of Colour 豆瓣
作者: Ian Patterson Stylus Pub Llc 2004 - 10
This dictionary is the first of its kind: a treasury of color words and phrases, a comprehensive resource for exploring every aspect of color and it many applications across the disciplines and through the ages.
Words are drawn from many different worlds including art, artists, craft and design, painting, printing and sculpture, the decorative arts, gems, fashion, textiles, cosmetics, physics, maths, astronomy, chemistry, dyes, colorants, paints, biology, geography, geology, minerals, history, art history, social history, religion, philosophy, heraldry, mythology and symbolism, languarge, linguistrics, grammar, slang, literature [inc. the Bible and Shakespeare], music, theatre, photography, television and film, psychology and human behavior, education, politics, commerce, economics, finance, law, travel, war, vision and color-blindness, medicine, drugs and color therapy, food and drink, color theory and many others.
魔戒電影設定聖典3 豆瓣
作者: 蓋瑞.魯索 朱學恆譯 奇幻基地
唯一獲得授權的設定集,讓讀者一窺彼得.傑克森光彩耀眼的「王者再臨」的內幕設定,超過六百張幾乎完全未曾出現在其它媒體上的獨家繪圖、草稿和電影中的數位特效!!獲獎無數的「魔戒三部曲」系列唯一獲得授權的設定集,讓讀者一窺彼得.傑克森光彩耀眼的「王者再臨」的內幕設定!六百禎前所未見的獨家繪圖、草稿和電影中的數位特效!更有彼得.傑克森特別撰寫的結語!從艾倫.李與約翰.豪威的鉛筆草稿到驚人的數位合成背景,蓋瑞?魯索讓您獨享一窺啟發彼得.傑克森的這些藝術創作。從米那斯提力斯到末日火山,從亡靈大軍到巨大的蜘蛛屍羅,電影中的每個重要地點和生物全都擁有鉅細靡遺的介紹,創作者們也詳細的解說如何將這個作品搬上螢幕。本書將帶領你一起穿越這個向不可能挑戰的精采歷程!
「魔戒電影設定聖典III」揭露了整部電影從分鏡表演變為最後成果的精采過程,超過六百張幾乎完全未曾出現在其它媒體上的圖片。這本獲得官方授權的作品包含了艾倫.李與約翰.豪威的鉛筆草稿、獲得奧斯卡提名的姬拉.迪克森的服裝設計、以及奧斯卡得主理查.泰勒領軍的威塔工作室所設計出的雕像、繪圖和數位特效。從米那斯提力斯到末日火山,從亡靈大軍到巨大的蜘蛛屍羅,電影中的每個重要地點和生物全都擁有鉅細靡遺的介紹,創作者們也詳細的解說如何將這個作品搬上螢幕。連被修剪掉的片段也沒有遺漏!
作者簡介
蓋瑞.魯索GARY RUSSELL
在媒體界擁有豐富的工作經驗,他曾經是雜誌編輯、小說家、專欄作家和廣播劇作家。他之前的作品包括了辛普森家庭等電視影集的報導作品、魔戒電影設定聖典1、2、3。
魔戒電影設定聖典2 豆瓣
作者: 蓋瑞.魯索 朱學恆譯 奇幻基地
獲獎無數的「魔戒三部曲」系列,唯一獲得正式授權的設定集,讓讀者一窺光彩耀眼的「雙城奇謀」的內幕設定!彼得•傑克森的「魔戒首部曲:魔戒現身」是影史上最成功的電影之一,在影像和藝術成就上更是讓人難以忘懷。但是,這一切只是開始,對於製作「魔戒二部曲:雙城奇謀」的設計師和藝術家們,他們必須面對超越前作的挑戰!本書將帶領你一起穿越這個向不可能挑戰的精采歷程!五百禎前所未見的獨家繪圖、素描和電影中的數位特效!魔戒電影設定聖典2雙城奇謀」揭露了整部電影從分鏡表演變為最後成果的精采過程,超過五百張幾乎完全未曾出現在其它媒體上的圖片。
這本獲得官方授權的作品包含了艾倫•李與約翰•豪威的鉛筆素描、獲得奧斯卡提名的姬拉•迪克森的服裝設計、以及奧斯卡得主理查•泰勒領軍的威塔工作室所設計出的雕像、繪圖和數位特效。所有出現在電影中的道具、場景、建築、武器全收錄,連被修剪掉的片段也沒有遺漏!打開本書,你將欣賞到彼得•傑克森如何和旗下才華洋溢的創作者們打造「雙城奇謀」,托爾金的文學作品又是如何的搬上大銀幕,展現傲人的魔力!
作者簡介
蓋瑞羅素在媒體界擁有豐富的工作經驗,他曾經是雜誌編輯、小說家、專欄作家和廣播劇作家。他之前的作品包括了「辛普森家庭」等電視影集的報導作品、《魔戒電影設定聖典1》。
譯者簡介
朱學恆,一九七五年生,中央電機系畢業,因喜愛電玩、科幻,而一腳踏入奇幻文學的推廣。自一九九一年(朱的高中時代)開始接觸奇幻文學後,朱學恆便在報章雜誌上撰寫專欄、架設網站推廣奇幻文學,國內奇幻作品的翻譯及電玩的玩家手冊,幾乎全自其手筆。從一九九八年《龍槍編年史》的翻譯,到最近在台銷售近六十萬冊的《魔戒三部曲》,朱學恆已譯過二十三本奇幻文學譯作,長久以來的耕耘,讓國內原本冷門、次文化的奇幻文學領域,能夠獲得國內市場的肯定與歡迎。
•現任財團法人奇幻文化藝術基金會 董事長兼執行長。
•現任城邦文化事業股份有限公司奇幻基地出版事業部 總策劃。
•1992年於《軟體世界雜誌》(月刊,銷售量約四萬三千多本)開設「奇幻圖書館」(Fantasy Library)專欄,介紹科幻(Science-Fiction)和奇幻(Fantasy)類型作品,為期一年半。
•1998年起密集翻譯英美奇幻文學作品:《龍槍編年史》三部曲,《龍槍傳奇》、《龍槍傳承》、《黑暗精靈三部曲》、《夏焰之巨龍》(以上皆為第三波資訊出版)。
•2001年翻譯聯經年度大書--《魔戒三部曲》、《魔戒前傳:哈比人歷險記》。
•各奇幻或科幻類型的遊戲說明書,如「無聲狂嘯」、「凶兆」(Ripper)、「冰風之谷」(IceWind Dale)、「魔法門七」、「魔法門八」等數十種翻譯。
Stuff White People Like 豆瓣
所属 作品: Stuff White People Like
作者: Christian Lander Random House 2008 - 7
They love nothing better than sipping free-trade gourmet coffee, leafing through the Sunday New York Times, and listening to David Sedaris on NPR (ideally all at the same time). Apple products, indie music, food co-ops, and vintage T-shirts make them weak in the knees.
They believe they’re unique, yet somehow they’re all exactly the same, talking about how they “get” Sarah Silverman’s “subversive” comedy and Wes Anderson’s “droll” films. They’re also down with diversity and up on all the best microbrews, breakfast spots, foreign cinema, and authentic sushi. They’re organic, ironic, and do not own TVs.
You know who they are: They’re white people. And they’re here, and you’re gonna have to deal. Fortunately, here’s a book that investigates, explains, and offers advice for finding social success with the Caucasian persuasion. So kick back on your IKEA couch and lose yourself in the ultimate guide to the unbearable whiteness of being.
文心雕龙 豆瓣
所属 作品: 文心雕龙注(上下)
作者: 刘勰 中州古籍 2008 - 3
《文心雕龙》是中国文学批评史上的第一部宏伟巨制,对文学起源、文体类别、神思、风格、修辞、鉴赏、作家人品、文学语社会变迁等一系列重大问题进行了系统论述。作者刘勰的文学观,以儒家为主,兼容道家和佛家思想。他对人物和作品的评点,见解精辟,开中国文学批评史之先河,对后世影响深远。作品风格刚健,富有诗意。
古代汉语(第四册) 豆瓣
所属 作品: 古代汉语(第四册)
9.6 (5 个评分) 作者: 王力 中华书局 1999 - 6
古代汉语这一门课程,过去在不同的高等学校中,在不同的时期内,有种种不同的教学内容。有的是当作历代文选来教,有的是当作文言语法来教,有的把它讲成文字、音韻、训诂,有的把它讲成汉语史。目的要求是不一致的。
经过1958年的教育革命,大家进一步认识到教学必须联系实际,许多高等学校都重新考虑古代汉语的教学内容,以为它的目的应该是培養学生阅读古书的能力,而要达到这一个目的,必须既有感性知识,又有理性知识。必须把文选的阅读与文言语法、文字、音韻、训诂等理论知识密切结合起来,然后我们的教学才不是片面的从而提高古代汉语的教学效果。至于汉语史,则应该另立一科;汉语史是理论课,古代汉语是工具课,目的要求是不相同的。
北京大学在1959年进行了古代汉语教学的改革,把文选、常用词、古汉语通论三部分结合起来,取得了较好的教学效果。此外还有许多高等学校都以培養阅读古书能力作为目的,改进了古代汉语的教学。
The Elements of Style, Fourth Edition 豆瓣
所属 作品: The Elements of Style, Fourth Edition
9.2 (52 个评分) 作者: William Strunk Jr. / E. B. White Longman 1999 - 8
这是一本薄薄的小书。首版于1918年由纽约一家出版社出版。作者William Strunk,康耐尔大学英语教授,E.B.怀特对此书加以了修正。此书短小精悍,容量巨大。涵盖了母语英语的人写作和用法上常出的错误,也清晰地解释了一些语法书中很难找到的语言现象。虽然是为说英语的学生所写,但对于任何需要进一步了解英文用法,进而学习书写英文的人,这本书必不可少的。
The Book of Useless Information 豆瓣
作者: Noel Botham Berkley Pub Group 2006 - 6
Thousands of things you didn't think you needed to know-and probably don't.
All you never needed to know, and couldn't be bothered to ask.
One person's useless information could prove invaluable to someone else. Then again, maybe not. But to The Useless Information Society, any fact that passes its gasp-inducing, "not-a-lot-of-people-know- that" test merits inclusion in this fascinating but ultimately useless book.
Did you know...
- That fish scales are used to make lipstick?
- Why organized crime accounts for ten percent of the United States's annual income?
- The name of the first CD pressed in the U.S.?
- The shortest performance ever nominated for an Oscar?
- How much Elvis weighed at the time of his death?
- What the suits in a deck of cards represent?
- How many Quarter Pounders can be made from one cow?
- How interesting useless information can be?
The Book of Useless Information answers these teasers and will captivate readers with the joy of pursuing pointless knowledge.
The Joy of Chemistry 豆瓣
作者: Cathy Cobb / Monty L. Fetterolf Prometheus Books 2010 - 1
This book challenges the perception of chemistry as too difficult to bother with and too clinical to be any for. Cathy Cobb and Monty L Fetterolf, both professional chemists and experienced educators, introduce readers to the magic, elegance, and, yes, joy of chemistry. From the fascination of fall foliage and fireworks, to the functioning of smoke detectors and computers, to the fundamentals of digestion (as when good pizza goes bad!), the authors illustrate the concepts of chemistry in terms of everyday experience, using familiar materials. The authors begin with a bangs colourful bottle rocket assembled from common objects you find in the garage - and then present the principles of chemistry using household chemicals and friendly, non-technical language. They guide the reader through the basics of atomic structure, the nature of molecular bonds, and the vibrant universe of chemical reactions. Using analogy and example to illuminate essential concepts such as thermodynamics, photochemistry, electrochemistry, and chemical equilibrium, they explain the whys and wherefores of chemical reactions. Hands-on demonstrations, selected for their ease of execution and relevance, illustrate basic principles, and lively commentaries emphasise the fun and fascination of learning about chemistry. This delightful and richly informative book amply proves that chemistry can appeal to our intuition, logic, and - if we are willing to get down and dirty - our sense of enjoyment too.
The Architecture of Happiness 豆瓣
所属 作品: 幸福的建筑
作者: Alain De Botton Pantheon 2006 - 3
From Publishers Weekly
With this entertaining and stimulating book, de Botton (How Proust Can Change Your Life) examines the ways architecture speaks to us, evoking associations that, if we are alive to them, can put us in touch with our true selves and influence how we conduct our lives. Because of this, he contends, it's the architect's task to design buildings that contribute to happiness by embodying ennobling values. While he makes no claim to be able to define true beauty in architecture, he suggests some of the virtues a building should have (illustrated by pictures on almost every spread): order combined with complexity; balance between contrasting elements; elegance that appears effortless; a coherent relationship among the parts; and self-knowledge, which entails an understanding of human psychology, something that architects all too often overlook. To underscore his argument, de Botton includes many apt examples of buildings that either incorporate or ignore these qualities, discussing them in ways that make obvious their virtues or failings. The strength of his book is that it encourages us to open our eyes and really look at the buildings in which we live and work. A three-part series of the same title will air on PBS this fall. (Oct. 3)
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From The Washington Post's Book World/washingtonpost.com
While happily reading Alain de Botton's graceful musings about architectural beauty, I was suddenly struck by the photograph of the Edgar J. Kaufmann House in Palm Springs, Calif., designed by Richard Neutra in 1946. I turned the page to see what de Botton had to say about it:
"The bourgeois couples who lived in Richard Neutra's mid-twentieth-century steel and glass pavilions in California may at times have drunk too much, squabbled, been insincere and overwhelmed by anxiety, but at least their buildings spoke to them of honesty and ease, of a lack of inhibition and a faith in the future."
That was all. Odd, I thought. De Botton never points out that this same Edgar J. Kaufmann commissioned the most beautiful private home in America, Fallingwater. He was. Nor, I discovered after checking the index, does he mention its architect, a certain Frank Lloyd Wright. Not once.
There's no obvious reason why the author of How Proust Can Save Your Life and The Consolation of Philosophy should leave out Wright. Perhaps he simply decided to challenge himself, to see if he could manage the trick, just as the French novelist Georges Perec once published a perfectly readable novel in which none of the words contain the letter E. Certainly, de Botton otherwise reveals his usual wide learning, lyrically deployed. He discusses the neoclassical influence of Palladio, the impact of Horace Walpole's Gothic extravaganza Strawberry Hill on 19th-century building in Britain, the austere concrete housing of Le Corbusier (who once dubbed his sterile tenements "machines for living"). But mysteriously, almost tantalizingly, he avoids the vastly influential, world-famous Wright, whose houses are so serenely beautiful to look at and yet almost impossible to live in comfortably -- at least if you slouch, have children or collect anything. Not surprisingly, The Architecture of Happiness is itself a carefully designed book, tightly constructed around the photographs that appear on virtually every other page. (Another mystery: Which came first, the images or the text?) There are pictures of castles, cathedrals, office buildings, private homes, bridges, hallways, windows, chairs, ironwork. De Botton visits a theme park in Japan built to resemble 17th-century Amsterdam, shows us a 30-foot-high obelisk memorializing a beloved pig, interprets the monumental elegance of the Royal Crescent in Bath, and discusses both the early modern pursuit of functionality and the ancient Japanese esthetic of wabi, which "identified beauty with unpretentious, simple, unfinished, transient things."
Throughout, de Botton argues that the buildings we walk by, work in or come home to affect how we feel. They influence our mood, our sensibility, our very character. No one is likely to disagree with this, especially those of us who dispiritedly sink down into our windowless office cubicles day after day or vainly yearn for just one room, let alone an entire house, like those in Architectural Digest. Alas, much of the time we must simply accept what we are given or settle for what we can afford. For at no point does de Botton seriously address the economics of architecture and interior design. Even if you do it yourself, construction of any kind, especially the highly individualized, is almost prohibitively expensive.
This reality, however, doesn't undercut de Botton's essential point: "Buildings speak -- and on topics which can readily be discerned. They speak of democracy or aristocracy, openness or arrogance, welcome or threat, a sympathy for the future or a hankering for the past." In short, "they speak of visions of happiness." De Botton attempts to understand aspects of that happiness by touching on the achievements or failures of particular styles and constructions. He offers us, in effect, a handsome photo album printed on coated stock, augmented by thoughtful, highly polished paragraphs and pensées. Time after time, his descriptions neatly capture the distinctiveness and character of even the most unusual buildings. Admittedly, those who prefer their sentences strictly functional may sometimes judge de Botton's a tad lyrical, just as his mini-essays risk sounding a little gushy. For the most part, though, he keeps his balance, largely through his quiet intelligence, passionate conviction and the charm of a personality lightly tinged with melancholy:
"The failure of architects to create congenial environments mirrors our inability to find happiness in other areas of our lives. Bad architecture is in the end as much a failure of psychology as of design. It is an example expressed through materials of the same tendency which in other domains will lead us to marry the wrong people, choose inappropriate jobs and book unsuccessful holidays: the tendency not to understand who we are and what will satisfy us.
"In architecture, as in so much else, we cast around for explanations to our troubles and fix on platitudinous targets. We get angry when we should realize we are sad and tear down ancient streets when we ought instead to introduce proper sanitation and street lights. We learn the wrong lessons from our griefs while grasping in vain for the origins of contentment.
"The places we call beautiful are, by contrast, the work of those rare architects with the humility to interrogate themselves adequately about their desires and the tenacity to translate their fleeting apprehensions of joy into logical plans -- a combination that enables them to create environments that satisfy needs we never consciously knew we even had."
De Botton concludes his book with an even more heartfelt plea: We must strive to build in a manner worthy of the meadows and woods we are destroying. "We owe it to the fields that our houses will not be inferiors of the virgin land they have replaced. We owe it to the worms and the trees that the buildings we cover them with will stand as promises of the highest and most intelligent kind of happiness."
Copyright 2006, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved.
From Bookmarks Magazine
Alain De Botton, author of How Proust Can Change Your Life, The Art of Travel, and Status Anxiety, among other books, takes a humanistic approach in Architecture of Happiness and explores the ways in which our built environment affects us. He occasionally overindulges in florid prose, but critics agree that his more general observations of architecture are sound and interesting, if not entirely novel. The average reader will find much of interest in the broad range of eras, places, and styles that de Botton discusses. Well-placed photographs illustrate each point in the text. The book is so visual, in fact, that the BBC is making a three-part television series based on it, to air on PBS this fall.
Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.
Review
"De Botton is a lively guide, and his eclectic choices of buildings and locations evince his conclusion, that “we should be as unintimidated by architectural mediocrity as we are by unjust laws.”
—The New Yorker
The next time I'm at a party, and the conversation turns to "serious topics," like what the stock market did today, I think I'll suggest we talk about something more important: architecture. I'll ask the investment banker why he bought the house he did and insist he answer the question. And then I'll start quoting Alain de Botton.
—The National Post
If this book were a building, it would be a contemporary reading room, I think, with big windows, and clean, built-in bookshelves with a fold-out step ladder just right for fetching slim volumes from the top shelf. The elegant clarity and brisk humour of his style, accompanied by pages of photos, opens your eyes to the rich possibility of thinking about your home, and your city, in a new way.
—The Toronto Star
"De Botton's books are the literary equivalent of the Slow Food movement. They demand to be lingered over, not because the concepts are difficult but because they are rich and deep. Be prepared to put down your book frequently and turn his last few sentences over in your mind, testing his theses against the rooms and buildings you know well."
—The Globe and Mail
"In this simple, entertaining and brilliant book, Alain de Botton explores how architecture speaks to us and why it affects all aspects of human life. His great strength is to explain things we always knew but never understood."
—Christopher Hume, Architecture Critic, Toronto Star
“How did we ever manage without de Botton?”
— Sunday Times (U.K.)
“[de Botton] deals with questions of style, ideas of beauty, notions about why certain structures appeal to us. The author argues that we love beautiful buildings because they solidify ideas we have about ourselves and our world. They put into concrete form our aspirations; they compensate for our human weaknesses; in short, they make us happy. Virtually every page contains a sentence any essayist would be proud to have written. A lyrical and generously illustrated monograph about the intimate relationship between our buildings and ourselves.”
— Kirkus Reviews
“Singlehandedly, de Botton has taken philosophy back to its simplest and most important purpose: helping us live our lives.”
— Independent
Product Description
One of the great but often unmentioned causes of both happiness and misery is the quality of our environment: the kinds of walls, chairs, buildings and streets that surround us.
And yet a concern for architecture and design is too often described as frivolous, even self-indulgent. The Architecture of Happiness starts from the idea that where we are heavily influences who we can be, and it argues that it is architecture’s task to stand as an eloquent reminder of our full potential.
Whereas many architects are wary of openly discussing the word beauty, this book has at its center the large and naïve question: What is a beautiful building? It is a tour through the philosophy and psychology of architecture that aims to change the way we think about our homes, our streets and ourselves.