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I've quite a few books on the go at the moment but the one that's taken hold of me is The Spell of the Sensuous: Perception and Language in a More-Than-Human World. Has anyone else read this? It articulates many ideas that resonate with me deeply, and the poetry and scholarship of the writing is extraordinary. It basically addresses the underlying reasons for our modern day disconnection from the Earth - the understanding of which is fundamental to finding some way to reconnect.
This is very much a philosophical Green book. It's not an easy read, but it is extremely thought-provoking. I need time to sit and ponder quietly the ideas that have been thrown up here. I would recommend it to anyone with an interest in "deep ecology" and also to anyone who loves language. I think it would offer very fertile ground for discussion.
Megan, if you indeed have a copy, put this right to the very top of your to-read pile!


I'm currently wrapping up Post Carbon, and I'm also reading Water: The Epic Struggle for Wealth, Power, and Civilization and Nature's Ghosts: Confronting Extinction from the Age of Jefferson to the Age of Ecology. So many books, so little time.


I'm also reading The Forgotten Beasts of Eld, which is a wonderful story by one of my favorite fiction authors, Patricia A. McKillip. Her writing is absolutely magical. I've read some of her more recent books and I wasn't sure if this one, published in the 1970s, would match up. While McKillip's story telling has gotten tighter over time The Forgotten Beasts of Eld is still beautiful and I highly recommend it for people who enjoy poetic, fairytale-like fantasy stories.


I tried to read it last year but lost interest- I thought I'd give it another go!


Mike-sounds good. I love dogs, but I usually can't handle sad dog stories :(
I've been on a politics kick lately, I'm trying to get ahead of the election curve.

Well its going well so far. Not gripping, and not enough focus on the fish, but it is interesting. I shall also read the 1979 follow up, A Persian Quarter Century. BTW I much prefer the name Persia to Iran!

Also reading Kraken by China Miéville which largely follows a curator from the Natural History Museum, London searching for a giant squid which impossibly disappeared from the Darwin Centre and is prophesied to be a god and will bring about the end of the world. For anyone not familiar with Mieville, he is a writer of speculative fiction, his style often called 'New Weird' and imo he is a genius.
Also making my way through Wormwood Forest: A Natural History of Chernobyl by Mary Mycio which I am finding very interesting.


I read Oogy to review it for the amazon Vine Voice program and thought it one of the best animal books I've read in a long time (and I read a lot of them, being an animal lover).






And our library book group has chosen "Catcher in the Rye" for June :-) Looking forward to re-visiting Holden after many years.

And love "Catcher in the Rye." One of my favorites. Although the book has been replaced somewhat by John Green's books, especially "Looking for Alaska."


In Praise of Slowness: Challenging the Cult of Speed
Bill McKibben gave it this blurb: "Try reading this book one chapter a day--it is worth allowing tis subversive message to sink slowly in so it has a chance of changing your life."
I've learned that the Slow Movement has its own website: http://www.slowmovement.com/
And the author of the book, Carl Honoré, has a TED talk from 2005: http://www.ted.com/talks/carl_honore_...
And his own website: http://www.carlhonore.com/
The book is an important look at the addiction to "fastness" in the developed world. Honoré discusses "slowness" in relation to food, cities, mind/body, medicine, sex, work, leisure, and children. Each chapter reiterates that slowness enriches and deepens our lives.
The opening citation is from Gandhi: "There is more to life than increasing its speed." Some other quotations that stayed with me are:
p. 33 "It's hard to think about the fact that we're going to die; it's unpleasant, so we constantly seek ways to distract ourselves from the awareness of our own mortality. Speed, with the sensory rush it gives, is one strategy for distraction." (Mark Kingwell, professor of philosophy at the University of Toronto)
I had to smile at these words from Plautus, the Roman playwright, in 200 BCE:
"The God confound the man who first found out
How to distinguish the hours--confound him, too,
Who in this place set up a sundial
To cut and hack my days so wretchedly
Into small pieces!...
I can't even sit down to eat unless the sun gives leave,
The town's so full of these confounded dials..."
I really liked his discussion of how clocks and watches make us their slaves. He makes excellent points in each of the sections, moving into areas such as alternative medicine, yoga, and meditation. He himself sees them as valuable tools for slowing us down, but does not attach a spiritual component, which I appreciated.
The most touching chapter was the one on children, titled "Raising an Unhurried Child." The segment on reading bedtime stories to his son was such a great personal example of what can happen when we stop all the hurrying.




I'm just enthralled, and suggest everyone go to www.elisabethtovabailey.net to learn more about the author and this slim volume of pure inspiration.
This observation states my views most clearly:
"Like Seabiscuit's Laura Hillenbrand, this author is at the house-bound, often bed-bound extreme of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (brain stem inflammation), a condition similar to Lyme mockingly labeled "Chronic Fatigue Syndome" which U.S. Health Officials likewise continue to stall progress in. While her living restrictions set the stage for what transpires, 95% of this book isn't about illness, but an easily read, witty account of all-things snail. Starting from the almost-silent but neighborly presence of one, it gently focuses in on how snails eat, move, defend themselves, and mate. It draws on the expertise of current biologists, and on the prose of authors past, likewise fascinated by these presumptively simple creatures. The artful weaving between her growing personal interaction and amazement with a mysterious pet and the light science is so well done that one feels like a gastropod expert without having read a textbook, as well as entertained and indeed privileged to see a world invisibly slow to most of us."
The debilitating illness that is the underpinning of the book is never made into a maudlin, self-pitying background. Rather, I was mesmerized by the quotations Bailey chose to start each chapter--simply brilliant.
Much like The Diving Bell and the Butterfly: A Memoir of Life in Death, this slim volume is a tribute to the power of an individual who can overcome unbelivable adversity. And the information on snails is absolutely fascinating--another example of the miracles around us if we just take time to slow down and pay attention.


In Praise of Slowness: Challenging the Cult of Speed
Bill McKibben gave it this blurb: "Try reading this book one chapter a d..."
I'm so glad that you are reading Honore's book! Really changed my outlook and the way I approached my day and the things that I had to accomplish.
While it can be difficult to put into practice everything that he talks about, I have done a lot of what he suggests, and it worked for me. Of course, I started some of the things before I read the book, but there were many other suggestions that I hadn't heard before. Plus, he gives a lot of historical background which I found very interesting.
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Books mentioned in this topic
In Praise of Slowness: Challenging the Cult of Speed (other topics)The Diving Bell and the Butterfly: A Memoir of Life in Death (other topics)
The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating (other topics)
In Praise of Slowness: Challenging the Cult of Speed (other topics)
Kraken (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Mary Mycio (other topics)China Miéville (other topics)
Anne LaBastille (other topics)
Patricia A. McKillip (other topics)
This is meant to encompass everything you're reading, even if it doesn't directly relate to the green group! Happy reading :) For the record, I find nearly everything relates to environmental science.