The Notebook
Autor Roland Allenen Limba Engleză Paperback – 9 sep 2024
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Paperback (2) | 59.87 lei 22-36 zile | +24.26 lei 5-11 zile |
Profile – 6 noi 2024 | 59.87 lei 22-36 zile | +24.26 lei 5-11 zile |
BIBLIOASIS – 9 sep 2024 | 118.91 lei 22-36 zile |
Preț: 118.91 lei
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781771966283
ISBN-10: 1771966289
Pagini: 416
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: BIBLIOASIS
ISBN-10: 1771966289
Pagini: 416
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: BIBLIOASIS
Notă biografică
Roland Allen is a publisher and author who lives in Hove. He studied at Manchester University and works in book (and notebook) publishing. He has written about subjects as diverse as bicycles and bread, kept a diary for decades, and enjoys stationery a little too much.
Recenzii
A restless, arresting new history of the notebook ... a fine book on a fabulous subject
A different, fascinating, entertaining, witty approach to writing cultural history
A fascinating study of notebooks through history, ... beautifully written and a complete delight to dip in to or read from cover to cover
With this fascinating exploration, Allen has written a very original, diverting and surprising history of a humble everyday object
Fluently and engagingly written
Remarkable ... Allen points to evidence that maintaining a notebook with pen and paper is best for processing and retaining information. It can stave off depression and act as ballast to those struggling with ADHD. It is tactile, a form of "embodied cognition", another example of the superiority of slowness ... paying attention, caring, handwriting: this is love.
The humble notebook is surprisingly revealing ... despite what Apple, Evernote and the like might try to tell us, the best cognitive tool available to us today was invented in the counting houses of Renaissance Florence
The fascinating stories [The Notebook] tells certainly make you want to take out a pen and jot down a few points ... Allen considers the notebook in its various forms, from the wax tablet to the electronic spreadsheet, and from early modernity to the present day ... his writing has the lightness of touch needed to turn the dry pages of notebooks into living historical documents
Roland Allen traces the ancient lineage of thought made tangible in pen and ink
The story that Allen tells dances from the pages of the earliest Arabic texts and the oldest surviving European scribbles from the 13th century, to friendship albums in the Netherlands in the 16th century, and onto recipes, cures and bookkeeping
Enjoyable ... Allen is a relaxed and amusing guide ... although he professes to be concerned mainly with notebooks' practical applications, he is a philosopher by stealth, keen to make the reader question where the mind stops and the rest of the world begins.
Charting an epic history from medieval sales ledgers to the jottings of Albert Einstein, Allen's wonderfully engaging account of the humble notebook through the centuries makes for enlightening reading
A fascinating, sweeping book which belongs on the Christmas present lists of everyone who lives their life in notebooks ... the humble notebook might be one of the most simple inventions humans have ever made, but that doesn't mean it hasn't revolutionised our lives ... charting everything from medieval note-takers to the pocketbooks of Einstein; Frida Kahlo's sketches to Agatha Christie's exercise books which are scrawled with plot ideas, Allen delves into how brilliant minds and everyday people put pen to paper as a method for thinking and shaping our world
An engaging popular history that considers the notebook in its various forms - wax tablet, ledger, spreadsheet - over the centuries. Why, despite the digitisation of everything, do many of us still write and draw on paper? Reflecting on this question, Allen touches on art, accounting, science and politics the better to trace through the years the relationship between power and information technology.
[An] intriguing exploration through the ages of the humble - and not so humble - notebook ... this is a book to be savoured
A delight to read, The Notebook is a reminder of our most vital tool
[A] meticulously researched celebration of notebooks, and the vital role they've played in creativity of all kinds
A notebook is evidence, process and inspiration, and Roland Allen captures it all in this sweeping survey of ideas and inventiveness
Transformational ... it's inspiring me to write longhand in a real paper notebook again
A glorious celebration of my all-time favourite object from its earliest incarnations to its funkiest forms. In his always interesting history of thinking on paper, Roland Allen has confected a scintillating cornucopia of notebook miscellany
Meticulously researched and intensely readable ... a tantalising glimpse into the private thoughts of artists, voyagers and medics, from pre-Renaissance Florence to a Covid-filled intensive care ward
A different, fascinating, entertaining, witty approach to writing cultural history
A fascinating study of notebooks through history, ... beautifully written and a complete delight to dip in to or read from cover to cover
With this fascinating exploration, Allen has written a very original, diverting and surprising history of a humble everyday object
Fluently and engagingly written
Remarkable ... Allen points to evidence that maintaining a notebook with pen and paper is best for processing and retaining information. It can stave off depression and act as ballast to those struggling with ADHD. It is tactile, a form of "embodied cognition", another example of the superiority of slowness ... paying attention, caring, handwriting: this is love.
The humble notebook is surprisingly revealing ... despite what Apple, Evernote and the like might try to tell us, the best cognitive tool available to us today was invented in the counting houses of Renaissance Florence
The fascinating stories [The Notebook] tells certainly make you want to take out a pen and jot down a few points ... Allen considers the notebook in its various forms, from the wax tablet to the electronic spreadsheet, and from early modernity to the present day ... his writing has the lightness of touch needed to turn the dry pages of notebooks into living historical documents
Roland Allen traces the ancient lineage of thought made tangible in pen and ink
The story that Allen tells dances from the pages of the earliest Arabic texts and the oldest surviving European scribbles from the 13th century, to friendship albums in the Netherlands in the 16th century, and onto recipes, cures and bookkeeping
Enjoyable ... Allen is a relaxed and amusing guide ... although he professes to be concerned mainly with notebooks' practical applications, he is a philosopher by stealth, keen to make the reader question where the mind stops and the rest of the world begins.
Charting an epic history from medieval sales ledgers to the jottings of Albert Einstein, Allen's wonderfully engaging account of the humble notebook through the centuries makes for enlightening reading
A fascinating, sweeping book which belongs on the Christmas present lists of everyone who lives their life in notebooks ... the humble notebook might be one of the most simple inventions humans have ever made, but that doesn't mean it hasn't revolutionised our lives ... charting everything from medieval note-takers to the pocketbooks of Einstein; Frida Kahlo's sketches to Agatha Christie's exercise books which are scrawled with plot ideas, Allen delves into how brilliant minds and everyday people put pen to paper as a method for thinking and shaping our world
An engaging popular history that considers the notebook in its various forms - wax tablet, ledger, spreadsheet - over the centuries. Why, despite the digitisation of everything, do many of us still write and draw on paper? Reflecting on this question, Allen touches on art, accounting, science and politics the better to trace through the years the relationship between power and information technology.
[An] intriguing exploration through the ages of the humble - and not so humble - notebook ... this is a book to be savoured
A delight to read, The Notebook is a reminder of our most vital tool
[A] meticulously researched celebration of notebooks, and the vital role they've played in creativity of all kinds
A notebook is evidence, process and inspiration, and Roland Allen captures it all in this sweeping survey of ideas and inventiveness
Transformational ... it's inspiring me to write longhand in a real paper notebook again
A glorious celebration of my all-time favourite object from its earliest incarnations to its funkiest forms. In his always interesting history of thinking on paper, Roland Allen has confected a scintillating cornucopia of notebook miscellany
Meticulously researched and intensely readable ... a tantalising glimpse into the private thoughts of artists, voyagers and medics, from pre-Renaissance Florence to a Covid-filled intensive care ward