50th International Book Fair in Sofia

I love the bookseller events in Sofia. They usually happen 2 times/year, and if the weather is good, I would go multiple times. This fall, I was short on time and visited once but it’s still open tomorrow as well. This is my harvest.

Physical books take up space, cost more, and are less available than electronic books but they still bring me far more joy. Nothing in the book is going to start blinking to get my attention. I won’t be tempted to context switch elsewhere like I am when reading on a screen. And last but not least – I pay for translation, paper, and publishing, and help some small businesses stay afloat.

Checkov’s gun

Checkov’s gun is a concept that in any story, there should be no irrelevant elements as they create an expectation that’s never met. Elements, like a gun, with no connection to the story should be edited out. Assuming a blog post is a story, you cut it down until it’s all down to the essence.

I find this theory fascinating and probably right, no matter if I agree with it or not. And while I’m trying to match it when writing, I think I enjoy seeing well-placed exceptions. One of my favorite book quotes is completely disconnected from the storyline, yet it stuck in my brain and made a footprint there.

“Trout, incidentally, had written a book about a money tree. It had twenty-dollar bills for leaves. Its flowers were government bonds. Its fruit was diamonds. It attracted human beings who killed each other around the roots and made very good fertilizer.”

― Kurt Vonnegut, Slaughterhouse-Five

On Forgetting Books

There’s a common wisdom that partners only do their best until they get married. This might be true or not but I’ve noticed similar things in various areas – diets, sport, alcohol consumption. An injury, a stressful situation, or just a long series of small transgressions and we are back to our worse selves but less hopeful. I think some of that is happening to my efforts to learn about Psychology and Marketing.

Yesterday I finished a book, called “To Sell is Human” by Daniel Pink. It covered areas of which I expected to be knowledgeable – engaging in conversations, noticing communication failures, active listening. The book is citing many others I’ve already read and even a research I’ve been aware of. Many takeaways, however, felt new. I checked my notes from “Verbal Judo” and “Crucial Conversations”. It was eye-opening. It felt like I forgot much of the content without ever using it. Then I checked a couple of other related books I read 2-3 years ago – I had no notes whatsoever.

Dale Carnegie suggested somewhere [citation needed] that his “How to Win Friends and Influence People” needs to be re-read, and I think also in another book suggested a slow pace of reading (no more than 1 chapter per day). All of that is so that the information sticks. The goal of reading non-fiction, after all, is not filling my home with books but learning skills and becoming a better human. Re-reading sounds a bit too much for me but read and forget is not a good strategy either (well, maybe it is, for “A Song of Fire and Ice”).

Here is what I plan to do:

– Write notes and keep highlights when I read non-fiction and self-help
– Write resumes with key takeaways so that I can go back and remind myself what was it all about when I need it.

I hope this makes my new year in reading more productive.