Book description
** A New York Times Bestseller **
NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY: Time • The New Yorker • NPR • GQ • Elle • Vulture • Fortune • Boing Boing • The Irish Times • The New York Public Library • The Brooklyn Public Library…
Why read it?
6 authors picked How to Do Nothing as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
Urgency is a lie. We all need a reminder to sit down and do nothing and this book is the one to remind you. One of the main points is that our attention is sacred, and we live in a fast world vying for it. Refusing to participate is one of the highest acts of liberation, especially when practiced in community with others who to believe in the art of “doing nothing.”
I love the permission this book gives. Often, we need permission to sit down because nothing is as urgent as we are told it is.
This book is…
From Brittany's list on free your mind.
I read the two previous books when I was working to strip a lot of negative forces out of my life. They opened my eyes to how power holders manipulated my desires to convince me that their exploitative version of the world was in my best interest. It was one thing to reject that hierarchy of ideas around money, status, power, and attention; it was another to embrace the void they left.
Odell helped me embrace the space. This book allowed me to reflect on the way I’d been taught that endless growth and productivity were the only way to…
From Wendy's list on help you reject capitalism.
Reading this book encouraged me to use my attention and even personhood as a form of resistance against our fitter, happier, more productive society. A ‘why’ book more than a ‘how’ book, Odell shaped and squeezed my brain the whole time I was reading it and showed me how to find happiness that wasn't tied to doing ever more things.
From Neil's list on create happy habits in your life.
If you love How to Do Nothing...
If you have ever felt alienated by our capitalist society which tells us we do not deserve any sort of freedom or any sort of safety net, and which encourages us to use all of our time laboring and being “productive” – Jenny Odell’s book is for you.
I had already quit my job and started planning my road trip the week before How To Do Nothing came out, but if I hadn’t, I would have! The way Odell writes about paying attention to nature – she calls herself not a bird watcher but a “bird noticer” – has shaped…
From Blythe's list on nature and freedom.
Our attention is a precious - and overdrawn - resource. This counterpoint to the appeal of attention economics helped me think about how to allocate my attention with intention. Partly self-help guide, part political manifesto, Jenny rails against the hustle culture of modern capitalism and provides a way of thinking beyond productivity, efficiency, and the supremacy of technology. As advertisers and media companies continue to find new and better ways to harvest attention it behooves us to consider what we want to do ours, and remind corporations that it is a rare and valuable thing. What you pay attention to…
From Faris' list on on how valuable your attention is.
What do the California wildfires and our addictions to smartphones have to do with each other? How to Do Nothing spells it out. The book isn’t really about doing nothing, but like a zen koan, it offers a paradox: we live in a society that treats productivity in a particular (capitalist) way, and this kind of productivity is both damaging to ourselves and to the world. Against that grain, “doing nothing” is a kind of resistance. And in the process, we might actually “do” something really great for the world, like for starters, notice it in the first place. Where…
From Sarah's list on keeping cool on a warming planet.
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