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A**V
Collector's item: inspiring children to become readers
A wide variety of letters by authors, drawing on their personal experiences on what drove them towards reading. Excellent art work. Beautiful resource for kids to find and/or validate their passion for reading.
P**D
Received with all corners damaged!
This is an expensive book, and a great book for young people to read.I had wanted to gift it, but the condition in which it has come prevents me from gifting it. I observe that all the corners of this expensive hardcover book have suffered damage because of being handled by people who probably normally handle only stuff that can be thrown carelessly about.
M**A
A work of art.
The content of the book itself is brilliant with beautiful, warm illustrations and inspiring letters addressed to young readers.The quality of pages is glorious, the illustrations vibrant, the book seems to me a work of art in itself. You can tell the labor that went into the book, from its content to cover (even the beauuutiful endpaper; which gets its own note!). It was carefully packaged as well!A treasure to behold, if I had any doubts before, about splurging on this book, I dont anymore! This book deserves it, also the proceeds from the sale of it benefit the NY public library system (so another plus!).I’d urge everyone who can, to go ahead and buy it!
R**J
Expensive but so worth it.
Recommend for adults and children alike.
A**R
Every house should have this book
A collection of letters, with whimsical illustrations, conveying what reading and books have meant to different people. People ranging from rap singers, authors, naturalists and scientists. Its my go-to book for some heartwarming inspiration.
S**
A beautiful collection of letters.
“You can’t remember being born, or the moment you first laughed, yet these episodes live inside you as vital contributors to the anthology of your inner self. Every good and bad experience leaves a rubbing inside you; an imprint of feeling whose impact doesn’t require memory or articulation to matter. Your deepest self is a mural of feeling-patterns running down your veins, across your heart, and they shrink or expand correspondent to your attention, nourishment and empathy. Books send signals from their feeling-patterns to yours, teaching you to identify what you’ve not been able to name. Follow their flares. Just like you, a book has an interior life, and just like you it only ever wants to be known; each of your efforts to connect freshens your best traces. Through a book, an author offers her own painted pulses, trusting you’ll care, and hoping you’ll recognize its match inside you. To accept something meaningful from a stranger you’d never ask for in person is a privilege as rare to receive as to extend. Every reader should behave like a book, pushing others toward growth, aiming to deepen the most enduring relationship: the one we have with ourselves.”
A**T
Would've bought it if it was priced at its tenth.
Although I admire everything about BrainPickings and Popova's curation, I wonder how many readers will actually be able to get a hold of this book, given its price (not to mention the age group that's been mentioned in the description- 10 and up- shall remain untouched by the gem this book is, unless one has rich parents). I can only wish for the time when the book achieves a wider readership; when it finally cuts down on the elitism and exclusivity it should've aimed to obliterate in the first place.P.S.- Haven't read the book yet. Probably won't be able to read it either. This is my disappointment speaking.
J**Z
Favorite of all time
"Velocity of Being" by Maria Popova is a wonderful collection of letters and illustrations that celebrate the magic of reading and the power of books. Popova, along with Claudia Bedrick, curated this book to inspire readers of all ages to explore the wonders of literature.The book features letters from a diverse group of contributors, including scientists, artists, writers, and more, who share their personal experiences and insights about the joy and importance of reading. Accompanying these letters are beautiful illustrations by artists from around the world, adding an extra layer of creativity and visual appeal to the book."Velocity of Being" is a treasure trove of wisdom, humor, and heartfelt reflections on the impact that books can have on our lives. It's a reminder of the profound connection we can feel with characters, stories, and ideas, and how they can shape who we are and how we see the world.Overall, "Velocity of Being" is a delightful and thought-provoking book that will leave you feeling inspired and eager to dive into your next literary adventure. Whether you're a lifelong bookworm or just discovering the joys of reading, this book is sure to touch your heart and ignite your imagination.
A**Z
Bonito!
Esta muy bonito pero el papel no me gusto, la calidad de las impresiones me las imaginaba mejor.
M**E
Special
Every now and again a book comes along that is special. If only all books could delight like this.Great for your library and brilliant as a gift.
G**O
Such a special, special book
A remarkable collection of letters matched each with bespoke artwork that together delivers memorable and moving stories for and about young readers and reading that will resonate with every parent. I’m so pleased I found my way to it. I immediately bought three more to give away. I cannot imagine a better gift for a parent of a young reader, or especially also for a parent of readers who were young not that long ago (including themselves).
V**A
Amor pelos livros!
São mais de 100 cartas endereçadas às crianças, de pessoas de áreas diferentes mas com uma coisa em comum: o amor pelos livros. Cada carta vem acompanhada de um ilustrador, todos maravilhosos, vários dos melhores ilustradores da atualidade, por sinal.Existem três exceções aqui, nas quais texto e ilustração pertenciam a uma só pessoa. É o caso de Tomi Ungerer ou os quadrinhos de Roz Chast e Ariel Schrag. Estes três artistas foram os únicos a fazerem ambas as coisas: texto/imagem. Mas isto é só uma curiosidade. Todas as cartas e ilustrações são bonitas de se ler/ver.Envio fotos com o índice para vocês conhecerem todos os artistas que estão neste livro maravilhoso, de 280 páginas, formato próximo de A4 e capa dura.
S**H
Beautiful and vast
A Velocity of Being: Letters to Young Readers, a beautiful and huge, 280-page hardcover brick of a book compiled over eight years or more through their asking dozens of leading people in the public sphere—many of them not surprisingly writers—about the way reading had been central in the shaping of their lives (no one said it hadn’t been important, of course; I assume any such letters were respectfully not included. I was imagining some of the letters from some of my high school students many years ago as a counter-argument)..Some letters I liked came from Jane Goodall, Neil Gaiman, (educational psychologist) Jerome Bruner, Ursula K. Le Guin, Yo-Yo Ma, Judy Blume. I liked most of them, don’t get me wrong, but after a time I wondered about the audience for such a book. Pro-reading types, of course: Librarians, English/language arts teachers, Goodreads readers!! as well as the target audience stated in the title, young readers, but if they already like to read they would mostly rather read a book than talk about why books are so great. And the kids (or adults) who hate reading, well, this book ain’t gonna talk ‘em into it. But many of the statements are lovely, what any of us might have said, though why have a book what we said, we want to know what successful said about how reading help shape them and become world-renowned. It’s a kind of well-written confirmation of most readers’ generally held views, some of them a bit short and obvious.But this is one gorgeous artifact, a coffee-table book every school and library oughtta have on display. I’ll tell you why I would personally want it, though. Popova also knows thousands of terrific illustrators, and she gets some of the best I know, a one page illustration per letter: Isabelle Arsenault, Chris Ware, Oliver Jeffers, Maira Kalman, Shaun Tan, Art Spiegelman. Almost every page is gorgeous, just stunning, like visual poems about reading. That’s the primary reason why this book gets five stars from me.I loved Chris Ware’s two page illustrated story, one of my faves.I liked this story: Author Elizabeth Gilbert skipped school to stay home and read Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls. She got caught lying and was grounded. Yet she never forgot that day or that book. (How many days would I have preferred to stay home from school and just read a book all the way through!? Many of them!)Holocaust survivor Helen Fagin once lived in a Polish ghetto where reading was punishable by hard labor, even death (like slaves in this country!), but she risked her life running a secret school for kids, though it couldn’t be about facts, she soon realized:“What they needed wasn’t dry information but hope, the kind that comes from being transported into a dream-world of possibility. There are times when dreams sustain us more than facts.”Though I generally liked school, that’s why I would have wanted to stay home from time to time, as learning in school was often configured as an accumulation of facts and skills rather than passionate engagement with the world through the imagination. You and I already know this, but it is nice to see it confirmed here again and again in this book.
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