Member Reviews
I came to this a bit late, but the topic is relevant in recent years as we contend with the harmful effects of the type of life that we've set up for ourselves and the harmful expectations of capitalism. It was a good examination of technology and psychology, as well as productivity, and how our relationships to those can be scrutinized and transformed.
From the description of this book and what I heard, it was quite different than expected. The case studies and examples belaboured the points early on and took multiple chapters to set up the framework of the book. A story about hippies living together on a compound and why that didn't work out was discussed extensively but didn't make a strong point. Taking time in nature and having regular places to go back to and visit are commonly accepted as good ideas, so I was left looking for more from this book.
I really wanted to like this book. It’s an interesting premise about activism and what we could be doing with our time; however, it’s so academic, slow, nearly inaccessible, and written as almost a navel-gazing session.
You can tell the author is a professor because the purpose and themes are buried in obscure references.
How to Do Nothing is an amazing exploration of our current attention-competing, dizzying world of information overload—and it would be a fabulous book if it just stopped there. But Odell actually offers insights into how to fight this modern cacophony of too-muchedness, leaving us with an improbably optimistic and refreshing view on a decidedly 21st-century problem
Very good book, but hard to describe. Surprisingly (in a good way) focused on ecology. I mostly listened to this book on daily isolation walks, and it was a perfect fit for that. The kind of book where I made sure to add most of the books she mentioned to my “to read list”
With such a title as "How to Do Nothing," one might have the mistaken idea that Jenny Odell's book is a self-help guide. Instead, it is Odell's thoughtful musings on the attention economy and the ways that she attempts to resist its lures and snares in favor of a more thoughtful life.
Featured in a column on the Beauty of Boredom:
"Up next on my own reading list in this category is How to Do Nothing (Melville House, $25.99) by Jenny Odell, which promises suggestions for "resisting the attention economy." (Shelf Awareness for Readers, June 4, 2019)
A book of essays lyrically written not exactly a self help book but a book that will capture your thoughts a special read a book to use while disengaging from the busy world.I will be gifting this to friends.#netgalley#melvillepress
A timely title indeed! While it may be harder to follow for some rather than others, it's a great book to have and to gift! I bought this because I have trouble relaxing myself.
Really enjoyed it. Brings a lot of attention to the "attention economy," which is a phrase I've been using in my everyday speech. I've always hated social media, and this book gave me a lot of insight on its creep into the lives of everyone.
This book, as others have said, was not what I expected. It was slow-going for me to get through (and there are chunks of it I skimmed, pledging to come back to when I was in more of a state to process the information I was being given), but wow, is it powerful! It's not an easy read, despite what the cover or title may tell you. I, like others here, feel like this book would benefit a little more from a more accurate title and cover. However, I feel like it's vital reading, and I'll continue thinking about it and returning to it for months -- maybe years -- to come.
Thank you Melville House Publishing and Netgalley for this ARC.
I was attracted to this book for the title of ‘How to do nothing’ and also beautiful cover!
I was not able to finish this book. It was very different from what I had anticipated and rather than being a book on simplicity, creating space in life etc it felt bogged down with politics, academia and just too heavy for what I was hoping for,
I feel a different title and cover page may attract the market this book is designed for.
Thank you for the opportunity to review this book.
Like others, this book is not what I was expecting. I was expecting more of a how-to, self-help book but instead this is a very heady, very academic and well-researched treatise on attention, culture, and our society at large. I didn’t get to finish because of a slew of family events, but what I read I did...respect? I never was excited to pick the book back up, but once I did I always found the author’s arguments original and well-founded - I found myself wanting to highlight a LOT. This book is for deep thinkers, armchair philosophers, and those interested in peeling back the layers of our constructed reality.
Thank you for the opportunity to review "How to Do Nothing" by Jenny Odell. I've been working my way through this work slowly- 'tis the season for academics to be swamped with competing interests, but hey... isn't that the point of this work? To lift our eyes from all of the things that distract us and take moments to simply be present and notice the world around us? (I'd say something about being mindful here, but that isn't a word that Odell puts forth; of course there are many ways to take in the world...)
In any case, I've read most of HtDN, and so far, so good. I'm inclined to recommend it to friends based on my progress thusfar, and I look forward to making some moments to see how she wraps things up.
Not quite what I was expecting--based on the subtitle, it sounded like a handbook or self-help guide for mindfulness--but this collection of essays by Jenny Odell is lovely and lyrical, and will encourage you to slow down and do some deep thinking of your own.
"How to Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy" is a call to action from American artist and writer Jenny Odell. Dealing with the ubiquitous right-now phenomenon of social media and big-data advertising, aka Facebook and Google (but many others as well), Odell exhorts us to move beyond "turning off" or quitting, to finding new ways (which are just old ways rebadged) to be present in the world while attempting, best as one can, to bend social media and the rest to our ends. Odell doesn't come at this most fascinating and vital issue with the eyes of an academic but as an artist and activist, and the book isn't easy going for a generalist and novelist like me. As she herself admits, her eagle eye skates all over the place, referencing all manner of art and politics, and her arguments can be dense to the point of loss of meaning, again when looked at from the perspective of an ordinary person like me. But in my reading, I forgave her all of that, because she offered exactly what I sought: intellectually fresh and lateral ways to view the issues. And she delivered in spades. I have tons of quotes from her pages to help me tease out my own views on this strange world I now inhabit. If, in the end, Odell's climax cum conclusions offered me little, the journey was more than worth it. Highly recommended for its careening intellect and visions.
In the great tradition of Emerson and Bookchin you will find in this book by Jenny Odell, "How to Do Nothing", a slidelong journey to find the hopeful possibilities of life in the Twenty-First Century. It is a remarkable book not the least for its range in discussion, bridging the very personal with the global and universal. Its as practical as it is reasonable and adventurous. I would say epic in scope, but if anything Odell reasons for a different sought of engagement, one where we understand ourselves and the world around us more fully. I don't know if this is a self help book for a person or a planet, either way she does a great job of engaging the reader.
I was immediately drawn to this books based on the concept of it. Like many, I struggle with burnout and am tired of being caught in the race our culture sells us. Though there were some amazing gems in this book, they were hard to discover through the meandering and seeming disorganization of the rest of the book.
This quote was pure gold:
“I don’t mean this to be a weekend retreat or a mere treatise on creativity. The point of doing nothing, as I define it, isn’t to return to work refreshed and ready to be more productive, but rather to question what we currently perceive as productive.” I wanted more of this and less of the wandering thoughts through art, culture, philosophy, etc. It wasn’t that I wanted more specific application. It’s just that I struggled to make the connections between the many topics the author threw at me. Some great concepts that stuck with me but I’m reluctant to recommend this one.
Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read and review this book
An amazing treatise about reclaiming our attention.
It's not a how-to book, but rather a deep examination of how culture reacts (or can react) in the face of changing times and technologies.
Podcast TK
Odell has created a truly special work in this book.
While its possible that it's a mixture of the two, I feel like the book was either too smart for me or was just a high level thought experiment. There were several moments while reading where I felt just on the verge of something extremely profound, but ultimately I finished reading with a sense of wanting, which is why I settled on a 4 star rating instead of 5. But since superficially easy answers are also a product/invention of the attention economy, perhaps this isn't fair.
Would HIGHLY recommend for artists, writers, thinkers, and ...well, let's go inclusive with "humans"