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18/07/2024

READING TIPS

Nassim Taleb spends 30 hours every week reading books.

Here are 27 reading tips from Nassim Taleb

1) The minute I was bored with a book or a subject I moved to another one, instead of giving up on reading altogether.

2) The trick is to be bored with a specific book, rather than with the act of reading.

3) A good book gets better at the second reading. A great book at the third. Any book not worth rereading isn’t worth reading.

4) I follow the Lindy effect as a guide in selecting what to read: books that have been around for ten years will be around for ten more; books that have been around for two millennia should be around for quite a bit of time, and so forth.

5) The reading of a single text twice is more profitable than reading two different things once.

6) A private library is not an ego-boosting appendage but a research tool.

7) Read books are far less valuable than unread ones. The library should contain as much of what you do not know as your financial means, mortgage rates, and the currently tight real-estate market allows you to put there.

😎 Drink old wine. Read old books. Keep old friends.

9) Read nothing from the past one hundred years.

10) Never read a book that can be adequately summarized.

11) Never read a book you would not reread.

12) No book that can be shortened survives.

13) Books that endure don't look like good books; they are almost always very poorly written, but address fundamental topics.

14) What matters for a book is depth and relevance, which is extremely rare. Plus internal, not external coherence. Books that have them don't need the cosmetic s**t.

15) When a risk taker writes a book, read it. In the case of Peter Thiel, read it twice.

16) Keep the book. Easier to remember contents just by looking at it. Often not even necessary to consult notes.

17) I don't remember what I learned in class. I remember much of what I read on my own.

18) To become a scholar, spend decades reading 30-40 h/week.

19) You will accumulate more knowledge and more books as you grow older, and the growing number of unread books on the shelves will look at you menacingly. Indeed, the more you know, the larger the rows of unread books. Let us call this collection of unread books an antilibrary.

20) I don’t read newspapers. I don’t watch television. I’m not on Facebook. I don’t care for the social networks. I’m on Twitter, but I use it only as a means to an end. I read books.

21) Books are not read by the majority because they read the Internet, which is like junk food for the mind.

22) The unread books on your shelf are like a universe of alternate possibilities waiting to be explored.

23) I divide my spirits into two categories: those I read for the pleasure of reading and those I read for the pleasure of rereading.

24) To see if a book is real, ask 10 people of different backgrounds & professions to summarize it. If the summaries are similar, the book will not survive as it can be shortened to a journal article.
The more the summaries diverge, the higher the dimensionality of the book.

25) If you want to study classical values such as courage or learn about stoicism, don’t necessarily look for classicists. One is never a career academic without a reason. Read the texts themselves: Seneca, Caesar, or Marcus Aurelius, when possible. Or read commentators on the classics who were doers themselves, such as Montaigne—people who at some point had some skin in the game, then retired to write books. Avoid the intermediary, when possible.

26) Criticism, for a book, is a truthful, unfaked badge of attention, signaling that it is not boring; and boring is the only very bad thing for a book. Consider the Ayn Rand phenomenon: her books Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead have been read for more than half a century by millions of people, in spite of, or most likely thanks to, brutally nasty reviews and attempts to discredit her.

27) A novel you like resembles a friend. You read it and reread it, getting to know it better. Like a friend, you accept it the way it is; you do not judge it.

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Compiled by Alex and Books

I received this message from Emerson Collins. If you're interested, or know someone who is, please feel free to contact ...
27/06/2024

I received this message from Emerson Collins. If you're interested, or know someone who is, please feel free to contact him.

Hello!

I’m Emerson Collins, the Program Director for the Del Shores Foundation.

Based on the career and work of Sordid Lives creator and playwright/director/producer Del Shores, our mission is to identify and support new Southern LGBTQ+ playwrights and screenwriters, we're excited to share that we have launched our third Del Shores Foundation Writers Search and we are currently accepting scripts through the end of July 2024!

Our Writers Search includes Cash Awards for the winners with $3000 for Best Screenplay and Best Play and $1000 for Best Short/Web Series. We also award $250 to all finalists and $100 to all semifinalists and is open screenwriters and playwrights who: identify as LGBTQ+, currently live in the U.S. South, and have not been produced in the submission category.

We have Production Grants associated with each category. $2000 to the production budget of the winning short film, travel to Los Angeles and production company meetings for the winning screenplay, and $10,000 to the Del Shores Foundation Theatre Partner who produces the world premiere production of the winning play. We also have Play Finalists Reading Grants to support one-night stage readings with the writer in attendance at one of our Theatre Partners. Three of those from last year’s Writers Search are happening in June! Additionally, each year we produce a Del Shores Foundation Writers Festival featuring live stage readings of all three winning scripts, private workshops with film and theatre professionals and public panels.

ALL EVENTS ARE FREE!

We also cover all travel, accommodation and meal costs for the winning writers and finalists in all three categories who are available to attend! The festival moves each year, enjoy highlights from our 2024 Writers Festival in Atlanta:

https://youtu.be/nVayqy7PoeM?si=D_5kAaQ2Oo-Z9rJF

Our 2023 Short Film winner is producing his short this month with the support of our Production Grant. Our Screenplay winners have met with executives from Ryan Murphy Productions, Shondaland Productions, Greg Berlanti Productions, A24, Universal Pictures and more. Our 2022 Play winner had his world premiere production in Los Angeles last fall and another play opened Off-Broadway in January. The world premiere of our 2023 Play Winner is this fall at Actor’s Express in Atlanta!

We will create a waiver code for free submission for your members and audience if you would be interested in helping us connect with Southern LGBTQ+ writers in an eblast, newsletter, social media, listing or with colleagues, members, or associates you think might have a script or be interested.

If you have a recommendation for reaching even more writers in your community, please let us know. I'm happy to speak further if you have any questions. For more information on us:

https://www.delshoresfoundation.org/

Thank you for your time!
Emerson Collins
[email protected]
818-602-2730

Nonprofit inspired by the work of Sordid Lives creator Del Shores promoting, mentoring and developing the work of LGBTQ southern writers

27/05/2024

This summer, the West Texas Wordsmiths will host the inaugural writing challenge, Book or Bust!

Find out more info here: https://www.wtxwordsmiths.com/

30/04/2024
https://lubbockwrcg.com/local-authors-books-at-mahon-library/
12/10/2023

https://lubbockwrcg.com/local-authors-books-at-mahon-library/

Local WRCG Author's Books at Mahon Library At the back of the Non-Fiction Books next to the women’s restroom. Women's Restroom at the back right side of the libraryFull ShelvesGrace Allison BlairThomas J. NicholsJoe Douglas Trent, Brick Wilson, MishkaDan-Dwayne SpencerPatrick Hanford

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Many authors spend their lives receiving rejection letters and cannot afford the high fees charged by subsidy publishing companies so they never get published. Now, with ePubnationwide.com, you can see your work in print without a large up-front cost to you.