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Alimentar la mente

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Este volumen contiene dos textos de Lewis Carroll desconocidos para el público lector en español, dos aproximaciones inusuales al genial autorde Alicia. El primero, «Alimentar la mente», es una conferencia que dictó Carroll sobre la lectura y sus bondades, en clave de humor y genial por momentos. El segundo texto, «Ocho o nueve sabias palabras sobre escritura epistolar», es un texto amable, curioso, delirante y también lleno de humor. En él Carroll describe sus singulares prácticas a la hora de redactar y clasificar su correspondencia. Muchos de sus consejos, en esta época en que la escritura por carta parece extinguirse, siguen siendo útiles, pues lo son para las relaciones personales, y ¿por qué no? para la escritura de correo electrónico. Pero sobre todo, el lector pasará a lo largo del texto de la sonrisa a la carcajada.

Esta edición contiene las ilustraciones en color que acompañaron a la edición inglesa de 1890.

69 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1907

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About the author

Lewis Carroll

6,191 books8,430 followers
The Reverend Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, better known by the pen name Lewis Carroll, was an English author, mathematician, logician, Anglican clergyman and photographer.

His most famous writings are Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and its sequel Through the Looking-Glass as well as the poems "The Hunting of the Snark" and "Jabberwocky", all considered to be within the genre of literary nonsense.

Oxford scholar, Church of England Deacon, University Lecturer in Mathematics and Logic, academic author of learned theses, gifted pioneer of portrait photography, colourful writer of imaginative genius and yet a shy and pedantic man, Lewis Carroll stands pre-eminent in the pantheon of inventive literary geniuses.

He also has works published under his real name.

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5 stars
140 (35%)
4 stars
144 (36%)
3 stars
74 (18%)
2 stars
28 (7%)
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9 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 58 reviews
Profile Image for R..
85 reviews10 followers
January 5, 2019
Short essay but it takes long to read because you feel like you need to chew on everything he says
FULL of good advice
Profile Image for Jim.
Author 7 books2,088 followers
October 29, 2018
Just a 30 minute essay comparing the feeding of the mind to the body. Great parallels. I do try to vary my diet & I do consume books regularly, but I find myself guilty of gluttony & his warnings against this were fantastic. I do need more time to digest at times. The style was very much like that of the Alice stories, narrated the same way, & just as interesting. Highly recommended!
Profile Image for Shauna.
112 reviews93 followers
May 15, 2015
Why, what have you been doing with your mind lately? How have you fed it? It looks pale, and the pulse is very slow.

Feeding The Mind is (very) short but sweet. Lewis Carroll has always been a favourite of mine for his funny-peculiar style, and this endeared him to me all the more.
54 reviews
April 21, 2014
Feeding the Mind is short, pithy, and to the point. It offers great common sense for using books as food for the mind.
Profile Image for Kenil Patel.
25 reviews
April 21, 2024
Feeding the Mind: Feeding the mind with the right nutrition and ingredients is indispensable. As reading is one of the mightiest source of knowledge for an individual and has a prodigious impact as well, it becomes prominent to choose the right materials and the way of exercising it. A mind lacking these elements becomes slow and cannot maintain pace with moderate conversation, nor can it jump between two logical conclusions, as everything becomes absurd for it and it gets stuck in narrow controversies. This is what is called "A Fat Mind". Conversely, possessing a gluttonous mental propensity can also lead to severe ramifications. Too much novel can over-fantasize your expectations with this uncertain world and can cause depression and low self-esteem as well. Therefore, sweet pudding or pie should be for a mild taste, not the whole of your appetite.
Profile Image for Fishpiss_ Slowjottings.
15 reviews1 follower
November 16, 2025
Everything that's worth knowing had already been said before. Everything worth feeling had already been sung about. Everything is written, and there is no incentive for a troubled mind like yours to create. Then, how will you make peace with the timidity of your existence? How will you cope with visions and aspirations of your grandeur?
Many seek solace in consumption, and all sorts of them. Drugs, sex, clothes, social media and the most ubiquitous of them all, gluttony. What if all your life you had been fed that you're one of the smarter kinds? The frivolous trivialities of everyday life shouldn't bother you. Yet, the Hunger calls - in growls and boredom. And, Hunger hurts.
Hence, the only choice for you which remains is feeding your mind. It is here that the astute aphorisms and imaginative metaphors of Caroll intervene. Can your mind be overfed or underfed? What is an obese intellect? Does one digest thoughts or absorb wisdom? Do the great books make you masticate? Are you a ruminant? I could go on endlessly with the metaphors related to food and thought, but more importantly, does this review tickle your appetite? If so, then perhaps you should pick it up and eat it

(a 4.5 stars read. my only complaint is that it should have been longer, more thorough.)
Profile Image for İlhanCa.
909 reviews7 followers
October 24, 2023
A short essay but will take some time to get what it means to you..
Profile Image for Brittnee.
401 reviews35 followers
July 30, 2018
This was a very insightful little read!
Profile Image for Sona.
4 reviews1 follower
February 12, 2016
"Well, it is, I say, for us that the consequences of neglecting the body can be clearly seen and felt, and it might be well for some if the mind were equally tangible and visible. If we could take it to the doctor and have its pulse felt."
"-First, then, we should set ourselves to provide for our mind proper kind of food.
-Then, we should be careful to provide this wholesome food in proper amount.
-Then again, though the food be wholesome and in proper amount, we know that we must not consume too many kinds at once.
- Having settled the proper kind, amount, and variety of our mental food, it remains that we should be careful to allow proper intervals between meal and meal, not swallow them too hastily without mastication so that it may be thoroughly digested.
- As to the mastication of food, the mental process answering to this is simply thinking over what we read."
Caroll, in this witty and short essay, draws an analogy between body and mind, stating that if it is the nature who turns on the necessary functions of a body and leaves no need for us to activate those functions but to simply meet the needs of it; in the case of mind, the scenario is completely different, it is, as stated by Lewis, 'one's duty no less than one's interest to read, mark, learn and inwardly digest'the good books that fall in your way.'
Profile Image for Alex.
11 reviews14 followers
May 17, 2014
This is a great little read (very little, only 8 pages long). I highly recommend it if, like me, you like new mental perspectives on familiar things. Carroll presents a metaphor between feeding and reading which is both entertaining and enlightening.

It's interesting as well to notice similarities between his idea of the brain needing a few minutes to "digest" and currently popular techniques like Pomodoro.
9 reviews
October 25, 2020
Feeding the Mind, Lewis Carroll, ca1870-1890, super short
This brief speech by the famous author of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland recommends certain habits to maintain mental health as one would maintain physical health. The first half of the Amazon e-book (free) is an introduction by the person we have to thank for the publication of this speech, about 20 years after the speech was made.
Unless you are an avid Lewis Carroll fan (as I am), I recommend skipping this introduction, which ends with the initials of its author (W. H. D.). The main take-aways from the introduction are simply that this speech was not academic, but instead given to a crowd of “simple people”; and the citing of some light-hearted suggestions on letter-writing separately published by Lewis Carroll, the last of which is this:
“When you have written a letter that you feel may possibly irritate your friend, however necessary you may have felt it to so express yourself, put it aside till the next day. Then read it over again, and fancy it addressed to yourself. This will often lead to your writing it all over again, taking out a lot of the vinegar and pepper and putting in honey instead, and thus making a much more palatable dish of it!”
Now that you have read these thoughts, you can skip directly to the “main course” that is the speech itself. Otherwise, I fear the bland but filling introduction may spoil your appetite!
Profile Image for Byren Burdess.
86 reviews16 followers
December 31, 2023
"I have heard a physician telling his patient—whose complaint was merely gluttony and want of exercise—that ‘the earliest symptom of hyper-nutrition is a deposition of adipose tissue,’ and no doubt the fine long words greatly consoled the poor man under his increasing load of fat.

I wonder if there is such a thing in nature as a FAT MIND? I really think I have met with one or two: minds which could not keep up with the slowest trot in conversation; could not jump over a logical fence, to save their lives; always got stuck fast in a narrow argument; and, in short, were fit for nothing but to waddle helplessly through the world."


Preach it sister. Over the years I've tried improving my recollection of media consumed, particularly in books by using a variety of sticky notes to easily access interesting or important sections. Carroll ends this paper with this appropriate message:

"If this paper has given you any useful hints on the important subject of reading, and made you see that it. is one’s duty no less than one’s interest to ‘read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest’ the good books that fall in your way, its purpose will be fulfilled."
Profile Image for Joseph Sawanowich.
20 reviews8 followers
January 6, 2018
Mathematician Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, popularly known by his nom de plume of Lewis Carroll delivered this little essay in October of 1884 to the Vicar of Alfreton's parishioners. After the lecture, the Vicar was given the manuscript by the author with instruction to do with it as he wished. The lecture instructs us on the care and feeding of our minds. My edition was published by Levinger Press with illustrations by Edward Koren. A interesting little book by a fascinating man.
Profile Image for Diego Pino.
73 reviews14 followers
December 15, 2018
I enjoyed this read. It's essentially a very short essay about how to nurture your mind: good habits, what to do and what not to do, etc. Originally, the essay is a manuscript for a lecture Lewis Carroll delivered in October 1884 in front of a public audience in Derbyshire.

Despite the essay is more than a hundred years old, I found it still relevant today. For instance, it comments that it's a bad habit to gorge information and to not dedicate time to reflect between reads. I found this particularly true when thinking about the daily habits of many people today (including me), trying to consume as much information as possible through social networks and mass media. And this is just an example of some of the ideas you will find in this essay, there are other good points too.

On the other hand, I got this tiny book from Amazon's Kindle library. In my opinion is not worthy. The book is artificially fatten with useless content (with the exception of the preface). You better try to find this essay somewhere on the Internet (I think it has been published by Guttenberg project).
Profile Image for Joseph.
20 reviews1 follower
September 13, 2019
Read this Periodically

In an age obsessed with self-image, physical prowess, and entertainment galore, this short essay is crucial to maintaining overall health! So often people are too focused on improving one aspect of their body, but we must find a balance. Read this periodically to check yourself!
Profile Image for Emilia.
30 reviews1 follower
December 13, 2022
Un librito muy breve y con toques de humor. En la edición que yo leí venían más ensayos sobre como redactar la correspondencia, guardarla , etc. Tenía algunos comentarios bastante machistas pero si quitas eso creo que merece mucho la pena leerlo 🌙
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
19 reviews
April 6, 2025
Me lo he leído en 10'. Es curioso como algunas de las advertencias y recomendaciones dadas para la correspondencia epistolar tendrían sentido hoy en día. Curiosa también la relación entre lectura y comida que se propone en el ensayo.
Profile Image for Ella.
619 reviews105 followers
January 1, 2019
pretty much ????? the whole time i was reading
Profile Image for Jonathan.
594 reviews
January 3, 2019
I’m currently binging on short reads, so I think he’d probably have words with me.

But that’s okay.
Profile Image for Renee Starcher.
6 reviews
October 13, 2020
Not really what I expected.

A short narrative comparing the connection between mental and physical health and how balance in self care can help people.
234 reviews15 followers
April 26, 2021
Boring, lacked any real insight. Far too short for anything of worth to really be argued. Very typical of the era by waffling on about something without actually saying anything important.
Profile Image for Gypsy Heart.
44 reviews
November 5, 2021
i agree...wish he could have added more specific do's and don't ...but i guess we have to use our mind to figure it out
86 reviews27 followers
December 15, 2021
Nice short witty book. I agree with the observation that only 3-4 mins of break is enough to completely relax the mind, but one has to completely throw of the mind in random directions.
Profile Image for Sam Ghalayini.
9 reviews
March 25, 2022
Free on Google Books

“I wonder if there is such a thing in nature as a FAT MIND?”

“read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest”
Profile Image for Alexander Cruz.
140 reviews3 followers
May 15, 2022
Excelente lectura sobre la buena lectura, no por gula o por alcanzar un vano reto (como los de Goodreads). Es mejor digerir calidad a cantidad.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 58 reviews

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