My thanks to both NetGalley and The School of LIfe for an advanced copy of this book on quotes about life and love and how we can make ourselves a little bit better in both.
I have always been one of those readers who use a file card for a bookmark, sometimes two or three. I write down words I am unfamiliar with, historical events that I was unaware of and helpful hints that a lot of writers love to share. And quotes. I write down line, sentences, whole paragraphs, sometimes just a phrase. I have a dream of one day going through all my cards and seeing what took my fancy here, what I thought was profound there. Words can be a solace sometimes, or convey a meaning to others that shows what a person is thinking, but can't articulate. So I love quotes, as much as it seems as these editors do. The School of Life: Quotes to Live By: A collection to revive and inspire by The School of Life and its team is a compendium of aphorisms detailing the human condition and how others share those feeling we all have, but are better at writing it down.
The quotes here are taken from previous books in The School of Life series. As there reason for being is to help people lead more fulfilled lives, the quotes deal with the things that make humans be what we are, and the most crazy. Relationships, work, sociability, leisure and more. Some are very pithy, some are very telling. A seem lost in meaning or translation, and one or two defy understanding. There is a certain zen koan to quite a few, upon reading the quote becomes a mental earworm running around the head, a Möbius strip of meanings that keep the mind occupied all day.
The book is illustrated with a sort of New Yorker style, and like the New Yorker can hit or miss. My biggest pet peeve is that the quotes exist in a vaccum. There is no mention of what books they came from, and while I understand the authors are part of The School of Life, still I would have liked to know who wrote something, especially if I wanted to read more by that person later. There is a section, Others, whose authors and works are cited like in a Bartlett's, and the mix of anonymous and familiar can be a little jarring. Still there is a lot of truth here, and the names might not be as important as the words they left behind.
A good gift for a person you know that is having a rough time in life, and to remind them that they are loved. Also this would be a good entry for a lot of people into The School of Life and they many publications they have. I've been a fan for a while, and look forward to a second volume of quotes.