If you want to do better at studying ...read this book
If you want to help your kids in school...read this book.
If you want to be a better teacher...read this book
If you want to remember where you left your keys... this book can't help you. But for anything that requires organised information, there is profound insight between these covers.
In 2016, Lynne Kelly published a book on how indigenous cultures around the world memorized vast amounts of information - from cultural history and how to navigate their landscape, to complex records of all the animal, plants, insects, stars and elements of the natural world that matter for their world. Many of their artifacts, some of which seem impractical or strange, were not created for aesthetic pleasure, but as utilitarian memorization tools.
In her 2019 follow up book, Memory Craft, Kelly explores a dozen or so different memory techniques across history, from the Songs, Dance and Craft of the First Nations, the page scribbles of the Medieval era, and especially the Memory Palaces of the Greeks, Romans and modern world champions of memory competitions. All these systems rely on the same fundamental insight: The human mind is very good at remembering physical locations, and emotive, impactful stories within those locations. If adopted consciously, using specific locations and scenes as a 'code', virtually anything from historical events, to chemical equations to random binary numerals can be remembered.
Kelly is the most delightful guide on this tour though the world of memory, because she's an active participant herself. She strikes me as that classic teacher we all once had who has 15 different amazing hobbies, seemed to know everything and yet still able to splurg with a quiet teenager about their latest obsession. Through her memory techniques, she not only has vast and rich knowledge of the world, but lives a life that seems very alive - the places around her packed with vibrant memory palaces, her clothing designed to help remember Shakespearean plays, her daily chatter regularly breaking into song as she converses with imaginary 'rapscallions' which help her remember that her slice of bread is a masculine noun, while her jam is feminine. It may sound strange, but once you read this it all feels so vibrant and fun.
This is a joyous book. Kelly has a background as a school teacher, so she's often focused on how to help kids remember things. As a retiree (she was 67 at the time of writing) she's also passionately engaged with the effort to show memory does not have to decline as we age. Indeed in the course of writing the book she puts herself through several experiments, including learning French and Chinese languages and competing in the Australian Memory Championships.
This is therefore less a review than a gush. Few authors personalities leap off the page in such a compelling way. Few books have lit up my imagination for how I could adapt and apply these techniques. Indeed, and I feel comfortable saying it for those who've taken the time to read this far down, I've begun playing with memory palaces. And they actually work. Very early days, but I'm very struck by the potential. Both as a learner and a teacher.
Buy this book.