An editorial work by Studio Ghibli themselves, published by Kodansha, no wonder it is such a treat.
The book chronicles Studio Ghibli films from the very first one that was Nausicaa (1984) until The Red Turtle (2016), both directed and produced works alike. The content includes the general need-to-know and doesn't discriminate, even towards some lesser works like Earthsea.
My favourite section is definitely "In Their Own Words", which has memos and letters from the directors themselves to the production teams and the staff, how they saw the films, what they wanted to bring, the messages they would like to share, and why these stories the ways they were and so on. I don't think I'd have access to these pieces of writing without this book. (Or maybe I'm not hardcore enough of a fan to find all of these myself.)
I also appreciate all that about Isao Takahata, especially my three favourites of his: My Neighbours the Yamadas, Princess Kaguya and Pom Poko.
How I wish I could look into the artbooks of My Neighbours the Yamadas and Spirited Away, just next to this book but wrapped tightly in plastic...
Still, I think they can do a better job at making this book something new, something exciting (maybe an experience, like their movies) rather than this feeling of a formula, or worse: a chore.