The poet they probably shouldn’t have sent. I watch anime and am sometimes accused of reading books. I'm writing a long gay giant robot story in verse—probably this millennium's best yuri mecha epic poem, through lack of competition.


'Now praise those names on tombs of steel engraved | And toll this rotting country’s countless bells.'


A while back I saw tweet from an account called something like 'Library Mindset', bearing book recommendations from various CEOs.

The recommendations were, of course, a tyre fire. But I won't talk about that in this post. You'd already guessed at the tyre fire when you hit the word 'CEOs'.

Rather: some opinions about reading and gathering books.


A personal library should—should ideally—range wide, stay unembarrassed, and spend some of its time rowing against the canon.

I feel some pride in the fact that mine includes the twelfth-century Poema morale alongside Machikado Mazoku. (Images above.) I feel more pride in the juxtaposition than in either item alone.

It's good to own some books you haven't read:

  • Now you have things to read in an emergency.
  • Some books are tools. I flit through many of my work books, raiding them. Read scholastically as well as monastically.

Not all reading needs somehow to improve you:

  • You're not an asset, you're a person.
  • 'Learn everything; afterwards, you'll see that nothing's unnecessary.' ('omnia disce. videbis postea nihil esse superfluum.')

Making sure you're doing some reading, somehow, beats agonising over failing to read for a full three hours a day.

  • Fifteen minutes before you crash? That's fifteen more than zero.
  • Audiobooks? Great! (And very traditional.)

Use actual real communal libraries, if you're lucky enough to be near any! A library system will always outclass your collection—unless you're too wealthy to be reading this—and that outclassing is healthy and good.

And fight for libraries, when and where you can. Every day, librarians go to work and try to make sure that children learn and that our species doesn't forget. Usually they do this without the money and time they need.


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in reply to @thaliarchus's post:

YEAHHH. Hell yeah. I used to read a lot more systematically but have been opening myself up to a lot more whim-reading, tool-reading, and reading in different formats and it's so fun! And interesting! Libraries are great! Eclectic book collections are great! Reading a thing you've barely heard of but the title looks cool is great! Reading stuff outside your wheelhouse but that friends have recommended is great! Reading without thinking about the book's utility to you is great!

Hear, hear!

A big shift for me, I think, came when I grasped that I'd never read every book in existence anyway: 'the lyf so short, the craft so long to lerne'. We all just scratch the surface. And strangely, for me at least, that thought became very freeing.

And how freeing it is! For a long time I felt two coprimary reading pressures: 1) the pressure to read the "right things" (and to like them), which I resented and rebelled against, which took me away from reading a lot of things for a long time (I failed to realize until later that in rebelling I was still expressing my belief in the concept), and 2) the pressure to read for some kind of mastery or expertise (my form of that belief that reading should improve you). But in holding these beliefs I was underprivileging breadth and overlooking that depth and expertise take a long time to acquire and are not universally agreed-upon static concepts. And too that one can read for a whole host of reasons in a whole host of ways.

Part of what caused the shift for me was listening to people further along than I was (especially writers) talk about their interests and thoughts on books and the fact that many of them were totally fine with unapologetically reading stuff that seemed irrelevant to their interests or their work. They read all across the board and, when asked about some well-known book, were totally fine saying, "idk, haven't read it." I looked at these cool people I admired and I was like oh I can do that too! I am free! I don't have to learn about the "right things" in the "right way"! I can read whatever I want actually!

That realization ended up making those "right things" feel much more accessible by making them a fun option and not a dreaded eventual chore