Books I have read in the year of 2023 Anno Domini
I attempt a six-word sentence as a response to each book.
Brontë, Whitman, et al. Edited by John Boyes. “Poems that will save your life”.
How they lived, in beautiful rhyme.
I attempt a six-word sentence as a response to each book.
How they lived, in beautiful rhyme.
(Written after reading Phyllis Chesler's “Letters to a Young Feminist”, Letter Twenty-two: Letter to a young feminist, who happens to be a man, who happens to be my son.)
You're stronger than I thought. I have been delusional and ignorant to think you were weak. Forgive me for that.
My friend (whom I met at church) introduced me to a book by Lewis Hyde, titled “The gift: how the creative spirit transforms the world”.
I was interested in learning about the failures of democracy, anarchism and communism, respectively.
It occurred to me that I am coming across stories of menstruation frequently.
I have just read Kuo Pao Kun's “Keynote Address at the Southeast Asian Theatre Seminar on War”.
I have skimmed too few pages to understand the book fully, but one thing stood out:
Reading the first few pages of Joel Mokyr's book, “The gifts of Athena: Historical origins of the knowledge economy”.
Published in 2002, this book highlights an obvious phenomenon in 2022:
Recently I noticed that many employers are hiring in Singapore.
Just a few examples:
I read in the news that Twitter wants to double the size of its engineering team, at its regional office in Singapore.
And a popular bakery is hiring a baker.
And a photography-focused organisation is hiring a Trainee in Arts Management, through a four-month contract.
But I read in Charles Eisenstein's (2021) book – titled “Sacred economics, revised: money, gift & society in the age of transition” – that jobs are obsolete.
As someone residing on the island of Singapore