Seven-day, Seven-book Challenge #1
Day one:
Escape into Meaning
Ralph Waldo Emerson In his essay described The Poet as "is only half himself, the other half is his expression." Evan Puschak may not be called a poet, not in a traditional sense, but a poet who knows how to weave words. One-half of Evan is a son, a husband, and a Youtuber with 3 Million subscribers, the other half is his book called ‘Escape Into Meaning’.
The book is a composite of 11 essays. In each of his essays, Evan discusses wide-ranging topics like passion, addiction, fantasy escapism, economics, cinema, and comics. Each essay has a distinct voice that you may be familiar with in his videos. What started as a way to promote his novel soon turned into a full-time job where his only goal was to make information immersive. The book does the same thing, in a much more depthful manner. The book wants to immerse the reader into his obsessions with Superman, Lord of the Rings, and Tarantino.
What made me love about his videos is his ability to dissect and articulate ideas and reach a conclusion that sounds satisfying. I was glad after reading his essays I got to experience the same feeling. Learning about new things about the people you like is always a welcome idea. I learned that he- was inspired to write essays after finding Ralph Waldo Emerson’s ‘Essays’, did not believe in God, and a Democrat.
The essay that I loved the most is called “Write a Book”. Here Evan chronicles his awful penmanship showed in his early attempts at writing. I can relate because I am going through the same rite of passage as he did, story-writing. There are many favorite lines in this book that I think quote-worthy, one of them is this from ‘on friendship’
“...friends are family you choose. They can also choose to walk away, much easier than family can, if the relationship ceases to be rewarding. To have good friends you have to be a good friend. You have to selfless, and caring and generous…”
It would be a good review if I provided some criticism. But in case of Nerdwriter, I would like it to be as biased as it can be. If you love reading non-fiction, eager to learn how a person developed his critical thinking then this is a book for you. Read it and I hope you find a meaningful escape.
Sayonara!
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