J'ai rarement lu un livre sans noter sur un bout de papier au moins une phrase ou une expression marquante.
Mes récentes lectures étant pleine d'extraits marquants, j'annote, je souligne, et je noircis des pages de carnets.
J'ai réalisé rapidement que tous ces livres développaient plus ou moins les mêmes idées (ou en tout cas que moi, j'y retrouvais toujours les mêmes idées) exprimées de manière différente.
J'avais donc envie depuis un moment d'organiser mes notes et de reformuler telles que je les comprends ces différents concepts sur lesquels je ne cesse de revenir, pour en faire quelque chose de cohérent et de personnel, mais je n'avais pas encore pris le temps de m'y mettre.
Ce matin finalement, j'ai passé plus de 5h devant mon écran, avec sur les genoux un de mes carnets et un livre noirci d'annotations. Et quelque chose commence à prendre forme. Quoi, je ne le saurai que quand j'aurai repris le reste de mes notes et les autres livres noircis.
En attendant je me suis dit que je pourrais mettre sur ce blog la liste de mes lectures "d'inspiration". Cette liste est évidemment amenée à évoluer et à s'enrichir.
Pour l'instant j'y mettrais :
- L'homme révolté -- Camus (et l'intégralité de son oeuvre)
- L'enfant -- Maria Montessori (et l'intégralité de son oeuvre)
- Le petit prince -- Antoine de St Exupéry
- On the Road -- Jack Kerouac
- Les nourritures terrestres -- André Gide
- To the lighthouse -- Virginia Woolf
- The power of Now -- Eckhart Tolle
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I rarely read a book without writing down at least a sentence or an expression that got to me. My recent readings being full of powerfull phrases, I scribble, underline and blacken my notebook's pages. I quickly realised that all these books developped more or less the same ideas (or at least that I kept finding back the same ideas) expressed in different manners. For a while now, I've been willing to organize my notes and reword, as I understand them, those different concepts that I keep coming back to, and try to make something coherent and personal out of it. But until now I hadn't taken the time to do so.
This morning I sat at my computer for 5 hours, with one of my notebooks and a book, scribbled on on most of the pages. And something started to come out of it. What, I couldn't say yet, I still have to cover the rest of my notes and some other scribbled books.
In the meantime I figured I could write down a list of my inspirational readings. This list is obviously bound to evolve and grow. For now that's all there is (you can see it above).
- Quand la conscience s'éveille -- Anthony de Mello
- The rise of superman -- Steven Kotler
- Petit traité sur l'immensité du monde -- Sylvain Tesson
- La force du Bouddhisme -- Le Dalai Lama et JC Carrière
- Life, Love, Laughter - Osho
- The rise of superman -- Steven Kotler
- Petit traité sur l'immensité du monde -- Sylvain Tesson
- La force du Bouddhisme -- Le Dalai Lama et JC Carrière
- Life, Love, Laughter - Osho
****************
I rarely read a book without writing down at least a sentence or an expression that got to me. My recent readings being full of powerfull phrases, I scribble, underline and blacken my notebook's pages. I quickly realised that all these books developped more or less the same ideas (or at least that I kept finding back the same ideas) expressed in different manners. For a while now, I've been willing to organize my notes and reword, as I understand them, those different concepts that I keep coming back to, and try to make something coherent and personal out of it. But until now I hadn't taken the time to do so.
This morning I sat at my computer for 5 hours, with one of my notebooks and a book, scribbled on on most of the pages. And something started to come out of it. What, I couldn't say yet, I still have to cover the rest of my notes and some other scribbled books.
In the meantime I figured I could write down a list of my inspirational readings. This list is obviously bound to evolve and grow. For now that's all there is (you can see it above).
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