I was wondering how on earth Ryder Carroll would find things to fill so many pages with, but the more "philosophical" back half was actually interesting. Reminded me of Leo Baubata's 'Zen Habits' and other 21st-century stoic-bros. The AM and PM reflections struck me as a particularly good accompaniment to the notebook-as-thing.
I still can't get behind the fact that he only migrates tasks monthly and looks at each day every morning and night. Bujos don't deal with scheduled tasks well enough w/ his prescribed method, IMO.
Good boo: would recommend getting in from the library or buying the ebook, though. It's not earth shattering.
Thank you for the review! I read comments that the Kindle version has serious layout issues. Did you read it in this format? I've been in a long queue waiting for the ebook version from the library.... XD
I read an epub, so I can't speak to the kindle quality. Epub didn't have any glaring issues, though. (I was on desktop, though, so resizing was less arduous)
If epub is a format you could make use of, I'd be happy to "loan" it to you, as it were ;)
no subject
Date: 2018-12-08 09:05 pm (UTC)I was wondering how on earth Ryder Carroll would find things to fill so many pages with, but the more "philosophical" back half was actually interesting. Reminded me of Leo Baubata's 'Zen Habits' and other 21st-century stoic-bros.
The AM and PM reflections struck me as a particularly good accompaniment to the notebook-as-thing.
I still can't get behind the fact that he only migrates tasks monthly and looks at each day every morning and night. Bujos don't deal with scheduled tasks well enough w/ his prescribed method, IMO.
Good boo: would recommend getting in from the library or buying the ebook, though. It's not earth shattering.
no subject
Date: 2018-12-09 02:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2018-12-09 05:33 pm (UTC)If epub is a format you could make use of, I'd be happy to "loan" it to you, as it were ;)