The subtle art of not giving a f*ck: a counterinuitive approach to living a good life - By Mark Manson
By: Mark Manson
2016
Harper, 224 pages
Synopsis –
In this profane and irreverent title, blogger Mark Manson has some startling
messages for us; we try too hard, our pursuit of happiness causes misery, you
are not special, suffering is good, you always have a choice, failure is good,
hearing and saying no is good, and we’re all going to die. Other than you
always have a choice, saying no is good and we’re all going to die, most of his
ideas appear counterintuitive on the surface. However, when the reader digs
into this book they will find that Manson has some good points.
Don’t worry, Manson is not here to tell you your life is
meaningless and pointless but he does give some good counterpoints to the “If
you dream it you can be it” B.S. that most of us were taught. Manson wants us
to be selective about what we put our efforts into or where we place our f*cks
because life is short and we only have so many f*cks to give.
Rather he suggests that we place our energies and effort into
caring for and striving for things that truly fit important lasting values. Manson
makes a strong argument that many of our problems occur because we have
entitlement issues. We feel entitled to always succeed and to not suffer, or conversely, we feel entitled to always fail and always suffer. Either perspective is a heap
of trouble. His final message regarding death is that to truly appreciate our
lives we need to keep the perspective that life is short and we are a part of
something bigger than ourselves. This perspective helps us realize that all the
trivial superficial issues in our lives are truly not worth giving a f*ck
about.
Title Characteristics
Genre – Humor Writing.
Subject Terms - Conduct of life. Self-realization.
SELF-HELP -- Motivational & Inspirational.
SELF-HELP -- Personal Growth -- Happiness.
SELF-HELP -- Personal Growth -- Success.
Tone/Mood – Funny; Irreverent; Self-Depreciating; Thought-Provoking; Iconoclastic.
Pace - Leisurely
Subject Terms - Conduct of life. Self-realization.
SELF-HELP -- Motivational & Inspirational.
SELF-HELP -- Personal Growth -- Happiness.
SELF-HELP -- Personal Growth -- Success.
Tone/Mood – Funny; Irreverent; Self-Depreciating; Thought-Provoking; Iconoclastic.
Pace - Leisurely
Style/Language –Candid; Conversational.
Personal Observation – As someone who enjoys profane irreverent
humor and gives entirely too many f*cks, this was a thoroughly enjoyable,
thought provoking title. A perspective changing concept for me was the idea
that solving problems leaves us with more, slightly better problems. His point
being that we need to learn to enjoy problem solving whether we fail or succeed
because life is essentially a series of problems. It never ends. An example of
this was my striving to be promoted from Assistant Reference Librarian to Adult
Services Manager. I achieved this goal or “solved the problem” but believe me when I say I now have a whole host of new problems in this new position. You have to
enjoy the journey.
Read-alikes (Novelist Plus)
1. The book of Leon - Leon Black
2. Theft by finding – David Sedaris
3. Grace’s guide – Grace Helbig
4. Bad advice – Venus Nicolino
5. I regret nothing – Jen Lancaster
Sources
Novelist Plus. (2019). Read-alikes for The subtle art of
not giving a f*ck.
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Subject terms retrieved from https://welc.ent.sirsi.net/client/en_US/default/search/results/?ln=en_US&q=the+subtle+art+of+not&rw=0

Excellent personal observation! So many people check this book out, yet I didn't know anyone that had read it until your review! Great job on the summary and characteristics. Full points!
ReplyDeleteI have seen many books that talk about entitlement in regards to succeeding, but not when it comes to failing and suffering. I know myself and some of my friends have had to deal with this way of thinking because of our mental health. This book definitely seems like something I need to read.
ReplyDelete