My Evolution in Annotating Books-With Examples!

In which I explain how and why to annotate your books with examples from my own collection.
For a pleasantly honest description of the challenges of slowing down while reading (and thus maybe a reason to annotate so thoroughly), check out @renee_angelica's video: kzread.info/dash/bejne/haWJtK9yoKvegNI.htmlsi=8eukreufWSe02MjE
Some great videos (in agreement and disagreement) on annotating books:
@anotherbibliophilereads with kzread.info/dash/bejne/nopt05VqmrKqms4.html
@saintdonoghue with kzread.info/dash/bejne/dq2kuqeTcruXmZM.html
@M-J with kzread.info/dash/bejne/mWia19R8YsjOh9o.html
@materiagrix with kzread.info/dash/bejne/rH-L06yNeNvUqdo.html who also has a follow-up on the contentious issue of pen vs. pencil with kzread.info/dash/bejne/rI5p15SaaNqoqcY.html
To support the channel (thank you): ko-fi.com/toreadersitmayconcern
Chapters:
00:00 Purpose of Marking Up Books
02:42 Limits of Highlighting
05:42 Detailed Annotations
15:38 On Annotating Fiction
18:16 Outro
The books discussed in this video (with Amazon links):
Behave by Robert Sapolsky: amzn.to/3TFaKVv
The History of Western Philosophy by Bertrand Russell: amzn.to/3TAMQuc
The Master and His Emissary by Iain McGilchrist: amzn.to/4aw6P4g
Reasons and Persons by Derek Parfit: amzn.to/4ajnB6C
The World by Simon Sebag Montefiore: amzn.to/3J9Rw5f
A People's Tragedy by Orlando Figes: amzn.to/4aeeMeq
Our Oriental Heritage by Will Durant, which is the first part of the Story of Civilization series: amzn.to/3vFR0ZN
The Better Angels of Our Nature by Steven Pinker: amzn.to/3J3KYoN
The Dictionary of the History of Ideas, edited by Philip P. Wiener: amzn.to/3PKq6Xm
I am a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
I can create these links for any books I choose, so this does not affect my choice of what books to cover for this channel.

Пікірлер: 58

  • @talking_to_trees
    @talking_to_trees3 ай бұрын

    With regard to annotating fiction: my personal way is simply based on the idea that I want to remember what I read, I want to remember what I felt when I read it, and I want to mark beautiful sentences and words. In order to not take myself out of the story, I use booktags to pinpoint any idea I would normally highlight or write next to. I also mark themes, but I don't explain or intellectualise them. It is just me noticing things. Once I am done with the book, I go through the tags and remove the ones I don't want to hold on to (some words are often just good because of the whole story, and not so much when I go back to it). From there it's the same process as the non-fiction process below: I add quotes, themes, questions, ideas, and sometimes movie or other book connections into the reading journal, condense everything onto a cue card, and now when I go back to these, I immediately remember what I read and my books no longer turn into ghosts. When I reread, it's so much more fun because I have my notes and booktags, but I find new things and add it to the whole thing. It's fun to see how every version of me as a person finds new things each time I reread a book!

  • @RyanHReviews
    @RyanHReviews3 ай бұрын

    Reading Mortimer Adler's essay "How to Mark a Book" persuaded me that I need to start annotating.

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the reading recommendation!

  • @RolandoSMedeiros

    @RolandoSMedeiros

    3 ай бұрын

    That Essay is better than 90% of "How to Read" (also by him)

  • @ilya1046
    @ilya10463 ай бұрын

    I mostly read fiction and struggle with annotations. This video was very helpful. Thank you!

  • @buster9106
    @buster91063 ай бұрын

    I like the idea of creating a map for my future self.

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    Yeah, and that metaphor extends to the initial wading through the terrain of the text. Though it is initially a struggle, you can all the while leave breadcrumbs and track the bounds of the trail you've traversed. Those breadcrumbs and that tracking becomes a resource for your future self to return to that landscape with the experience and mapping you've built for yourself, and now, finally, you can see the nuance of the terrain for what it's always been, rather than merely the struggle it had initially felt to be.

  • @1russodog
    @1russodog3 ай бұрын

    I look at your frame…the background those titles. Many of which I share similar interests. Power to you and forthcoming videos. Stay well friend!

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    My backdrop of books has really helped like-minded readers discover their shared interests with me. I'm glad it's working out that way, and I'm glad to have you here among them.

  • @ryam4632
    @ryam4632Ай бұрын

    You're spot on regarding the value of writing in books.

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    Ай бұрын

    Glad you agree!

  • @rafael55
    @rafael55Ай бұрын

    I use a note book to take notes of the book i'm reading. Help's me remember better and does not make my book ugly.

  • @owendavis4154
    @owendavis41543 ай бұрын

    I agree with your point about annotating fiction. I am reading Moby Dick for the first time and discovering many unfamiliar words. I'm just jotting them down in my journal to look up at a later date, which is definitely tarnishing my enjoyment to some degree. My plan is to read the book again after I finish. Time consuming but it works for me. I did the same with Marcel Proust's In Search of Lost Time and found that got a lot more on the second read. Helps if the books are great!! I also journal my thoughts after each chapter including favourite sections from the text....I guess that's just my way of having a conversation with myself about the book. Thanks for the great videos, keep up the good work. I'm planning on tackling The Story of Civilization thanks to your Ten Hard Books video.

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    I love that you journal afterward. It's like you're distilling down-purely for yourself-the significance and meaning of what you read. The advice I offered in this video ended up rigid and studious, fitting of my disposition, but I also love the value of being reflective with what one reads, just lingering for a time, loosely. It allows for perhaps one of my favorite outcomes of both speaking and writing: you become accountable for your thoughts and so come to know your thoughts. With In Search of Lost Time and Moby Dick, such works are often themselves meditations, and so it is fitting to allow the words to wash over as sound waves themselves and then you ruminate on the feel and echo that resonates. That's why I love talking to my brother or my girlfriend after I read something beautiful. I want to discover what lingers and what my own thoughts truly are.

  • @vicenteferrao2960
    @vicenteferrao29603 ай бұрын

    I've been trying to get back into the habit of reading and actually finishing books that are not, well, non-fiction. Your video gave me some great insights (or maybe helped put them into words?) on how hard and somewhat unimaginative reading fiction has become! Having watched the steady decline in pages from when I was a Portuguese undergrad, it's almost inevitable to notice this particular sort of relationship that was created with fiction. I guess my point is that I hadn't realised how much of my engagement with this sort of literature is weighted down by my literary analysis habits, and how it would probably do me some good to simply... Read and explore the feelings and images the stories bring to me.

  • @BonnieNicoleWrites
    @BonnieNicoleWrites3 ай бұрын

    Ooh I love your discussion at the beginning. I so relate to treating books as holy relics. I love that thought of shifting the thoughts to treating books as something to work with instead. I rarely annotate, but I have on a few occasions. I appreciate your suggestions for organizing the notes, as that has been my struggle.

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    Hey, Bonnie! Yeah, it's hard not seeing books as delicate, pristine objects-at-a-distance. In many ways, they're just as precious to me now, but they've become touchstones of points in my life, ones I can return to from time to time. I like having access to that on my shelves, to relics of myself.

  • @BonnieNicoleWrites

    @BonnieNicoleWrites

    3 ай бұрын

    @@ToReadersItMayConcern That's such a wonderful way of viewing it.

  • @margarethaines9310
    @margarethaines93103 ай бұрын

    You are right - annotating fiction serves a purpose that is personal for the reader - even if the literature consumed will be used in a graded paper. In addition to "squaring" new or interesting vocabulary and noting the definition in the margin, I have several themes that I am interested in that recur in many different types of texts. For instance the idea of "treasure": literally wealth and what people will risk/trade for it (gold diggers or panning for gold in the West), but also intangible things that are valuable (connection, creativity, parenthood, agency . . .). It is handy to keep a Commonplace Book for quotes. I suppose these ideas will be useful at some time in the future, but at this point I am happy to easily locate them 🙂. Thank you for your thoughtful ideas.

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    Oh, that is so interesting! I love this!

  • @thedarianjade
    @thedarianjade3 ай бұрын

    Maybe trying tabs for fiction to keep it looser but also mark things/moments you really enjoy. I use an annotation bookmark with tabs. This allows me to easily mark something I enjoyed, or a word I was unfamiliar with, but not take much time or effort where it would take me out of the story.

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes, thank you for that suggestion! It's definitely the time and effort that becomes a distraction, so reducing that as much as possible with fiction would be ideal.

  • @LaughingStockfarm1
    @LaughingStockfarm13 ай бұрын

    I annotate fiction, but much more lightly than non-fiction. Mostly what I pull out are particularly beautiful passages. Also, because I tend towards epic & more literary SFF, invented words, political alliances of the characters, and other world-building points that seem long-term useful will get highlighted, flagged, or emphasized in some way. But like you I mostly just want to let the umwelt take over. I have been known to write ranty post-its to a character who is a particular jerk, or does something mind-bendingly stupid. 😆

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    Yeah, books kind of suggest their own annotation styles; different books have different challenges, and we have to adapt. It's been a long while since I've read science fiction or fantasy-they used to be my favorite genres-and so I wonder if when I go back to such works I'll end up adopting a similar method to yours. I recently purchased Alan Moore's Jerusalem, which seems to fit as dreamlike fantasy. Maybe that will be my return, and we'll see what sort of annotations that book suggests of itself.

  • @LaughingStockfarm1

    @LaughingStockfarm1

    3 ай бұрын

    @@ToReadersItMayConcern I look forward to what arises, if any annotation happens, when you read Jerusalem. Happy page turning!

  • @ThatReadingGuy28
    @ThatReadingGuy283 ай бұрын

    I love to see how your channel has grown in the last few days!

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much! Steve Donoghue gave a huge boost to the "hard books" vid, which then prompted KZread to push it out further. I feel very lucky. And I happen to particularly LOVE your channel, so if there's any way I can help you, please let me know! [FOR ANY VIEWERS READING THIS, CHECK OUT THAT READING GUY'S CHANNEL! HE'S ARTICULATE AND HIS TASTES MATCH MY OWN (WITH PERHAPS EVEN MORE FUN OBSCURITY ON TOP)!]

  • @ThatReadingGuy28

    @ThatReadingGuy28

    3 ай бұрын

    @@ToReadersItMayConcern thanks for nice and words, but with your videos are infinitely better quality! You deserve all the subs you've been getting.

  • @NicholasOfAutrecourt

    @NicholasOfAutrecourt

    3 ай бұрын

    @@ThatReadingGuy28 I hate to break it to you, but you both have incredible channels! I'm glad I was given the opportunity to discover both of you recently. Looking forward to seeing how things progress!

  • @noeditbookreviews
    @noeditbookreviews3 ай бұрын

    This is something I struggle with, and by the way, I'm seeing a lot of really great titles in your shelves!

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    Hey, thanks for stopping by! And we share a lot of interests in non-fiction; many of the science books you cover are also on my shelves. P.S. When you get a chance, check out my most recent vid, the one with "What's This Channel" in the title: you might be surprised by what you hear at the 22 minute mark. ;)

  • @swiodine
    @swiodine2 ай бұрын

    I admit I don't like marking fiction up much either. Nevertheless, one thing that I have always done is written a brief summary of the events of a chapter right above the chapter title immediately after I finished reading it. This significantly helped my ability to recall the events of a book, as forcing yourself to carefully think through what happened in each individual chapter allows you to better process the more minute details of a narrative, and more deeply appreciate the work as a whole. This has been especially helpful in preventing me from reading a book too quickly, and losing track of the story as a result.

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    2 ай бұрын

    I'm so glad you said this. I've done this a few times myself, and you're completely right, having to pinpoint what matters to you most about a chapter is key to recognizing what resonates most, and that is immensely valuable and seemingly requires reflection. Another similarly helpful act is to talk about what you read with someone who cares. That, of course, requires a special someone, but it quickly reveals to you what you truly understand or what you only have a superficial grasp of.

  • @RachelJ2016
    @RachelJ20163 ай бұрын

    New sub 👋🏼 It looks like you’re in an actual library and I’m so jealous 🙃😂 will we get a tour of those shelves one day?! Keep these videos coming. I can’t tell you how happy I am to have found some booktubers recently who are talking about slowing down to read/annotate and just talking about books other than the usual popular ones we see over and over!

  • @RachelJ2016

    @RachelJ2016

    3 ай бұрын

    Also I love annotating. My books that I annotate, I hope to hand down to my children to read one day ❤ I hope they appreciate it 😂

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    I'm glad to have you here! It's been a dream to be surrounded by books in this way. I love it! And I started filming a shelf tour yesterday. It's gonna be split among many videos. Will take a while.

  • @ReadtoFilth
    @ReadtoFilth3 ай бұрын

    If it was my book I may highlight or make a short note at the end of the chapter. But most of the time I don’t really like to stop to take notes. And I usually watch or read the review or analysis of the book right after I finished it.

  • @Julian-tu6em
    @Julian-tu6em2 ай бұрын

    You've convinced me to start annotating instead of highlighting! Also do you have a list of all the books you've read? I recognize a handful of them but would love to see the others. That is if you have one already of course.

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    2 ай бұрын

    I've yet to list out what I read, or track my reading in any separate way aside from writing in each book and remembering. Over time on this channel I'll cover more of what I've read in the past, and eventually I'll showcase every book I own (though, with there being over 1,000 books on all my shelves, it'll take a while).

  • @talking_to_trees
    @talking_to_trees3 ай бұрын

    I love your reasoning and method of annotating. I am definitely going to incorporate the content page method to my annotations! I have gone through cycles of annotating or not annotating. At the moment, I annotate heavily, but I think it is because it is not frowned on any more. There are librarians and teachers who would probably burn me at the stake if they knew this. Like you, I have degrees of annotations, but one of those degrees is still a highlighter but I use one that is almost like a crayon. I like that it lifts things out for me. I also write in the margin, summarise chapters and main ideas, but I also make notes in a GoodNotes notebook after every chapter to just take the main ideas out of it. And then I also have a cue card system where all of the books in my library are catalogued once I have read them, with their main quotes/thoughts/themes on, as well as a summary in my own words and a star rating. These cue cards are also linked through their date to my virtual reading journal where all notes and all the best quotes are kept. And I also try and write an essay (sometimes just half a page) about what I found or thought while reading the book. I do this for all my books, whether non-fiction or fiction or graphic novels. I think everything has sometimes to teach us, although sometimes I need to squeeze a bit hard to get meaning out of some things.

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    You know, your experience in this regard sounds perfect for a video of your own. I would be fascinated to see your cue card system and the differing degrees of annotation you employ. You sound like you have a wonderful, immersive way of doing things!

  • @talking_to_trees

    @talking_to_trees

    3 ай бұрын

    @@ToReadersItMayConcern i might just do that! I will tag you when I do x

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    This makes me unreasonably happy.

  • @apollonia6656
    @apollonia66563 ай бұрын

    If the books are on and yours annotating helps. I never (would I dare) scribble in any of my parents library, even though I am far from being a child because they do not have a single pb; all the books are in or leather bound, first prints or extremely valuable for other reasons. Infact, most of my books look like they have become books within books ! 😂

  • @NicholasOfAutrecourt
    @NicholasOfAutrecourt3 ай бұрын

    Despite being a very slow reader, I still struggle to make myself stop and take notes. I can't bring myself to write in the book, but I usually have a tablet of paper or spiralized notebook, but still struggle. I've been wondering if there might be some good "carrots" to wave over my head to act as a kind of incentive. I already use Goodreads and my own KZread channel to post long-form reviews as a reading catalog, but I'm sure creating a new habit of taking handwritten notes will also redound with benefits. If anyone has any ideas, I'd certainly love for you to share!

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    The best carrot for me has been the difference annotation makes in my ability to retain and communicate the information I read. It can be frustrating to grasp a concept at the level of recognition but not to be able to recall the concept at the point of discussion. Slowing down, jotting notes, organizing the text visually, though at first seemingly slow, becomes engaging in itself and rewarding in its eventual benefits. But that's one of those qualities that can only be felt after having already made the leap. Another possible carrot is the mere feel of slowing down. Thinking about what to write and how to visualize relations between ideas prompts a concerted effort to think, think, think the whole way through a book. And that perpetual thinking is its own reward, or, at least, it has felt as such for me. In some ways, upon re-reading a book in a post-annotation mindset, I find myself feeling as if I had never really read the book in the first place. With annotating the reading becomes an act of interchange between myself and the author, and that feels wholly distinct from doing otherwise. All that said, I've been watching your videos for a long time. You are an excellent reader, and in your case, annotation may not be as necessary as for myself.

  • @NicholasOfAutrecourt

    @NicholasOfAutrecourt

    3 ай бұрын

    @@ToReadersItMayConcern This is why I try to leave comments. I never know who's watching me. I'm so flattered that you take the time to watch! From now on, I'll be returning the favor. Keep it up with the spectacular videos!

  • @davidnovakreadspoetry

    @davidnovakreadspoetry

    3 ай бұрын

    I’m beginning to think I should do some form of note taking for nonfiction books I read. I like the video’s distinction between highlighting and using a pen - but I hate to mark up books.

  • @LaughingStockfarm1

    @LaughingStockfarm1

    3 ай бұрын

    I’m hesitant to mark up books as well, so I use 0.23”/6mm highlighting tape! There’s also underlining tape. It can be removed if you decide not to keep the book, so the trade value is maintained. And I use post-its for writing out my thoughts, again removable. I’m mostly a fiction reader, and I have discovered that with good fiction at least, I am much more immersed in the world, and have a better feel for the characters. On the other hand, it really makes bad writing glaringly obvious and rather painful. Then my post-it notes become rather scathing, which is also a nice stress reliever. 😆 Really appreciating these videos!

  • @cristianmicu
    @cristianmicu3 ай бұрын

    i can totally relate about the highlight

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    I'm glad I'm not alone!

  • @benpessoa4013
    @benpessoa40133 ай бұрын

    My initial inhibition of annotating was making the book less aesthetically appealing. Even now when I do mark my books quite regularly, an ugly mark or a redundant annotation sort of makes me want to engage with the book less.

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    As part of this video, I should've shown what my girlfriend does with her books. She was inspired by my method of annotation, but she adapted it to her artistic sentiments and thus draws images along the margins rather than words, and these images bring her back to the thoughts and feelings of that moment in the text.

  • @eryzish
    @eryzish3 ай бұрын

    Do you keep a commonplace journal?

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    No, actually. I had to look up the term. I do jot down ideas I have-often for future writing, lessons, or now for this channel-but they end up in various places or dispersed among Google Documents, not in a single book and not as a regular practice.

  • @eryzish

    @eryzish

    3 ай бұрын

    Nice. Looking forward to more of your videos.

  • @KeithDvorak

    @KeithDvorak

    3 ай бұрын

    instead of google docs, you may want to consider obsidian, which would keep all your notes in one place but with the ability to link ideas, or parallel streams of thought etc? typology!! ❤

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern

    @ToReadersItMayConcern

    3 ай бұрын

    @@KeithDvorak Thanks for the suggestion!

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