To begin, they cite self-help’s contribution to our culture of anxiety and overwork, which leads to what McGee calls the “belabored self” of modernity
Grishas quoted3 years ago
These books are not overtly marketed as self-help, but on the sly that is what they are: they are manuals on how to live your life, and how not
Grishas quoted3 years ago
In recent self-help works, modernism has become an unlikely mascot for the embrace of resilience in the place of perfectionism, realism rather than “cruel optimism.”
Grishas quoted3 years ago
that modernism is now experiencing a revival as a source of useful countercounsel in our advice-saturated culture
Grishas quoted3 years ago
It is because authors such as Proust, Kafka, Joyce, and Woolf refused to supply readers with the easy solutions the self-industry thought that they wanted (whether readers really wanted such facile answers is a question I address in later chapters)
Grishas quoted3 years ago
rich or winning friends but about how and why people read
Grishas quoted3 years ago
Self-help’s most valuable secrets are not about getting
Grishas quoted3 years ago
reading nonsequentially for personal use offers a window onto the way that reading and writing once “belonged to a continuous effort to make sense of things