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Two enormous books

Mickey Mellen
2 min readJan 4, 2023

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I do most of my reading on my Kindle, for reasons I’ve explained earlier. I enjoy the experience, and it makes it easy to migrate my highlights over after I’m done reading.

From time to time I’ll pick up a “real” book, but it’s rare. In most cases, it’s only when I don’t have a choice, like with Blake Howard’s “ Radically Relevant “ that is only available in print. In the case of Blake’s book, it’s print-only because of the powerful design behind it — there’s no way to replicate that experience on a Kindle.

The same is true for these two books. Not only are they well-designed and not suited for Kindle, but they also happen to be massive.

Sapiens

The first is Sapiens: A Graphic History, which is almost like a giant comic book. I’ve mentioned the traditional “Sapiens” book before, which is absolutely a must-read, but this is a different take on it. See an example page here:

To make it readable and look good, the book is roughly 8″x11″ and nearly an inch thick. Despite the hefty size, it’s less than half the number of pages of the original “Sapiens” and (given the sparse text on each page), probably a 5–10x faster read. It’s a great way to see the book through a different format and pace.

Poor Charlie’s Almanack

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Mickey Mellen
Mickey Mellen

Written by Mickey Mellen

I’m a cofounder of @GreenMellen, and I’m into WordPress, blogging and seo. Love my two girls, gadgets, Google Earth, and I try to run when I can.

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