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How to Sharpen Pencils: A Practical &…
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How to Sharpen Pencils: A Practical & Theoretical Treatise on the Artisanal Craft of Pencil Sharpening for Writers, Artists, Contractors, Flange Turners, Anglesmiths, & Civil Servants (édition 2013)

par David Rees (Auteur), John Hodgman (Introduction)

MembresCritiquesPopularitéÉvaluation moyenneMentions
1948141,171 (3.99)11
Getting the right point on a pencil is really a matter of skill and expertise. Most people need to know how to achieve the perfect pencil point to match the job. Deep in New York's Hudson River Valley, craftsman David Rees - the world's number one #2 pencil sharpener - still practises the age old art of manual pencil sharpening. How To Sharpen Pencils is a book, a manifesto and a fully-illustrated walk-through of the many, many, many ways to sharpen a pencil. Delivered with pencil-sharp wit and hilarity, this is the authoritative guide to a dying art.… (plus d'informations)
Membre:joshbush
Titre:How to Sharpen Pencils: A Practical & Theoretical Treatise on the Artisanal Craft of Pencil Sharpening for Writers, Artists, Contractors, Flange Turners, Anglesmiths, & Civil Servants
Auteurs:David Rees (Auteur)
Autres auteurs:John Hodgman (Introduction)
Info:Brooklyn, NY: Melville House; Edition: paperback
Collections:Votre bibliothèque
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Mots-clés:humor, reference

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How to Sharpen Pencils: A Practical and Theoretical Treatise on the Artisanal Craft of Pencil Sharpening for Writers, Artists, Contractors, Flange Turners, Anglesmiths, and Civil Servants par David Rees

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» Voir aussi les 11 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 8 (suivant | tout afficher)
This is a completely pointless and very stupid book. I loved it.

I was worried that this was just a funny idea for a book. With an artful photo shoot, a well-designed cover, and enough padding and celebrity endorsements, I thought, you could make a book out of this, but it might not be worth reading.

The line that convinced me otherwise was in a rundown of the equipment required for sharpening pencils, when he says, "It's not hard to come by a good pair of tweezers; I use the ones my wife left behind when she moved out".

The weird emotional truths revealed in these asides colour everything else in the book; it's less about how to sharpen pencils and more about the type of man who sharpens pencils as a calling. ( )
  NickEdkins | May 27, 2023 |
Started as a great, fun, clever read but then it became boring and repetitive. ( )
  eduardochang | Feb 3, 2022 |
David Rees' sadly retired Get Your War On remains to this day one of my favorite political comic strips, but after that ended he hasn't done much on that level. In fact, he's apparently been running an artisanal pencil-sharpening side business from his house in suburban New York, which he decided to leverage into this very treatise. I read an interview with him where he described it as "basically an emotional memoir disguised as a how-to manual hidden inside a 'humor' book", and that's actually somewhat accurate, since he has also gotten a divorce, an event that's occasionally, and somewhat jarringly, referred to in the book, which for the most part is exactly what the title promises.

The conceit holds up fairly well for the first two thirds. Rees strikes just the right kind of mostly-deadpan tone while he discusses, in stupefying detail, the materials, techniques, and best practices you would need to sharpen pencils to even the most exacting standards of craftsmanship. He mentions that he's a big fan of serious industrial manuals, and the parts where he discusses minutiae like how to get perfect scalloping patterns on collar bottoms are marvels of comedic voice. Only someone who had dedicated a truly non-trivial amount of time to something like obsessing over pencil points could write sentences like these:

"Remember: A pencil point enjoyed by the writer may not be suited for the draftsman; the ideal point for the standardized-test taker laboring in an over-lit classroom may not please the louche poet idling on a windswept peak. No point can serve all needs. The unsharpened pencil is, in contrast, an idealized form. Putting a point on a pencil - making it functional - is to lead it out of Plato's cave and into the noonday sun of utility. Of course, life outside a cave runs the risk of imperfection and frustration. But we must learn to live with these risks if we want enough oxygen to survive.

Let us now walk together into the sunlight."

The last third of the book, by contrast, feels like space-filling. There are too many items of "wacky" material like sidebars of "Common Names of American Schoolchildren", and even though it's difficult to argue that the final chapters are any less meaningless than the beginning ones, Rees loses the voice he had earlier. Fans of Jimi Hendrix will also object to a portion of the section on unconventional sharpening techniques. Still, as a guide to sharpening pencils, this is basically as comprehensive a book as you could ask for. Of course, you could skip reading the book and just send Rees $15 and a pencil to have the master do it for you himself, but seeing as how a brand new paperback copy currently costs less than $13, and a Kindle version costs only $9.99, that old adage about giving a man a sharpened pencil versus teaching him to sharpen his own has never been more apt. Luckily I picked this up at the library and didn't pay anything. ( )
  aaronarnold | May 11, 2021 |
My weirdness becomes very apparent when you see me with my pencils.
  diovival | Oct 14, 2013 |
Pencils are awesome. ( )
  MichaelDC | Apr 3, 2013 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
David Reesauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Hodgman, JohnAvant-proposauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
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The simple physical artifact multiplies the power of the individual.
—Henry Petroski, The Pencil: A History of Design and Circumstance
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For Margaret and Philip Rees, the sharpest people I know.
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Just as a chef always travels with his or her favorite knives, a professional pencil sharpener—or serious enthusiast—should always have his or her tool kit ready at hand.
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Don't trust a pencil sharpener who doesn't offer to return your shavings. The shavings are part of your pencil, after all, which means they are your property.
It also behoves us to remember the adage that "Whenever a member of our modern world sharpens a pencil using a pocketknife, he or she moves forward and backward through time simultaneously": forward, insofar as the knife is deployed concurrently with the world's temporal flow and anticipates a future state of affairs (i.e., the sharpened point, itself suggesting astronomer Arthur Eddington's "arrow of time"); backward, as the persistent movements of the knife function as pistons in a nostalgia-engine which delivers its user to the distant past.
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Getting the right point on a pencil is really a matter of skill and expertise. Most people need to know how to achieve the perfect pencil point to match the job. Deep in New York's Hudson River Valley, craftsman David Rees - the world's number one #2 pencil sharpener - still practises the age old art of manual pencil sharpening. How To Sharpen Pencils is a book, a manifesto and a fully-illustrated walk-through of the many, many, many ways to sharpen a pencil. Delivered with pencil-sharp wit and hilarity, this is the authoritative guide to a dying art.

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