By Rainn Wilson
http://www.amazon.com/SoulPancake-Chew-Lifes-Big-Questions/dp/1401310338
Book review by Richard L. Weaver II
This is an
impressive book — not a great one — but it is striking. The artwork
throughout is awe inspiring. You can just sit back, turn the pages, and
be mesmerized by stunning impressions. Each page (or every-other-page)
is full of astonishing, colorful, provocative, thought-inducing, and,
in some cases, shocking images. What I had fun doing with each image
was to simply try to imagine how the artwork related to the quotations
on the page. In some cases this was easy; however, in some it was,
indeed, a challenge. In many cases, the relationship was remarkably
creative.
What I found most
unique in the entire book were the first six-and-a-half pages where
Rainn Wilson introduced himself and his life’s journey. I found it
honest (as honest as a reader who doesn’t know Rainn Wilson at all can
determine), straightforward, attention-grasping, and interesting. If
you are wondering how Rainn Wilson determined life’s essential
questions, or what he reads and what he has experienced, or even how he
became a spiritual being, he tells you.
If you want a
taste of his humor, he talks about the time when he and Phil (a friend)
were watching a Mets game in Phil’s ramshackle apartment and Rainn told
Phil about his “recent conversion to a belief in Wakan Tanka.” They
wanted to put his new belief to the test and the Mets were down 5-4 at
the bottom of the ninth inning. Rainn held up his arms in prayer and
said, “Oh great spirit Wakan Tanka . . . If it is your will, please
allow Darryl Strawberry to hit a home run and win the game.”
As soon as Rainn
finished his prayer, THWACK, Darryl Strawberry “hit a two-run homer, and
the Mets won. Phil and I looked at each other, jaws dropped. . .” (p.
iv). Now, that’s enough to make just about anyone a believer (in Wakan
Tanka!).
If the artwork
doesn’t spellbind you, then the quotations will. They are delicious, to
say the least. On average, there are about two or three quotations per
page in this 205-page book. The range of authors (for quotations) is
broad including Mahatma Gandhi, Ambrose Pierce, Benjamin Spock, James
Joyce, Aristotle, Viktor E. Frankl, Albert Schweitzer, Alexandre Dumas,
George Santayana, Coretta Scott King, Eric Hoffer, Adolf Hitler, Buddha,
Franz Kafka, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Bill Maher, William Shakespeare,
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., Elbert Hubbard, and many, many others.
But, here is the
interesting thing about this book. The artwork and the quotations are
really not what this book is all about. Surprise, surprise! This is a
workbook, and the artwork and quotations are there as catalysts. That
is, they are there as agents to assist in and speed up your reaction to
the overall thought on the page. On page 164, for example, the thought
is “Gyrate Your Genius,” the artwork is amazing (objects designed to
symbolize storage, tuning, sawing, and massaging), and there is a blank
(on p. 164), for your reaction to this: “If the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office can sign off on Chia Pets and the Beerbrella, then
what’s stopping you from throwing your idea into the mix? Step 1: Think
of a problem that irritates you. Step 2: Channel your inner inventor.
Step 3: Create a solution. No matter how far-fetched it seems, sketch
it out and name it.”
On most pages,
the questions occur under the heading, “Dig Deeper.” On page 63, the
overall thought is, “What one eye-opening experience should every person
have?” And, on the previous page, the third “Dig Deeper” question is,
“What single experience most transformed you?”
I am not claiming
this book is one of heavy substance; however, it is, more than
anything, exactly what you make it. You, as the reader/thinker/analyst,
bring the “heavy substance” — or not! If you simply want to look at
the pictures and read the quotations, then it will likely perceived as
lightweight. It is as philosophical as you want to make it. It is as
spiritual as you want to make it. It is as challenging or “deep” as you
want to make it. That is, indeed, what makes this book so fascinating,
intriguing, and personal.
I liked Rainn
Wilson’s own sales pitch for the book (p. xv). He said, “The book is
fun. And cool to carry around. Or put on a handsome shelf. Or
casually leave out on a coffee table as a conversation starter. Or
throw like a discus at the side of the head of an attacker” (p. xv).
How often are you likely to read such a paragraph by the author of a
book?
So, where do I
stand on this book? I like artwork, quotations, and challenging
questions. Of course, I prefer more substance; however, I am willing to
forego my quest for more substance (since I’m unlikely to answer all
the questions and fill in all the blanks — bringing the “heavy
substance” myself) just to experience such a unique book as this one.
If nothing else, it is just plain fun!
Soulpancake: Chew
on life’s big questions (Speak your mind, unload your questions, figure
out what it means to be human) can be purchased at Amazon.com:
http://www.amazon.com/SoulPancake-Chew-Lifes-Big-Questions/dp/1401310338
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