€16.75
Buy Making Things Right online from Woodbine Books – free delivery in ROI on orders over €50
0
In stock
It is so rich in descriptions of all pleasures related to mastering a craft: the portrayal of the working community, the joy of seeing something take shape, and the knowledge that one has left a piece of oneself behind. The pleasure of drinking coffee from a thermos, listening to good radio, observe the city from new angles, and feel the weight of history when you continue building on something that the craftsmen before you started . . . A nice mix of sociology, philosophy – not to mention ethics
Klassekampen
An important voice against knowledge deficiency . . . By documenting an entire course of a construction project in diary form, he offers insight into processes that very few people know anything about . . . The book is just as solid as the craft that he describes
Dagbladet
Thorstensen writes convincingly about heavy work as something honourable, without ever stumbling into romantic notions of physical work as a way to fill the emptiness . . . For Thorstensen the meaning already exists in the work itself and within him
Bokmagasinet
In Thorstensen’s skilled hands, the everyday story of a suburban loft conversion is turned into an urgent study on the value of doing good work. It should be widely read. – Robert Penn, author of The Man Who Made Things out of Trees
An enriching and poetic tribute to manual labour, and to the ongoing importance of the art that goes into it. Ole Thorstensen writes about the values manual labour brings to society as a whole. Making Things Right is a sharp reminder that we cannot afford to lose them.
Karl Ove Knausg�rd
A surprisingly absorbing read . . . illuminating for the humble homeowner and giving a great sense of his world. A quirky offering.
Sunday Business Post – Nadine O’Regan
Making Things Right won’t tell you how to do your loft conversion . . . but it should tell you what sort of guy you’d like to have it done by.
Spectator. – A.H.S. Smyth
A finely honed masterpiece . . . with precise prose, Thorstensen examines every nuance of the process, from the practical to the philosophical, from the craftsman’s point of view
Independent – Tim Alden
A swift and understated examination of a life spent working with one’s hands . . . He does well to demystify the trades. The work is not magic – a matter of tools and time, patience, practice and desire. For its detailing of the labor involved, the book will as much be useful to someone facing a renovation as it will provoke nods of recognition from those in the trades.
Wall Street Journal – Nina McLaughlin
Weight | 0.258 kg |
---|---|
Dimensions | 215 × 141 × 18 cm |