The Art of Marginalia: Capturing Thoughts in Books

The author discusses their practice of annotating books with marginalia, seeing it as a way to capture thoughts, questions, and connections while reading. These annotations create a personalized record of their responses to the text, akin to preserving life’s moments through photographs or letters, revealing individual perceptions that may not resonate with others.

Whether a marginal note, comment, reference, or illumination, books I have read multiple times will be adorned. I know. I hear the muffled voices, “You do NOT write in books. Just does NOT happen.” I must admit that many of the books in my library have been adorned with marginalia.

These notes are questions I capture as I read. To be answered later or serve as rhetorical questions requiring contemplation of the passage. They are links to other passages, definitions, or exemplars. There are multiple entries along the margins. Reading a book at different times will evoke similar or different comments. The passage evolves into an annotated and personally curated artifact. It links ideas in a continuum. Alternatively, it adds a deeper and more interconnected journal of my reaction to a specific passage.

Several books in my library are embellished with that and much more. Some have note cards, newspaper clippings and pieces of paper between a page here and there. My own PKM, I guess.

None of these personally illuminated texts find their place anywhere except my library. Their use, relevance and even meaning elude some. It is a glimpse into how I read a book. You start to see my thought processes, my responses to the passages and get a glimpse into me. You comprehend my marginalia. Or you dismiss it all as doodles on the page.

All that being said, it’s like life. We each have an annotation in our lives. Sometimes, it exists and is preserved in a photograph. Sometimes, by letters we send and those we get. It all makes sense to you. But to others, it just doesn’t click.


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Author: dpeter19

Realizing that each day is a singular event or part of the connections from birth to death. How do we connect with each other? How do we connect to our past, both individual and collective? And the sharing of our stories - the connective fiber - brings us to a closer connection. These are my stories. They connect my days.

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