Origin Story

I have never consistently kept a journal. I am a bad returner of phone calls and an even worse writer of letters. I wrote a reading blog for awhile, but then that was abandoned to make way for Book Riot.

More than a writer of personal things, I am a hoarder of things that I find interesting, a digital raccoon who bookmarks a shiny bauble. Sometimes I share them via text or personal anecdote over dinner or coffee. For a long time, I didn’t think the anecdotes, facts, definitions, or stories that caught my attention had any unifying theme or overarching concern. I thought, and even said over many years, that I can get interested in almost anything. It has even become a (non) joke: there is no subject so boring that I won’t at least consider it as a subject of leisurely inquiry.

Over the last couple of years, though, I realized this is mostly untrue. Not the collecting part, but the taxonomic shruggie shoulders part. Because I have favorites, and these are not the undifferentiated background flotsam in Ariel’s cave, but rather kept on a special shelf in my mind.

Broadly speaking, these are stories of people having a great idea and then doing something with it. Of seeing a problem and solving it. Of asking a question, and then answering it. Of being told “not so fast,” and responding “hold my beer.”

To me, human ingenuity is the most interesting thing in the world—and worth celebrating.

I don’t remember figuring this out, but I do know the date I did something with it: Dec 21st, 2022. I know this because on that date I created a new Google doc and immediately dumped 79 items (I am still struggling to find the right noun for these things) into it just off the top of my head. Bookmarks and saved links provided another few dozen. And over the last two years, new entries have trickled in, both remembered items and new discoveries.

I each case, I find myself eager both to file a new finding away and to tell someone about it. And I do, usually in the form of a dinner time did-you-know to my family or workplace today-I-learned Slack message.

So What is Kinda Genius?

The idea for this newsletter is simple: share these stories with more people, more consistently. I considered an Instagram account or other social media presence, but I am by nature a writer and reader, and so text will always be my media franca. And everyone has email, but no one owns it.

My very loose plan is to send something at least once a week. Possibly Sunday mornings. In many cases, these might only be a few sentences long; I am not interested in belaboring a wonderful anecdote that can speak for itself. I give context or a thought or two, but as with cooking, if you have good ingredients, sometimes the simplest preparation is the best.

For my first post, I wrote about the ending of of Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory. This will most likely be on the long side of what I post, but who knows! I want to experiment and play, and I hope that leads to a pretty wide variety of topics, formats, and approaches.

Here is the bit where you can subscribe

If that sounds like the kind of thing you might be interested in, this is where you can sign-up. I am turning on paid subscriptions, as I have learned that putting out your hat when you are playing guitar, even just for fun, doesn’t hurt anybody.

User's avatar

Subscribe to Kinda Genius

Kinda Genius is a weekly email with one unforgettable story about creativity, curiosity, or invention plus a selection of links, exercises, and other resources.

People

CEO & co-founder, BookRiot.com. My Substack is called Kinda Genius, and it's a celebration of human ingenuity--in all its forms. I think you'll like it.