The World of PostSecret, by Frank Warren. Published 2014 by William Morrow. Art, Popular Culture.
In
2004 Frank Warren started asking people to send him postcards with
their secrets written on them. People responded in droves to the
opportunity to participate in his public confessional, and he's received
countless secrets since then, started an extremely popular website/blog
(postsecret.com), traveled the world doing events and shows, and
published five earlier books.
This book is several
things. It's a collection of secrets, like the earlier five. It's also a
look back at the project, now ten years old, containing reminisces by
Warren and his mail carrier, and stories about controversies, victories,
special secrets and more. He also discusses the fate of the PostSecret
app, and what the future might hold for the project, hinting that he's
looking for a successor to take it on.
I've always been
fascinated by PostSecret and have made a habit of visiting his blog
every Sunday to see the latest secrets. I think the project appeals to
people on several levels. There's an aspect of voyeurism at wanting to
see others' secrets. There's a wish to find out if someone else has the
same secrets one has. (Am I the only one who...?) And there's the
art itself, the beautiful and strange and wonderfully bizarre and
personal images and messages that people take the time to produce.
Finally, I think the project appeals to people not only as a way to
express their own secrets but to see others reaching across the digital
world, reaching out, and being that person who receives the message,
like a message in a bottle.
The messages take all
forms. Just about any secret you can think of, you will find on the
website or in one of Warren's books. It makes you think how alike we all
are, how we struggle with so many of the same things. Empathy is the
biggest take-away, the chance to consider struggles from many different
perspectives. I wonder about the stories behind the secrets, too. What
compelled the person to share, what got him or her into the situation
and how will it be resolved? What's it like to live with these secrets
day to day? Probably, it's the same as it is for all of us to live with
our secrets. Reading this book reminds you you're not alone no matter
what you struggle with.
I recommend it to
readers who like the confessional and the personal, and I also recommend
it as a holiday gift for anyone for whom you bought Allie Brosh's Hyperbole and a Half last
year. It's the kind of thing that different kinds of people who enjoy
on different levels, including a lot of people who wouldn't think of
picking it up for themselves. It can kind of hang out on the coffee
table or the nightstand and be the kind of book you pick through a
little at a time, then return to in a quiet moment now and then, a book
for introverts if you will. I liked it.
Rating: BUY
FTC Disclosure: I received this book for review from HarperCollins.
2 comments:
I started reading this this morning and I'm loving it!
Love these books, I can read them in one sitting. They really make you think about the rest of the world and other people. I think I submitted a secret a few years ago. But I don't remember.
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