
In a world of anxiety and burnout, Katherine May's "Enchantment" offers a transformative journey back to wonder through earth, water, fire, and air. This lyrical meditation has become essential reading for those seeking to escape digital overwhelm and rediscover life's simple magic.
Katherine May is the New York Times bestselling author of Enchantment and an internationally acclaimed writer exploring themes of nature, spirituality, and neurodivergence. A master of blending memoir with societal observation, her work delves into reclaiming wonder amid modern disconnection. Enchantment continues her signature style of intertwining personal narrative with universal truths, reflecting her background as an autistic woman navigating sensory-rich experiences.
May’s previous works include the global bestseller Wintering: The Power of Rest and Retreat in Difficult Times, adapted as BBC Radio 4’s Book of the Week, and The Electricity of Every Living Thing, a memoir chronicling her midlife autism diagnosis while walking England’s South West Coast Path.
She amplifies her insights through The Clearing, a popular Substack newsletter, and the top-ranked podcast How We Live Now. Her perspectives have graced The New York Times, Aeon, and Good Morning America. Enchantment debuted as an instant New York Times bestseller, solidifying May’s reputation as a visionary voice in contemporary nonfiction.
Enchantment explores rediscovering wonder in everyday life through nature, ritual, and sensory experiences. Katherine May reflects on pandemic-era anxiety and shares personal journeys—like sea-swimming and visiting sacred sites—to illustrate how reconnecting with earth, water, fire, and air fosters resilience. The book blends memoir, philosophy, and practical guidance to help readers cultivate “small doses of awe” in a chaotic world.
This book is ideal for anyone feeling overwhelmed by modern life, climate anxiety, or post-pandemic burnout. Fans of Wintering, mindfulness seekers, and nature enthusiasts will appreciate its lyrical storytelling and actionable insights. It’s also valuable for readers interested in self-care frameworks tied to the natural world.
Yes—Enchantment offers a timely, restorative perspective for navigating uncertainty. With accolades from Anne Lamott and Krista Tippett, it combines relatable personal anecdotes with universal themes. The focus on grounding practices (like barefoot walks or moonlit rituals) makes it a practical guide for rebuilding emotional balance.
May argues that deliberate attention to nature—like observing a meteor shower or tidal patterns—shifts focus from fear to curiosity. Rituals (e.g., daily walks to a stone circle) create stability, while sensory engagement (touch, sound) interrupts rumination.
Earth, water, fire, and air serve as metaphors for reconnecting with the physical world:
Aether, a historical scientific concept, represents the intangible “glue” connecting all things. May uses it to symbolize embracing mystery—like finding awe in stargazing—even when logic falls short.
Both books blend memoir and self-help, but Enchantment focuses on proactive joy-seeking rather than coping with hardship. While Wintering addresses emotional hibernation, Enchantment advocates reengagement with wonder through intentional rituals.
Yes. By fostering a deeper bond with nature—such as noticing seasonal shifts or tidal rhythms—the book encourages stewardship and reduces eco-grief through purposeful connection.
Its themes of digital detox, community healing, and climate resilience align with ongoing post-pandemic and environmental challenges. The emphasis on micro-joy offers a counterbalance to AI-driven productivity culture.
Ressentez le livre à travers la voix de l'auteur
Transformez les connaissances en idées captivantes et riches en exemples
Capturez les idées clés en un éclair pour un apprentissage rapide
Profitez du livre de manière ludique et engageante
Enchantment is a way of encountering the world with a heightened attention to its possibilities.
Our mania for control has damaged our ability to simply be present in our own lives.
We don't need to change the world to find enchantment; we need to change the way we see it.
Enchantment is not the same as happiness, or even contentment. It’s more like a passing thrum of wonder at our own existence.
The world is always new, always wondrous; we just forget to see it.
Décomposez les idées clés de Enchantment * Exp * en points faciles à comprendre pour découvrir comment les équipes innovantes créent, collaborent et grandissent.
Condensez Enchantment * Exp * en indices de mémoire rapides mettant en évidence les principes clés de franchise, de travail d'équipe et de résilience créative.

Découvrez Enchantment * Exp * à travers des récits vivants qui transforment les leçons d'innovation en moments mémorables et applicables.
Posez n'importe quelle question, choisissez la voix et co-créez des idées qui résonnent vraiment avec vous.

Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco
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Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco

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Have you noticed how hard it is to finish a book lately? How birthdays feel like just another day, how you scroll endlessly but absorb nothing, how time itself seems to behave strangely-clustering in dark corners, looping back on itself? You're not alone in this peculiar emptiness. Katherine May's "Enchantment" names what many of us have been feeling but couldn't quite articulate: we've lost our capacity for wonder. Not the manufactured amazement of viral videos or Instagram sunsets, but something deeper-an ability to truly engage with the world around us. May, diagnosed with autism in adulthood and emerging from burnout, doesn't offer productivity hacks or mindfulness apps. Instead, she invites us on a journey through earth, water, fire, and air to rediscover what she calls enchantment: that small wonder magnified through meaning, an essential nutrient found only when we dig into our own soil of experience. This isn't depression-there's no self-loathing or destructive urges. It's something stranger: a difficulty engaging with anything substantial, an attention that slides away despite genuine desire, a feeling of flickering rather than existing solidly in the world. Friends describe similar states, attributing it to pandemic exhaustion, political upheaval, or that catch-all term: burnout. But what we're really experiencing is disenchantment-a disconnection from meaning itself. In our age of constant distraction and mounting anxiety, this book arrives like medicine for a sickness we didn't know how to diagnose.