by Kenji Shibata · 140 pages · epub + pdf · March 2026
A sustained essay in favour of the long sentence and the unhurried paragraph — on attention in a decade that sells it by the millisecond. Written slowly, to be read slowly. An argument for the kind of mind that doesn't scroll, and a defence of reading for the sake of reading.
The phone vibrated on the desk between us, and my friend's eye — in the middle of a sentence about her sister — flicked to it and back. It was a small movement, the kind nobody notices anymore, and the sentence continued. But something in the sentence had already been removed, because a part of her mind was no longer in the room.
This book is about what that part of the mind is doing when it leaves, and what remains behind, and whether either of them is still us.
I do not want to sound like a scold. Every generation has its own complaint about its own media, and most of those complaints sound thin in retrospect. Socrates was worried about writing. The novelists of the 1850s were worried about newspapers. What I want to describe is smaller and more local: the specific feeling of a sentence losing its ground mid-word.
Exactly what was on the tin. No upsells, no tier gates, no "contact us for pricing" once I was in. Shipped in an afternoon and the docs were readable by a human.
I've bought half the catalogue at this point. The voice is consistent, the prices are honest, and the updates actually land. It's what indie shipping should look like.
Did what the page said it would do. Knocked off half a star because I wish there was a Windows native build — I'm on WSL and it works but feels like a workaround. Support replied to me in four hours.
I bought it at 11pm, downloaded it at 11:01pm, had it running at midnight. That's the whole review. Email went to a person who answered the next morning.
The amount of thought in the copy alone makes this worth the price. And that's before you get to the actual product. Rare to see this level of care at indie prices.
Swapped out my previous tool for this one last sprint. Fewer features, honestly — but the ones that are here are the ones I actually use. Don't miss the rest.