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Review: The Doodle Revolution

When I showed my copy of Sunni Brown’s The Doodle Revolution to a fellow UX designer at the pub recently, her response was: “Don’t you already know that stuff?”

The answer is: No. Sure, I can sketch, and draw—I even do a bit of freelance illustration. So some of the exercises at the start of the book designed to coax hesitant doodlers out of their self-imposed hiatus weren’t really for me.

However, once you’re past those introductory activities, this is not a book about how to draw. It’s a book about how to extend and leverage your visual literacy to solve problems in creative ways—and to empower your workmates to do the same. It’s like a cross between Mike Rohde’s The Sketchnote Handbook, the video course of which we reviewed earlier this week, and Gamestorming, a book about collaborative design games of which Brown is also a co-author.

Getting all meta …

It felt entirely appropriate that, for a book about visual literacy, I create a visual summary about the content covered in the book (plus this review ended up being a bit long, so this is for those of you who can’t be bothered with the whole thing). I even filmed it for you!

Sunni Brown is a visual thinking consultant based in Austin, Texas. I first happened across her work via the TED talk she delivered a few years back—it was inspiring, funny, and hinted at something at the tip of an iceberg just begging to be explored further. This book is the outcome of that exploration.

Here’s the structure of the book:

  1. Introduction
  2. Doodling is Thinking in Disguise
  3. The Doodle’s Radical Contributions
  4. Doodle University
  5. Infodoodle University
  6. Taking the Infodoodle to Work
  7. Marching Towards Visual Literacy
  8. Famous Last Words

While there are other books about visual literacy, what truly sets this one apart from others is personality. I don’t want to come across all gushing, but dang, this girl can write. A cursory flick through the footnotes at the back of the book reveals the following gems:

OK, so this style of writing may not be for everyone. And yes, maybe after being inspired by that TED presentation I was more than a little swayed by the idea of this charismatic champion of cartoons referring to me as “lovebug”. Injecting quirky humour can be a fine line to walk, but I found it entirely appropriate and very welcome. (I should note that this degree of personality is not present in every sentence (there are plenty of plain language explanations, instructions, and credible sources cited) but there’s more than enough to keep it interesting.

The miseducation of the doodle

Stuff that made me go “Wow!”

Stuff that made me go “Meh”

However, these criticisms are pretty minor—overall, this is a fun, informative, and inspiring read, and I expect I will refer to it on multiple occasions for both group activities and to challenge and continually expand my own visual literacy journey. Highly recommended.

Buy The Doodle Revolution on amazon.com.