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Cool tools really work.
A cool tool can be any book, gadget, software, video, map, hardware, material, or website that is tried and true. All reviews on this site are written by readers who have actually used the tool and others like it. Items can be either old or new as long as they are wonderful. We post things we like and ignore the rest. Suggestions for tools much better than what is recommended here are always wanted.
Spyderco Dragonfly 2 penknife Non-locking, featherlight, legal to carry in most European countries, and the steel takes an edge beautifully. At tavernas in Greece, my friends always turn to me the moment something needs cutting: come on, where’s the knife? The rare object that manages to be both entirely practical and quietly perfect.
Collings OM2H-T guitar I own twenty-three guitars, so nominating one is not a trivial act. Julian Lage was among the first high-profile players associated with this model — which is how I heard of it — and when I found this particular example in London, even the staff said there was something unusually good about it. There still is.
Chuang Tzu: Inner Chapters (trans. Gia-fu Feng & Jane English) I’ve read the Inner Chapters almost every week since I was seventeen — I’m now in my mid-sixties. I own six or seven translations; this one earns its place through Jane English’s photographs, which capture the spirit of the Tao in a way I’ve never found elsewhere.
DIGITAL
Claude Code (via Visual Studio Code) I’m a retired English lawyer on a mountainside in Greece, writing a historical novel set in 1445 Samarkand. Through Claude Code I run an AI-powered publishing operation: a chief of staff called Archie coordinates specialists covering research, editing, marketing, and law. None of them exist in the conventional sense. All of them are indispensable. Full story on my Substack.
Lost and Savage An Italian rides a Kawasaki W650 across Central Asia — the W650 was my first serious motorcycle, and the Silk Roads are my obsession. Quieter, stranger, and considerably more interesting than the usual motorcycle travel content.
INVISIBLE
The chief element of happiness is this: to want to be what you are. — Erasmus
You could attribute this to Marcus Aurelius or Chuang Tzu and nobody would blink. Its universality is the point — not a cultural artefact but a simple, portable truth.
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