jessicaschick's review against another edition

Go to review page

fast-paced

4.0

cizzim's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Interesting read! I skipped a few bits here and there as I recognised it from my degree but overall enjoyable :)

de_ferraz's review against another edition

Go to review page

informative lighthearted medium-paced

3.25

samanthas_books's review against another edition

Go to review page

informative slow-paced

3.5

yecatherine's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

I’m a bilingual. My first language is Russian, but I started learning English at 8 and by 17 I was fluent enough to study at a UK university. For the past ten years I spoke English everyday, for social and formal interactions. I also spoke Russian to my friends & family and continued reading Russian books. Some of my Russian-speaking friends have moved to the UK too, and the language we speak is a hybrid of a Russian base with English words intertwined occasionally. Sometimes we switch to English mid-sentence, and then back to Russian after another two sentences. For a Russian or English monolingual’s ear this sounds grotesque and my mother is often repulsed when she hears us.

This books was a fascinating journey into my own brain. The biggest epiphany for me was the switching cost as it explained why after a week-long stay back home or after reading a Russian book I unintentionally start speaking Russian to my British boyfriend! A few times I said “Доброе утро” right after waking up to find him looking extremely confused (I know, he really needs to learn my language too).

The switching cost is probably the reason why me and my friends often struggle to find Russian words to describe our UK lives, as bilinguals have a slower and less reliable access to the lexicon than monolinguals. I imagine it as a “language data base” in your brain, and a bilingual person simply has more data points to go through. And beyond that, sometimes there are words that cannot be translated directly. Language is one of the most complex neural structures in your brain. Languages contain collections of meanings, which create frameworks and shape perceptions. Although Costa does mention that bilingual children show better abilities in perspective taking and empathy, I felt like the theme of how languages form realities was massively underdeveloped.

Some of the benefits of bilingualism mentioned in the book were higher amount of grey matter and delay in the onset of dementia by an average of four years. This is because of the greater cognitive reserve that slows the progression of the disease.

Another fascinating theme was how speaking a foreign language can make you more utilitarian in decision-making. When people were presented the famous train dilemma, they were more likely to choose killing one person to save five when the problem was written in their second language and vice versa. The results were pretty consistent, yet scientists are yet to understand the mechanics behind this phenomena.

Overall a great book summing up the latest research on bilingualism, although I wouldn’t’ say it’s for a general reader.

j_wdn's review against another edition

Go to review page

informative reflective

4.5

gabe_reads's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.5

I love short books. This is one I bought on a whim, which I rarely do, but I thought it might be related to my language and thought module. It wasn't, but it was interesting and because it was so short there was little lost. It was about the act of being bilingual and the effects that has. 

Some highlights are: infants seem to be able to pick up two languages just as easily/quickly as one; bilinguals have smaller vocabularies in each language (but larger overall) and get more tip-of-the-tongue events; bilinguals seem to have greater ability to supress irrelevant information, including pre-verbal infants; bilingualism is a form of cognitive reserve that protects against age-related decline; emotions feel less strong in a language you learn after childhood, and this leads to being more logical and less prone to emotionally-based cognitive biases. 

idaarmstrong's review against another edition

Go to review page

informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

4.0

Informative for everyone that speaks more than one language or is interested in language acquisition and how language impacts how you are perceived.

bsu2bf's review against another edition

Go to review page

informative slow-paced

3.75

amarguerita's review against another edition

Go to review page

informative slow-paced

3.0