Why I Started Ronan's Library
In another life, I think I became an English professor. Or maybe a librarian. Some kind of profession where stories were always part of the conversation, where books were not treated as side hobbies or school assignments, but as living things worth returning to.
I have always loved the idea of a life built around reading. Not just reading to finish another book, or to say I read something important, but reading because stories shape us. They give us language for things we have felt but never knew how to explain. They let us borrow other lives, other fears, other hopes, other ways of seeing the world.
Somewhere along the way, I think a lot of us lost touch with that.
We still consume stories constantly, but often quickly, passively, and alone. We scroll through opinions, watch clips, chase headlines, and move on before anything has time to settle. But books ask something different from us. They ask us to sit with an idea. To follow a person's choices. To notice what a world values, what it ignores, what it fears, and what it dreams about.
Stories inform how we see ourselves. They shape what we think is possible. They influence how we understand love, power, courage, loneliness, justice, failure, family, and belonging. They also shape how we see society: who gets listened to, who gets remembered, who gets misunderstood, and who gets left out.
That is part of why I wanted to start Ronan's Library.
I wanted a place to talk about books seriously, but not stiffly. A place for curiosity, recommendations, arguments, favorite passages, unfinished thoughts, and the strange way a good story can follow you around after you close it. I wanted to build a space where reading feels alive again, where stories become conversation, not just content.
Ronan's Library is for people who miss that feeling. The feeling of finishing a chapter and needing to talk about it. The feeling of finding a sentence that says something you thought only you had noticed. The feeling of realizing that a book written years ago, or hundreds of years ago, still has something urgent to say.
This project is a podcast, a blog, a book club, and maybe most of all, an invitation.
An invitation to read more closely. To talk more honestly. To remember that stories are not separate from life. They are one of the ways we understand it.