I have just finished two remarkable books.
The first is by a neat philosopher named Mortimer Adler, called How to Think About the Great Ideas. He uses the Great Books of Western Civilization to introduce and develop topics like love, peace, justice, punishment, human nature, democracy, progress, and much, much more. I could not speed read through this book; it was simply too dense. It was a mental workout, and it did a splendid job of whetting my appetite for more.
How to Think about the Great Ideas: A
Around the same time, I finished a poetry anthology, Americans' Favorite Poems, edited by laureate Robert Pinsky. This is the first book of poetry that I've read all the way through, and, like Adler, Pinsky has definitely whetted my appetite for more.
Americans' Favorite Poems: A
The first is by a neat philosopher named Mortimer Adler, called How to Think About the Great Ideas. He uses the Great Books of Western Civilization to introduce and develop topics like love, peace, justice, punishment, human nature, democracy, progress, and much, much more. I could not speed read through this book; it was simply too dense. It was a mental workout, and it did a splendid job of whetting my appetite for more.
How to Think about the Great Ideas: A
Around the same time, I finished a poetry anthology, Americans' Favorite Poems, edited by laureate Robert Pinsky. This is the first book of poetry that I've read all the way through, and, like Adler, Pinsky has definitely whetted my appetite for more.
Americans' Favorite Poems: A
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