Sherry Turkle’s Alone Together is one of those books that hangs around in your mind long after you’ve closed it, not because of any particular shocking revelation, but because it […]
The Medici: How a Renaissance Banking Dynasty Built the Blueprint for Modern Financial Power
Paul Strathern’s The Medici is one of those history books that reads more like a story than a lecture. He traces the family’s rise from shrewd moneylenders to cultural icons […]
From Birds to Banks: What Nature Can Teach Us About True Wealth
It has always seemed to me that nature, in her quiet dignity, never once conceived of interest rates or compound debt, and yet she manages her affairs with far greater […]
The Man Who Quit Money: What Daniel Suelo’s Radical Life Teaches Us About Freedom
In The Man Who Quit Money, Mark Sundeen follows the radical life experiment of Daniel Suelo, a man who in 2000 walked away from his last thirty dollars and has […]
You Can’t Get Enough of What You Don’t Need: The Real Secret to Happiness
There’s a saying I came across recently, probably in one of the thousands of YouTube videos that I tend to get lost in: You can never get enough of what […]
Why Living in Balance with the World Makes Sense
Thomas Sowell once said there are no solutions, only trade offs. That thought hits hard because it feels both frustrating and freeing at the same time. We like to believe […]
Luke Kemp’s “Goliath’s Curse” – Let’s Take a Look
Luke Kemp’s Goliath’s Curse is not the sort of book you can skim on a lazy afternoon and then forget on the coffee table. It’s the kind that lingers, nagging […]
Eric Hoffer Was Right: Rudeness Is Just Weakness in Disguise
Eric Hoffer said that rudeness is the weak man’s imitation of strength. That little sentence has been pounding in my head like my neighbor, who is the drummer for a […]
From Movement to Racket: Can Nonprofits Avoid Hoffer’s Trap
Eric Hoffer once wrote that every great cause begins as a movement, turns into a business, and eventually becomes a racket. The line is sharp enough to make one wince, […]
Contentment vs. Fulfillment: Why Being and Becoming Are Not the Same
Fulfillment, if it is to be understood in any serious way, must be distinguished from the more fleeting states of pleasure or contentment. Pleasure is transient, contentment is momentary, but […]