Collects the most noted works on manhood from three thousand years of literature, including excerpts from Homer, Sir Thomas Malory, Aristotle, Frederick Douglass, Shakespeare, and John Cheever to present an anthology that is a resource on the essential virtues of men. 50,000 first printing.
Second reading: Hof funny. I have an even higher regard for this book than my first reviewing it in 2015 (now 2017). I was also simultaneously reading Meditations (Marcus Aurelius) and Tribe of Mentors (Timothy Ferris). Actually was a great combination. What Aurelius wrote in 170 AD obviously fit within What is Man and includes a chapter from his Meditations (pages 253-259). Unlike the anthology of world history of What is A Man, Tribe of Mentors is a collection of 'accomplished' people alive today, sharing what leads to 'success'.
I particularly enjoyed the chapter The American Man. Breathtaking reading these ideals that have stood the test of time and yet ring pertinent from today's headlines! Make sure you read Lincoln's "Towering Genius Disdains a Beaten Path", penned 22 years before he was inaugurated. If only the politicians of today could point to a life history of core values that far back in their own lives.
First reading: OUTSTANDING BOOK! Buy as many copies as you can and give them to every young man in your life! Would have been great supplemental reading when I went to enlisted and officer Marine Corps. ABSOLUTELY INDISPENSABLE LIFELONG READING! Best book I have purchased in ten years!