i found it interesting how so much of his philosophy is current today. It was pretty tricky to see through his words but I felt like we were on the same wavelength so personally I loved it. I wish I could have met him.
Truly a personal philosophy, so dull, slow and lacking intellect or revelation that this could be anybody you find in the countryside. Competent writing for an 18 year old student.
The third of five books by the skillful and thoughtful Christopher Milne (the son of author A.A. Milne and the inspiration for the Winnie the Pooh character "Christopher Robin")—I read all five of his books in the order in which he wrote them. I was inspired to do so after I watched the rather apocryphal movie Goodbye Christopher Robin (2017). Sadly, Milne and his father adopted an atheist worldview related to their admiration of the work of William Winwood Reade. This book and his other stories reflect that dismal, pseudoscientific worldview. I gave three stars because Milne expresses his thoughts and conveys his story and journey in a very interesting way. (Sorry for the similarity to my reviews of Milne's other books; I read these five years ago and don't have fresh impressions of them.)