Decided to purchase this book after listening to Anderson Silver’s podcasts on Stoicism. Silver certainly makes some valid points and is good at giving the reader a reality check, but I did feel that the book jumped about in places, as it seemed to flit from the words of Stoic philosophers to Buddhism to science about the universe to history lessons about WWII and Hiroshima without much structure. I’m also knocking off an extra star due to the spelling/grammar/punctuation errors which, while mostly small, were frequent enough within the book’s eighty or so pages to make me question whether it had been proofread properly.
Nevertheless, the book did a good job of hammering home the fact of our own mortality and how best to spend our daily lives, as well as making the excellent point that external circumstances are neither good nor bad, it’s our judgements alone that makes them seem that way. I won’t rule out reading the second and third volume of this series, but for now I’ll be diving straight into the writings of Marcus Aurelius and Seneca - Your User’s Manual did a good job of whetting my appetite for what the classic philosophers had to say.