Your esteemed blogger Mr. Northcutt recently composed a short list which only someone with his erudite catholicity could have assembled. It's theme is "short and insightful" and soon I am sure you will be spurred on by the exciting contents of his admirable collection.
In the meanwhile please settle for my imitation. My brief captions are, I hope, the essence of each, but at least what I learned (or learned to ask.) I would add but one observation, one only apparent to me after grouping these books together: they all possess an aesthetic dimension. They all suggest that to think, or write, or be so, is not just good, but beautiful, and in being so, necessary.
1. Aurelius, Marcus. Meditations/Exhortations [To Myself]
- Work hard at who you are.
- The Mass in black and white. Period.
- You need a friend and you need to be one.
- See as much as you can and find you way through.
- What is a poem? A poet?
- The world works.
- How a great artist handles ideas.
- You should expect that they do it well.
- Words matter. Use with caution, knowledge, and affection.
- Pray!
- What does your world look like?
- Why tell a story?
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