Pragmatism (1907)

When I return to William James’s “Pragmatism” (1907), I find myself drawn not merely by historical curiosity, but by the book’s persistent urgency—a sense that the world, especially in periods of crisis or uncertainty, quietly demands a philosophical method as adaptive and practical as the one James describes. “Pragmatism” matters to me because it holds … Read more

Postwar (2005)

Introduction As a reader drawn instinctively to the great tides of modern history, I cannot help but be compelled, almost magnetically, by Tony Judt’s “Postwar”. This is not simply because it presents an unmatched panoramic account of Europe since 1945, but because the book animates the century’s darkness and its restless, unsatisfied yearning for a … Read more

Politics (350)

When I return to Aristotle’s “Politics,” I’m consistently struck by how vigorously it grapples with questions that resist resolution even now: what is the purpose of political community? By what standards do we assess justice in the distribution of power and resources? I find it intellectually invigorating not merely because it wields astonishing influence—though Aristotle’s … Read more

Poetics (335)

Introduction When I return to Aristotle’s “Poetics,” I never manage to read it as a cold artifact from the ancient world. Instead, I encounter it as a living inquiry—one that probes the machinery of our imaginations with such precision that I can’t help feeling both challenged and strangely invigorated. The text has always intrigued me … Read more

Phenomenology of Spirit (1807)

When I first encountered Hegel’s *Phenomenology of Spirit*, I was struck not so much by its reputation for difficulty, but by the sense that it invites its reader into a philosophical journey with unusually high stakes. The book is not simply a catalog of arguments, nor a set of practical guidelines; it is, at its … Read more

Pensées (1670)

Introduction Something happens inside me each time I approach Blaise Pascal’s Pensées. I always feel as if I am standing before a mind simultaneously tormented and lucid, both dazzling and dark. The book fascinates me not only for its raw intelligence and abrupt style, but because it reads like a mind interrupted: a torrent of … Read more

Peak (2016)

It’s rare that a nonfiction book so thoroughly unsettles widely held beliefs about human ability, and even rarer when it does so with both practical purpose and scientific integrity. “Peak: Secrets from the New Science of Expertise,” co-authored by psychologist Anders Ericsson and journalist Robert Pool in 2016, immediately drew my attention upon publication for … Read more

Outliers (2008)

Introduction Some books operate almost like intellectual Rorschach tests—how I read them ends up revealing more about me than about the book itself. For me, Malcolm Gladwell’s “Outliers” is precisely this kind of provocation. I first picked up the book with a mixture of curiosity and skepticism: could achievement really be boiled down to patterns, … Read more

Orientalism (1978)

Reading Edward Said’s “Orientalism” often feels like standing at the intersection of criticism and self-reckoning. The book gathers intellectual momentum through each chapter, interrogating not only academic conventions of “the East,” but also the unconscious scaffolding of Western thought. What draws me most is how “Orientalism” compels readers to consider the power behind the very … Read more

One Hundred Years of Solitude (1967)

Introduction There are books that linger in the periphery of my thoughts, yet few have invaded my waking imagination as thoroughly as Gabriel García Márquez’s “One Hundred Years of Solitude.” Even now, years after my first reading, the memory of Macondo—its founding, flourishing, and fading—flickers at the edge of my consciousness like a half-remembered dream. … Read more