
This book, by Scott Galloway, was ok. It was short and had a few good pieces of information, but overall it was quite repetitive and family focused. Basically, if you’re not married and if you don’t have children, you’re never going to be truly happy. So…
The writer is rich, white, healthy, smart, and very privileged, and he acknowledges so at the beginning of his book, but still, too much of what he says comes from that place. What he says is not bad, not wrong, and I agree with most of it: love your family and friends, be kind to people around you, work hard, don’t be obsessed with money (which is something rich people can say), be a mentor, live in the right place (again, rich people), when you are married don’t keep scores (I agree that, this is great advice for any relationship), plan your end of life (100% agree), invest wisely (again, rich people), take your kids to Disneyland, etc. It felt like most of the advice was for married rich white young men in the US.
There was one really funny part where he talked about doing the « easy stuff » (be kind, respectful, on time, etc.), because if you can’t handle the « easy stuff, » you’ll never be able to face the really tough stuff (get a job, be a good husband, navigating the politics of the workplace, etc.) (and I 100% agree with all this). At one point, he exchanged emails with a university students who had come to class late and left class early, and someone posted his response on the internet where it went viral. That was in 2010. Today, no prof could EVER say something like that to his students, they’d be fired in 5 minutes, but I often wish I could, though!
So yeah, ok book.

Thank you for this new review. According to me, finding happiness thanks to algebra couldn’t be an appealing concept in French. I hardly know people who like mathematics enough to enjoy such a title. Concerning your last paragraph, I didn’t know you had to carry on teaching. Given the current international situation, isn’t it too hard?
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I don’t teach a lot, fortunately. But my students don’t care about the international situation, they are very young and they worry about what movie they’ve seen, what music they like, and what they’ll do during their next vacation 🙂
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Aren’t they supposed to become soldiers?
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They will become officers, yes, but an 18-year old officer cadet can’t imagine what that means and still wants to enjoy life like every other 18-year old.
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It is probably better for their mental health, but I doubt that it is good news for their country 😕.
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I doubt the future officers of other countries are much different, you’re a bit of an idiot when you’re young, that’s a pretty universal quality 😉
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Being a bit of an idiot is not a prerogative of young people. I carry on being it 😉
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Haha, very true, and me, too 😊
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Un enfonceur de portes ouvertes cet auteur non? Sauf si c’est écrit au second degré et où ça pourrait être drôle à lire. Mais je ne crois pas que ce soit le cas d’après la lecture de ton résumé. Ça pourrait pourtant faire un bon bouquin dans ce cas là, je pense.
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Ce n’est définitivement pas écrit au second degrés, et je pense que ça peut donner des bonnes idées à des gens qui ne sont pas sûrs de leur chemin, des jeunes qui cherchent encore dans quelle direction ils veulent aller. Mais ce n’est pas un bouquin pour les vieux et les vieilles 😉
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