books? This book poses this broad question by examining the works of some of the greatest writers in history and from around the world and the life lessons we can all learn from them
'I read a book one day and my whole life was changed' ... So confesses the narrator of Orhan Pamuk's novel
The New Life. But what can we learn from reading books?
Life Lessons from Literature poses this broad question by examining the works of some of the
greatest writers in history.
In it, we can draw wisdom from Charles Dickens' views on poverty and wealth; draw comfort from ideas about love from Jane Austen and the Bronte sisters. Yet books are about much more than just romance and money. Through
careful examination of over
one hundred classic works of world literature, life lessons are also drawn from themes such as
conflict and
oppression, identity and psychology, showing how
literature enriches and informs our understanding of ourselves and the wider world around us.
From Brazil to Japan, the Americas to Africa; from Victor Hugo to Mark Twain and Chinua Achebe to Haruki Murakami, you will find literature from around the world in this gem of a book, in which the
plots may differ but the
themes and the lessons they have to teach us are entirely
universal.
Life Lessons from Literature is a must for all bibliophiles, providing a concise and highly accessible bucket list of
must-read books that teaches us so many fundamental truths and
broadens our minds.