Thursday, January 14, 2021
The best psichological books of 2021
12 Rules for Life : An Antidote to Chaos by Jordan B. Peterson
Launched earlier this year in America, and in our country at the International Book Fair "Bookfest", 12 Rules of Life was a real success worldwide, reaching the top of the best-selling books on Amazon. The psychologist of Canadian origin proposes 12 rules meant to help us lead a good and balanced life. Peterson starts from the premise that we live in a disorganized, chaotic world. The solution? Return to classical virtues such as courage, honesty, friendship, discipline. The author also urges us to take responsibility for our existence. Life has a meaning waiting to be discovered. It's hard for all of us, some less, some more, but that's not an excuse to run away from responsibilities. Peterson's speech is also compassionate to those confused young people who do not find their place in this world.
Young people eager for a word of encouragement and who still receive only reproaches. The Canadian psychologist tries to encourage them and teach them how to have a fulfilled life. Jordan Peterson is not afraid to tell the truth by name. His statements do not flatter readers. His concern is to speak honestly about the problems of today's world. Probably this sincerity contributed to his rapid success. Or maybe the simplicity with which he talks about what really matters in life.
Thinking, Fast And Slow - By Daniel Kahneman
One of the most important psychologists in the world at the moment, Daniel Kahneman makes an interesting foray into the mechanisms of human thinking to shed more light on them. Kahneman revolutionized cognitive and social psychology through his theories and is also a pioneer in behavioral psychology applied to economics.
In 2002, he also won a Nobel Prize in economics. The author presents in detail in his work the two systems in which he divides his thinking: Here are the two steps to follow
System 1, intuitive and emotionally influential, faster
System 2, slow, deliberative and logical
In other words, the first system provides us with a series of intuitive impressions, while the second system provides a means of controlling them, as well as the ability to understand the world more rigorously than intuition allows. Kahleman admits the extraordinary abilities of fast thinking, but also brings to the fore its errors, proposing the development of slow, more rigorous thinking.
If you are interested in the way our minds work and if you want to know what influences the choices we make, you should read this book. In addition, the author makes you aware that you can be deceived by your own mind, but shows you how to identify strategies that can help you not be fooled.
Stand and deliver. How to become a master of communication and a perfect speaker - Dale Carnegie
Do you want to become a good speaker, but are you afraid that you will not succeed? Does the fear of public speaking freezes your bones? Renowned American author Dale Carnegie teaches you how to become an expert in supporting your point of view and how to master the art of public speaking. Self-confidence, mastery of ideas, eloquence are necessary credentials for public speaking. This book will teach you how to get them.
You will also learn how to plan a good speech, how you can attract the audience to your side, why the well-knit beginnings and ends of a speech matter, and other helpful tips to help you become a good speaker. After reading only the first pages of this book, I found a piece of advice that made me overcome the fear of public speaking and start taking classes to teach other people what they know about online marketing.
That advice is worth as many as 100 public speaking courses that you could attend and if you only have that in mind when speaking in front of a group of people you can be sure that you are on the right track. But I will not reveal it to you now, because I want you to enjoy this book from the first to the last tab, just as I did. 🙂 Get it as soon as possible and learn the secrets of public speaking from a professional. With just one click you can find it online.
The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains
Were you in the same situation and wondering what was going on? Nicholas Carr gives you the answer. The above words belong to the author himself, who raises an alarm about the danger that the Internet represents for each of us. Maybe you find it a joke. Should the Internet be a wolf in sheep's clothing? Incredible, but not impossible. It's not a joke. That's what the author says. We can ignore them, but the negative effects of this new technology on human culture are very real. Here are some of the negative effects of the Internet that Nicholas Carr exposes:
Quick access on the net to what we want makes us expect a similar solution when we are not in front of the computer.
We become superficial. We don't explore things in depth anymore.
The power of concentration decreases. When we search for information on the Internet we are exposed to a lot of things that can distract us.
We quickly lose patience.
In support of his ideas, the author brings a lot of arguments, his work being very well documented scientifically. If you have also noticed the major impact that the Internet has on us and you are interested in discovering more, you need to know what Nicholas Carr has to say.
Don't miss this psychological book. It has been very successful since its launch and will help you better understand how our brain works! Enter here and buy it!
Sunday, August 26, 2012
The Best Books of the Twentieth Century
This top of the best books to read is inspired by "Writers vote their favorite books", a top made with the help of 125 contemporary writers of Britain and United States, including Norman Mailer, Ann Patchett, Jonathan Franzen, Claire Messud, and Joyce Carol Oates.
Each autor sent a list of their favorite top 10 works of all time (novels, short stories, drama or poetry), placed in order of their preference.

Each of the 554 titles that were submitted by writers scored from 1 to 10, so, as always, the first title in the list of preferences received 10 points while the latter is priced with 1 point. Finally, the points were collected and te top of "The Best Books of the Twentieth Century" was created:
1. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
2. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
3. In Search of Lost Time by Marcel Proust
4. Ulysses by James Joyce
5. Dubliners by James Joyce
6. One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
7. The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner
8. To The Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
9. The complete stories by Flannery O’Connor
10.Pale Fire by Vladimir Nabokov
If you loved this post, you should also read Top 10 Books to read of All Time
Sunday, September 25, 2011
The best fashion books of 2011
The best fashion books of 2011

Ugly Beauty
Rose, c'est Paris


Christian Lacroix and the Tale of Sleeping Beauty
In 2011, fashion stories are told with a more consistent dose of involvement, not necessarily related to marketing. It's all about an area that constantly fascinates female audience. Beautiful story of Sleeping Beauty, The Brothers Grimm is transposed and told in a new and original manner. The fashion dream becomes real and closer to fulfillment for women who have not forgotten to look at the world through the eyes of a child.
If you loved my list of best fashion books to read from 2011, you can subscribe to my blog. Thanks!
Friday, September 23, 2011
Top 10 Books of All Time
In addition, it is a kind of parlor game that adapts perfectly at global narcissism that floods the Internet every day. The exercise has been applied and J. Peder Zane has written book, The Top Ten, published in 2007. The author took 125 great names of literature and came up with a sentence. Here are the best books, in his view:
1. Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy,
2. Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert,
3. War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy,
4. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov,
5. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
6. Hamlet by William Shakespeare
7. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
8. In Search of Lost Time by Marcel Proust
9. Stories of Anton Chekhov by Anton Cekhov,
10. Middlemarch by George Eliot.
(you can find all these books on Amazon)
It is an American point of view, because Zane has applied a survey among Americans that can be said to have a certain insight regarding literature. Maybe that explains why Asians are missing, Kazuo Ishiguro, Murakami or South Americans, Allende, Llosa, Marquez.
There are no women in this top. There is no Muriel Spark, no Jane Austen, Virginia Woolf and Iris Murdoch. There is no Kundera, Musil and Mann. And you should consider ontemporary authors that are not detected by radars of our whimsicaltimes, but that will dominate the literary space in a century from now.
Is there a finality for the game above? It's just a taste of test guidance, reading. For that, we can rest assured that we live in the golden age of reading (never before have so many books been available), but we are tortured by the need to choose. What book to read? Where to start? Zane thinks that modern reader works on coordinates described by opportunity and confusion.
The irony is that dedicated readers does not have an apetit for force reading. Libraries are build out of passion, not according to some lists. Reading a book of our choice may be the last freedom we have.
Friday, April 15, 2011
How to cure molluscum book review
Click here to read it!
Saturday, February 5, 2011
Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption book review
On a May day in 1943, an Army Air Forces bomber plane went down into the Pacific Ocean and vanished, leaving only a spray of junk and a trail of oil, petrol, and blood. But out of thin air and water, a face came out. It was the plane’s bombardier, a teen lieutenant,who was fighting to a Carling float and drawing himself aboard. This is the beginning of the most exceptional odysseys of the Second World War.
Read more about his journey on Amazon.
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Autobiography of Mark Twain review
Mark Twain is the king of suspense, keeping us expecting for a century in order to reveal memories of his life. The rumours of his demise became accurate 100 years ago and one of Mark Twain's dying wishes comes to live: an extended, forthright and prophetic autobiography which he committed the last 10 years of his life to composing is finally here. UC Press is gallant to propose for the first time Mark Twain's uncensored autobiography in its totality and incisively as he left it.This major well-written event is just like a gift to the lecturers, supporters, and students. The book is the first of three volumes and introduces Mark Twain's authentic and uninhibited voice, full with humor, ideas, and beliefs, and speaking intelligibly from the grave as he designated.
Friday, November 12, 2010
Decision Points by George W. Bush
Let me keep this straight to the point and simple: this book is fascinating, down-to-earth. Appealing at certain turns and wildly unbelievable at others. The surprise is coming near the end: Decision Points is well-written and it's a pleasant reading.
This autobiography is centered around “the most consequential decisions” of his administration and his personal life from his determination to abandon drinking in 1986 to his decision to invade Iraq in 2003 to his decisions regarding the financial crisis of 2008. It's a book can bee seen as a twist, part asking for forgiveness to the world, part family scrapbook, part self-conscious attempt to rewrite his political legacy.
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Best Books of the Month (October)
"With waggish humor and a knack for unearthing the extraordinary stories behind the seemingly commonplace, he examines how everyday items--things like ice, cookbooks, glass windows, and salt and pepper--transformed the way people lived, and how houses evolved around these new commodities. "Houses are really quite odd things," Bryson writes, and, luckily for us, he is a writer who thrives on oddities. He gracefully draws connections between an eclectic array of events that have affected home life, covering everything from the relationship between cholera outbreaks and modern landscaping, to toxic makeup, highly flammable hoopskirts, and other unexpected hazards of fashion. Fans of Bryson's travel writing will find plenty to love here; his keen eye for detail and delightfully wry wit emerge in the most unlikely places, making At Home an engrossing journey through history, without ever leaving the house. --Lynette Mong"
Great House by Nicole Krauss
In each of the short stories that nest like rooms in Nicole Krauss's Great House looms a tremendous desk. It may have belonged to Federico GarcÃa Lorca, a poet and dramatist who was one of thousands executed by Fascists in 1936, when the Spanish Civil War began. We know that the desk stood in Weisz's father's study in Budapest on a night in 1944, when a stone shattered their window. After the war, Weisz hunts furniture looted from Jewish homes by the Nazis. He scours the world for the fragments to reassemble that study's every element, but the desk eludes him, and he and his children live at the edges of its absence. Meanwhile, it spends a few decades in an attic in England, where a woman exhumes the memories she can't speak except through violent stories. She gives the desk to the young Chilean-Jewish poet Daniel Varsky, who takes it to New York and passes it on (before he returns to Chile and disappears under Pinochet) to Nadia, who writes seven novels on it before Varsky's daughter calls to claim it. Crossing decades and continents, the stories of Great House narrate feeling more than fact. Krauss's characters inhabit "a state of perpetual regret and longing for a place we only know existed because we remember a keyhole, a tile, the way the threshold was worn under an open door," or a desk whose multitude of drawers becomes a mausoleum of memory. --Mari Malcolm
Worth Dying For by Lee Child
Worth Dying For You'd think that after 14 novels featuring hardscrabble hero, Jack Reacher, Lee Child's pulse-pounding series would start showing signs of wear. It is nothing short of remarkable that Child is not only able to continually reinvent his ex-military cop, but that each installment is better than the last. Worth Dying For finds our battered hero hiding in plain sight in a tiny Nebraska town, trying to recover from the catastrophe he left behind in South Dakota (no spoilers here, but readers are still arguing over 61 Hours’s cliffhanger ending). Fans rarely see such a physically vulnerable Reacher (in the first part of the book he is barely able to lift his arms) but it just adds to the fist-pumping satisfaction of seeing our weary good guy take on the small-town baddies. --Daphne Durham
All these can be bought from Amazon.com
Recommended from a friend at Melliris - Bio Honey
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
A Powerful Life: The Lost Writings of Wallace D. Wattles
Wallace Delois Wattles (1860–1911) was an American author. A New Thought writer, he remains personally somewhat obscure, but his writing has been widely quoted and remains in print in the New Thought and self-help movements. [wikipedia]
Wattles' best known work is a 1910 book called The Science of Getting Rich in which he explained how to become wealthy. [wikipedia]
Now, you can buy the 25 Long Lost, Extremely Rare Books And Articles Written By Wallace D. Wattles, Author Of The Science Of Getting Rich!
Monday, August 16, 2010
Out of the Dark - Book Review
Out of the Dark
Author: David Weber
Genre: Vampire Science Fiction | Alien Invasion
Hardcover: 384 page
Place to buy the book: Amazon.com
Built up a short story, this trilogy beginning combines ingredients of military science fiction and dark fantasy. In the very near future, Earth is aimed for colonization by a galactic conglomerate known as the Hegemony. Humanity has been written down as bloody-minded, disposable savages. When the Hegemony’s collaborators, the loyal Shongairi, come out to suppress Earth, the resistance is far from anything they had ever thought, particularly when vampires come along to help the humans. Weber brings off this vanity in daring style with a focus on military-powered action that will exalt fans of his Honor Harrington series, and he keeps the pedal to the metal right up to the almost incredible conclusion.
Monday, April 26, 2010
The Last Olympian Book Review

The Last Olympian is a fantasy-adventure novel based on Greek mythology by Rick Riordan published on May 5, 2009. The book is the 5th and concluding installment in the Percy Jackson & the Olympians series and serves as the direct sequel to The Battle of the Labyrinth. The Last Olympian circles around the demigod Perseus Jackson as he leads his acquaintances in a last stand to protect Mount Olympus. The book received many positive reviews.
The title relates to Hestia, the goddess of the hearth, who denotes to herself as such in a conversation with Percy. Additionally, there's a affirmation at the end of the book citing the close of "the first Camp Half-Blood series," arguing that there could be a lot to come after.
Friday, March 5, 2010
Kindle is no1 Product selling on Amazon
Well, Kindle is one of the great devices ever invented for book lovers like myself. Here are few reasons why I bought this second generation Kindle from Amazon.com:
- Battery life can last weeks.
- I can purchase books, magazines and newspapers. Wikipedia can be browsed free of charge. If Wifi is available I can browse the internet
- Slim design, cool and easy to read a book and tons of available information.
- Audio Reading Function
- The most important thing: for me, Kindle is my own personal mobile library
Buy Kindle (Latest Generation) on Amazon.com for $259
Saturday, November 14, 2009
Foundation by Isaac Asimov (review)

Foundation by Isaac Asimov is one of those books that bears become a specified historical tentpole of the literary genre that it's facile to disregard and accept for granted, a lot in the same direction new moviegoers nowadays could find it difficult to puzzle out the brilliance in Citizen Kane. Foundation by Isaac Asimov is not what you will call "a great book" plainly because critics tell you so. You have to read it, and find for yourself how staggeringly written and diverting piece of sociopolitical SF aggregated with brilliant storyline, and its finest dimensions could appear unusual to nowadays lecturers until you recognise just how magnificent they are accomplished. If you count over the years how SF genre has changed, becoming burdened by either futile style or clumsy plotting masquerading as epic legendry, Asimov's aphoristic language found in Foundation is a real breathing place full of energising air. Isaac Asimov acknowledged possibly better than anybody in that literary genre that SF is all about communicating. Isaac Asimov wrote as clearly as it gets, but not laconically. There's more than plenty humour to go around. To the highest degree imposingly, Asimov's plots were as complex as any of nowadays top novelists'. Nevertheless he still managed to maintain his lecturers' heads free from mental confusion and thwarting.

The stage for Foundation is set 13,000 years in a potential future, after human race has colonized space so exhaustively that just about everyone have lost any information regarding Earth. Foundation opens as the Galactic Empire is in its terminal years, having ruled across the galaxy for over 10 millennia. One-person on the capital planet of Trantor (a planetary which, by the way, George Lucas unabashedly abstracted and renamed Coruscant for use in Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace) dares to arise and evidence the dying Empire that its descent and capitulation is ineluctable. Hari Seldon has acquired the science of psychohistory, which aims to anticipate the behavior of wide populations across huge periods. Seldon has anticipated not alone the decline of the Empire, but the reality that a bashing 30,000 years of savagery will accompany that fall, unless his system, the Encyclopedia Foundation, is able to complete its vast task of cataloguing and maintaining millennia of compiled human knowledge and history. So, maybe, the 30,000 years could be trimmed to a bare millenium.
If you can't find any of the books in the Foundation Series, check Amazon:
All The Books in the Foundation Series
Read more about it on Wikipedia
Saturday, September 12, 2009
This Is Where I Leave You by Jonathan Tropper (book review)

Tropper mines old themes with his new book, This is Where I Leave You. Love relationship with college soul mate? Check. Father whose love is silent and unspoken and strong? Check. Sex with old high school fantasy? Check. Issue with athletic brother and other sibling rivalries? Check. I could go on.
The death of Judd Foxman's father marks the first time that the entire Foxman family-including Judd's mother, brothers, and sister-have been together in years. Conspicuously absent: Judd's wife, Jen, whose fourteen-month affair with Judd's radio-shock-jock boss has recently become painfully public.
This Is Where I Leave You is Jonathan Tropper's most accomplished work to date, a riotously funny, emotionally raw novel about love, marriage, divorce, family, and the ties that bind—whether we like it or not.
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Lord of Flies Book Review

Lord of the Flies is an allegorical novel by Nobel Prize-winning author William Golding. Central idea of the book is very simple: a group of children from different ethnic groups are found isolated on a deserted island (do not know how and why, but a vague mention atomic cataclysm) tries to recreate the rules of society in which they lived before becoming isolated. Gradually, the children with rational sense (Ralph and Piggy) will be consumed by instincts, senses the primary force and gross. All try to kill 'the beast' that lives in the heart of jungle, not knowing that the only beast around is the beast inside each other.
The novel is essentially an allegory on the sad human tendency to return back to the violent instincts, when one is put in front of certain conditions: isolation, lack of spatial or temporal landmark.
Read more about it on Wikipedia
Buy Lord Of Flies from Amazon:
The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown (preview)

Ok, I will admint I'm not Dan Brown's biggest fan. But I have to give the man credits for marketing his books nicely.
The most acclaimed "The Da Vinci Code" scratched the surface of some very interesting ideas that have been floating around for thousands of years. Unfortunately, he just scratched the surface and was content to take a great premise and wedge it into a contrived and boring plot.
The Lost Symbolis Brown's third Robert Langdon thriller, after Angels & Demons and The Da Vinci Code. In his new book Langdon uncovered conspiracies within the Catholic church that involved art and science.
The Lost Symbol is due to be released on the 15th September 2009.
Overview:
Dan Brown's new novel, the eagerly awaited follow-up to his #1 international phenomenon, The Da Vinci Code, which was the bestselling hardcover adult novel of all time with 81 million copies in print worldwide, will be published in the U.S. and Canada by Doubleday on September 15, 2009.
THE LOST SYMBOL will have a first printing of 5 million copies, and it will once again feature Dan Brown's unforgettable protagonist, Robert Langdon. Brown's longtime editor, Jason Kaufman, Vice President and Executive Editor at Doubleday said, "Nothing ever is as it first appears in a Dan Brown novel. This book's narrative takes place in a twelve-hour period, and from the first page, Dan's readers will feel the thrill of discovery as they follow Robert Langdon through a masterful and unexpected new landscape. THE LOST SYMBOL is full of surprises."
Dan Brown's popularity continues to grow. The film of The Da Vinci Code was a #1 box office smash when it was released by Columbia Pictures in May 2006 with Ron Howard directing and Tom Hanks starring as Robert Langdon. Box office receipts were $758 million. The same team released Angels and Demons theatrically worldwide on May 15, 2009.
links:
The lost symbol website
Pre-Order The Lost Symbol
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Liberty and Tyranny: A Conservative Manifesto
I was inspired to read this book by one of the reviewers from Amazon: "The louder someone complains, the closer you are to the truth. I anticipate a lot of ad hominem complaints from statists here. Do not let them talk you out of reading this book. "
They say any generation has few special authors and thinkers. After reading this book I know Mark Levin is one of those peoples. This masterpiece is one of those books that can survive the ravages of time and the shifting sands of societal evolution.
While Levin’s Liberty and Tyranny: A Conservative Manifesto is absolutist and escapist in nature, it addresses relevant issues in American society. Numerous programs and institutions need reform, and Levin’s work can be a springboard for debate. At a time when the Republican Party is searching for its identity, Levin provides a platform.
It is rarer still when a key book is written, recognized, and celebrated contemporarily. In my humble opinion, this is one such book. It's a must read!
Thursday, January 15, 2009
Top Autobiography and Memoir books
Traditionally, memoirs usually dealt with public matters, rather than personal, and many older memoirs contain little or no information about the writer, and are almost entirely concerned with other people. Modern expectations have changed this, even for heads of government. Like most autobiographies, memoirs are generally written from the first person point of view.
1. The Confessions (Augustine) - Free Download
2. The Complete Essays (Michel de Montaigne) - Free Download
3. Meditations on First Philosophy (Rene Descartes)
4. Walden (Henry David Thoreau) - Free Download
