Goodreads Reviews
“The Prince” is the most comprehensive individual résumé, and I don’t think that has been beaten to this day. Reading it was easy, because its sole intended reader, Lorenzo de’ Medici, was sort of a noob at the time. Machiavelli’s analyses on the rises and downfalls of princes, kings, and emperors were properly supported by historical events where footnotes from this edition definitely helps.
In the book, Machiavelli’s desire to help lead Italy to prosperity is evident. He explored different kinds of leadership in history and proposed a way to better govern the Italy of his time. His insights on social behavior were mostly general, and, I think, that is the reason why this is a timeless reading; the leaders of today are still the same as the leaders of yester-hundreds-of-years (or is it because of this book why it is so?).
And, since The Prince was written with a certain goal in mind—and that is to persuade de’ Medici to hire Machiavelli in his government—I appreciated more the chapters on “The Discourse” where Machiavelli reacted to Titus Livy’s “History of Rome.” Here, I believe, Machiavelli touched on more human and social truths without getting muddled up in desperation by analyzing as much history as he did in “The Prince.”