This is a collection of topically-arranged edited excerpts from Sri Sri Ravi Shankar's talks around the world. Most of the excerpts are less than a page, but they are thematically grouped (e.g. Fear, Ego, Compassion, Discipline, Consciousness, Silence, etc.) and many sections are several pages long and contain numerous excerpts. It is food-for-thought in bite-sized pieces, easily readable as a book that one picks up now and again to occupy a spare moment or two.
As for the content, I found it to be a mixed bag. I found a few pearls of brilliant insight mixed among banal truisms, and another form of faux-wisdom, one that is equally unproductive if more compelling to read, a shock and awe approach that forces interest by twisting consensus on its head. Prime examples of the latter can be seen in the sections on "Tolerance" and "Gratitude," both of which are taken -- on the whole -- to be negative traits. There are also a few points where I think ideas were misrepresented, such as in the section on "Skepticism" in which it is called a "know it all" attitude. While I'm not a skeptic, from what I'v read from those who are, it is rather a position that one can't know much, if anything -- depending on how extreme a stance is taken.
The book is well-edited to be readily consumed by readers. However, it's not clear how much one might be losing from context. By this I mean that presumably some of these excerpts were answers to questions or were comments delivered for a specific event (we know only dates and city,) and so it's possible that the shape of these comments were influenced by the context in ways that the reader can't know, (including those responses I've criticized.)
I found the book to be worth reading. It might seem like I was pretty hard on it, but even banalities, shock for shock's sake, and the rare misrepresentation can trigger insight in one who reads thoughtfully and analytically. It's a book of food-for-thought, and taken that way (as opposed to as sacred scripture) it has much to offer.