A book that truly inspires and lives up to its name. I must preface this review with two things:
1)I bought this in India and hence got the version that doesn’t have the bible quotes.
2)I think the bible quotes would have been a great addition to the book. To be honest, i felt its absence.
And so, I proceed having read the book sans bible quotes. To start with what I liked, I loved the selection! I thought that the stories couldn’t have been picked in a better way. My personal conviction is that everyone has a story. However, the author showcased a lot of people whom society admired for their effortlessness, natural talent, and work, but most people didn’t realise that they were struggling with some deep and obscure thing or the other. That was pretty special. It chose (mostly) well known people, but never failed to surprise you. They showed saints for their honest flaws, and villains for their abusive and stormy past and upbringing. That made a lot of difference and made this book one that you really learn a lot from. The shift of perspective was enlightening. I loved how they would make you guess the person, and you would finally find out at the end. That made the stories more impactful, as you read from an unbiased point of view.
Another particularly enjoyable thing about the selection of the stories, were their breadth and diversity. There were stories about everything - people of all crafts, and all struggles, i.e. abusive childhoods, fatal sickness in the family, unwanted children, extreme poverty, mental illness, deaths, etc. All while tying everything in quite an impressive way. Sometimes,there were even interlocking stories, which was cool. The one I specifically remembered was the two stories of Beethoven and his mother. In my estimation, just the fact that the author wrote about the little known parents or family of famous people was a testament to the research he did.
Another thing I liked, was the standard and short length of each story. I liked the idea of a story a day. It seemed like a novelty to me. I was about 3 pages per story, that made it really bite size and compact. The style of his writing is also so comfortable - not verbose, to the point that you wouldn’t want to read, and not informal, to the point that you doubt his credibility. It had a good flow, and was easy to understand. All the information provided were relevant and put in a way that was very clear in its meaning and quite meaningful in its moral. I was amazed that the author could find so much information that all added to his premise and aren’t well known facts. To make this even more amazing, he put pages and pages of citations. I think that’s an author who is accountable.
Among the things that I would have changed or tweaked, I didn’t know that the book was a christian book, which I didn’t mind at all…. until I read the sometimes, quite brutal judgement issued by the author, especially, from my observation to non christians or people who did not eventually become religious christians. As such, I might have either a)marketed it as more of a christian book or b)Removed some of the constant reference to christianity. I personally didn’t mind it, but I know a lot of either a)Atheists or b)Other religious groups of people that wouldn’t have appreciated the bombarding of christian ideology. By extreme christian ideology, I am not referring to the Bible quotes, which I would have liked. Though the author does explicitly express a lot of disapproval to people of other religions, some who didn’t do anything that terrible. It reminds me of religious parents who tell their children that people of other religions are bad. I felt the book would have been more affective is he just laid the facts and stopped there. There wasn’t a need to further downplay people’s achievements or feel condescend for one lesson that can be learnt in their life.
All in all, it was extremely inspiring and thought provoking. It sew some seeds of my trust in destiny, opportunities, god’s plan and humanity. I realised that it does indeed seem like god has his plan for some people - even ones who started from small beginnings or didn’t show much promise initially.
The stories that I really loved were:
1.The man of a million lies - Marco Polo
2.Old Woom’s Winnie - Winston Churchill
3.The Miracle on Flight 255 - Cecilia Cichan
4.Letters from Lizzie - Elizabeth Barrett
5.Two minutes that changed history - Abraham Lincoln
6.The price we pay for love - C.S. Lewis
7.Paco’s papa - Ernest Hemingway
8.The hand that rocks the cradle - Susanna Wesley
9.The dangling telephone - Marilyn Monroe
10.A tale of Two families - Jukes and Edwards
11.Falling forward - Harland Sanders (Colonel Sanders)
12.Only the Lonely (Pyotr Ilyich)
13.Unbroken by failure (Abraham Lincoln)
14.Theo’s big brother (Vincent Van Gough)
15.Decision at twenty nine thousand feet (Mazur)
Some quotes by the author or by others (highlighted by the author)
1.Ain’t too much sadder than the tears of a clown when there’s no one around… I’m hurt and I want you to know, but for others I put on a show - in man of a thousand faces (Peter Sellers)
2.There are two ways to be fooled: one is to believe what isn’t so; the other is to refuse o believe what is so - The fifteen minute superstar (Superstar USA)
3.Success is the ability to go from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm - Old Woom’s Winnie (Winston Churchill)
4.These words run like a thread of hope through so many stories: a rabbi running for his life; an inmate fighting to keep his sanity; an an evangelist trying to find hope; and countless millions who have been inspired by a hymn. Isn’t the sustaining power of a story amazing? - A lifeline from the asylum (The love of god Hymn)
5.You will make thousands of choices today. A few may be carefully weighed, but most will be impulsive or unconscious. The vast majority probably won’t warrant a second thought. But none will be unimportant. So do yourself a favour. Reflect long and hard on the story of the little boy who stole a quarter. Your decisions today may not lead to such high drama, but this much is true for each of us: Monumental consequences are shaped by momentary decisions. - Little Herbie steals a quarter (Herbet Dillinger)
6.Giving your heart away is risky. Too many folks try to protect their heart from hurt. - Strong heart (Saint valentine)
7.Do you see your story in Sukey’s disappointments? Have your dreams been dashed and your hopes been postponed? Maybe life has deposited you at a wide spot on the road to nowhere. Is it possible that God has placed you here for bigger purposes than you can dare imagine? -The hand that rocks the cradle (Susanna Wesley)
8.Maybe you are facing overwhelming odds. Perhaps you have suffered a crushing defeat. Take heart from the story of the three hundred spartans - A victory in defeat (Xerxes)
9.Theodore never recovered from the trauma of that move or the fact that his mother was incapable of showing affection. To make matters worse, she married an abusive alcoholic. The boy drew into a shell of bitter loneliness. Though he grew up to be quite handsome, Theodore had few friends or dates. He could never shake his paranoid fear of intimacy - Be careful little eyes what you see (Ted Bundy)
10.He waddled to the podium and stuttered, “C-c-c-comrade, I w-w-w-want you to t-t-turn me into a l-l-leader of m-m-men.”
Hyde later wrote in his book, Dedication and Leadership, that he groaned within. He had never seen sorrier human material. But he had made a promise. So he gulped and welcomed Jimmy into the brotherhood. The new convert was sent out to the mean streets of London to hand out the Daily Worker. He was ridiculed, spit upon, and assaulted. When he returned with his soul battered and bruised, he whimpered, “I c-c-can’t d-d-do it!” But his comrades wouldn’t let him give up. Slowly but inexorably, Jimmy was transformed from a loser into a leader. - The Unlikely Leader (Jimmy Reid)
11.It matters little where any of us are buried. It does matter what we compose while still alive on this earth. Every time we love, touch, rescue, or encourage others, they become the living notes of a beautiful symphony that we are composing for the ages. It may not have the perfection of Mozart’s musical genius, but our life symphonies will bring joy and beauty long after we are gone. So live today with this in mind:Everything will perish, and this world will pass, but the symphony you compose will last forever. - Symphonies and Pyramids (Mozart)
12.Sam Peckinpah posed hard questions to an America wrestling with Vietnam. Can pacifism stand in the face of evil? Will wickedness go away if ignored? If war isn’t waged against evil when it is small, will we face an inescapable fight to the death when it grows into a monster? Straw Dogs is an allegory of spiritual warfare. We flirt with evil, thinking that we can charm the snake. Like Amy, we are caught by surprise when our pet becomes a predator. Or, like the professor, we passively sit by and allow evil to worm its way into our homes and seduce our loved ones. We shouldn’t forget the story of a professor and his wife. They would probably agree with this truth: The only way for evil to triumph is for good people to do nothing.” - Strawdogs
13. By now you are thinking that this is no fairy tale but a story from Sunday school. It appears in the Jewish Torah and the pages of the Christian Old Testament. It is the true story of Moses, whose name literally means “delivered from water.” The delivered one went on to deliver God’s people. All fairy tales—and every other story, including yours—are really reflections of a redemptive narrative that makes up the greatest story ever told. God has written your story too. Your personal history is really his story. Yours is very special and indispensable to his bigger story because he took the time to write it just for you. - The power of story (Moses)
14.Her closest friend, Sister Nirmala, told CNN, “Mother Teresa often felt abandoned by God. But then, Jesus also felt abandoned on the cross.”
Most of us have never come remotely close to exhausting ourselves in works of mercy the way Mother Teresa did for more than sixty years. - The exorcism of a Saint (Mother Teresa)
15.Careers pale in significance to the care we give loved ones. If you put your life on hold to do what Mort did for Milly, let this encourage you during those often exasperating and thankless hours: Careers will fade in importance and soon be forgotten, but heaven’s applause for caregivers will last forever. - Saving Milly (Morton Kondracke)
16.It was dedicated with a prayer of thanksgiving to God for allowing the greatest crisis in their history. Sometimes things have to fall apart before they can fall together. - Let’s hear it for the boll Weevil
17.Though he has been called prince of preachers and countless millions have been transformed by his ministry, Spurgeon suffered severe depression for the rest of his life. Though his sermons were full of humour, he wrote, “Melancholy is my closet neighbour.” There were times when flashbacks of hat night in the Surrey Music Hall would come in the middle of a sermon and he would have to be carried home in a stupor. He would experience seasons of enthusiasm, only to spend other months in bed.