This is a wonderful, accessible introduction to the life and work of the prominent economist. Right off the top I must say that the narrator, Leon Nixon, did an outstanding job voicing Mr. Sowell with intelligence, just the right inflection of emotion, and clarity.
The format is a collection of letters written by Mr. Sowell to friends, family, and readers plus many leading economists, social scientists, etc. These are mostly simple, heartfelt correspondences, nothing too technical that you need a Ph.D. to comprehend.
In addition to the letters, Sowell provides brief, useful introductions and autobiographical comments. You get a good feel for the man. His mother died giving birth to his younger brother. He's adopted, raised on 145th Street in Harlem, earns admission to top colleges and graduate programs, gets mentored at the top economics program in the country, the University of Chicago, and teaches at a number of colleges before settling in as a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. Now 95, he is one of our nation's leading public intellectuals.
Sound a little dry? The book isn't. It's loaded with insights and breakthrough approaches challenging the conventional wisdom on all kinds of lively topics. There's plenty of conflict -- academic departments can get a little poisonous, you may have heard. There's a note of romance including the reappearance of an old girlfriend after twenty years, a surprising twist which would require a spoiler alert. There are fascinating conversations about racial matters with major players across the political spectrum, but there's not one "woke" word spoken. In fact, Sowell's take on race and cultures will surprise you at every turn, because much of what he says comes from his expertise (economic fundamentals) and a great intellectual curiosity which informs his scholarship on everything from slavery, the history of black achievement, through the unintended consequences of "affirmative action" and the minimum wage.
Most correspondents are known to Sowell, but he also writes to ordinary citizens (names redacted) who respond to his columns. His tone is cheerful, friendly, and never inflammatory. Even when the listener/reader disagrees (as I do with him and his pal Clarence Thomas on a question of constitutional interpretation) one respects Sowell for being precise and narrow about his claims, trying not to stray into promiscuity from his vast knowledge base.
Sowell cares deeply about opportunity in America, and about young black students of promise as he once was. Written in 2007, "A Man of Letters" is still relevant today. You can see where his correspondence goes online because he dates the later letters down to the second.
It's an entertaining read, and an even more compelling listen.