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Book Review 2025 > Book Review 2025 - Monthly Check-in - March

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message 1: by Icke (new)

Icke | 33 comments Hey guys,

I know this is quite late but I thought we can have a small discussion on what we chose for March as the freebie, unfortunately for me, I was still busy reading In The Buddha's Words. :(

Let me know how it all went for you guys!


message 2: by Icke (new)

Icke | 33 comments I plan on posting a thread for Epictetus' book later this week. So we can start discussing that then. I really enjoyed that the first time I read it, many moons ago!


message 3: by Henri (last edited Apr 16, 2025 06:11PM) (new)

Henri Mingu (aseaofourown) I'm also still not done with Buddha, but my plan is to continue it after I finish [insert month we're on]'s book. For March I read A Sand County Almanac. My theme for my own picks is nature stuff. I'm thinking of following it up with Walden, Silent Spring, and Origin of Species (or, if I find this last one too dry, Calpurnia Tate).


message 4: by Awelone (new)

Awelone | 4 comments in March I read Damian by Herman Hesse, I like some of his other books more, but this one was good too. It's fiction but a little philosophical, makes you think a lot.


message 5: by Icke (new)

Icke | 33 comments a sea of our own wrote: "I'm also still not done with Buddha, but my plan is to continue it after I finish [insert month we're on]'s book. For March I read A Sand County Almanac. My theme for my own picks is nature stuff. ..."


A Sand County Almanac sounds interesting just from the synopsis. How did you find reading it?


message 6: by Icke (new)

Icke | 33 comments Awelone wrote: "in March I read Damian by Herman Hesse, I like some of his other books more, but this one was good too. It's fiction but a little philosophical, makes you think a lot."

This also sounds pretty interesting. Nice to see Jung's influence transcend into fiction!


message 7: by Henri (new)

Henri Mingu (aseaofourown) Icke wrote: "a sea of our own wrote: "I'm also still not done with Buddha, but my plan is to continue it after I finish [insert month we're on]'s book. For March I read A Sand County Almanac. My theme for my ow..."

It was nice! It's essentially a literary version of a nature journaling sketchbook. It's not as surface level as I thought it would be, either - I'd liken it to Walden.

I'm also realizing (now that I reach the end of Enchiridion), that this whole time that I thought I'd been reading the Enchiridion I've instead been reading 'selections from the discourses of Epictetus'. The Enchiridion itself wasn't until the last 15% of the book, ahah. But I enjoyed those immensely, so I'm looking forward to it, anyway.


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