Book Review - The Beer Thrillers https://thebeerthrillers.com Central PA beer enthusiasts and beer bloggers. Homebrewers, brewery workers, and all around beer lovers. Thu, 16 Jul 2026 01:41:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0.1 https://i0.wp.com/thebeerthrillers.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/cropped-The-Beer-Thrillers-December-2022-Logo.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Book Review - The Beer Thrillers https://thebeerthrillers.com 32 32 187558884 Book Review: A Stinky History of Toilets by Olivia Meikle — A Surprisingly Flush Success https://thebeerthrillers.com/2026/06/18/book-review-a-stinky-history-of-toilets-by-olivia-meikle-a-surprisingly-flush-success/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=book-review-a-stinky-history-of-toilets-by-olivia-meikle-a-surprisingly-flush-success Fri, 19 Jun 2026 01:33:31 +0000 https://thebeerthrillers.com/?p=16934 Book Review: A Stinky History of Toilets by Olivia Meikle — A Surprisingly Flush Success

Let’s get one thing out of the way first: yes, this is a book about toilets.

Not metaphorically. Not symbolically. Literally toilets. Chamber pots, cesspits, Roman latrines, medieval privies, Victorian plumbing, modern flush toilets, and just about every unpleasant-yet-fascinating stop along humanity’s journey toward indoor sanitation.

And somehow…

It’s an absolute blast.

A Stinky History of Toilets: Flush with Fun Facts and Disgusting Discoveries by Olivia Meikle

Back of the Book Blurb

The back of the book blurb comes from GoodReads:

You sit on it every day, but how much do you really know about your toilet? Discover the history of pooping and peeing in this frankly disgusting nonfiction book.

Authors Katie Nelson and Olivia Meikle have scoured the toilet bowls and sewers of the world to find out how humans have done their business throughout history. It’s time to get to the bottom of toilets! Prepare to be revolted by:

• A fossilized Viking turd discovered by archaeologists
• The Mongol catapult used to fling smelly poop at their enemies
• The reason ancient Romans used pee to wash their clothes

Filled with poop facts and vomit-inducing stats, you will also learn how diseases like cholera spread through bad sanitation, why some of the earliest toilets had a tendency to explode, and how medieval kings and queens had special helpers to wipe their bums.

Featuring hilarious illustrations by Ella Kasperowicz, it’s a history book like no other!

A Stinky History of Toilets by Olivia Meikle (GoodReads)

Book Review

A Stinky History of Toilets: Flush with Fun Facts and Disgusting Discoveries by Olivia Meikle takes a topic that most people spend their lives trying not to think about and transforms it into one of the most entertaining history books you’ll likely read this year. Marketed toward younger readers as part of the Wacky Histories series, don’t let the intended age range fool you. Like the best educational books, it understands that curiosity doesn’t come with an expiration date. Adults who enjoy quirky history, trivia, or simply learning about the strange corners of civilization will find plenty to appreciate here.

History Is Messy

One of the book’s greatest strengths is recognizing that history isn’t just kings, wars, and political revolutions.

History also smells.

Civilizations rise and fall, but every one of them had to solve the same universal problem: where does the poop go?

It’s a question that sounds juvenile until you realize it shaped cities, influenced architecture, spread (or prevented) disease, and literally determined how millions of people lived. Once you start viewing sanitation as an engineering challenge instead of an embarrassing topic, you begin to understand just how revolutionary plumbing really is.

The Romans often receive praise for their aqueducts and public baths, but Meikle reminds readers that communal toilets were equally impressive—and, admittedly, a little horrifying by today’s standards. Medieval Europe? Let’s just say sanitation wasn’t exactly experiencing a golden age. Victorian innovations begin steering society toward modern plumbing, while today’s toilets represent centuries of trial, error, innovation, and a remarkable willingness to improve upon some genuinely awful ideas.

It’s surprisingly educational without ever feeling like homework.

Equal Parts “Ew” and “Wow”

Children’s nonfiction often falls into one of two traps. It either becomes overly clinical and dry, or it leans so heavily into gross-out humor that education becomes secondary.

A Stinky History of Toilets manages to avoid both.

Yes, there are plenty of disgusting facts. That’s half the appeal. You’re almost guaranteed to find yourself saying, “People actually did that?”

But every revolting anecdote serves a purpose.

Rather than presenting gross history as shock value alone, Meikle uses these stories to explain how societies adapted to changing populations, disease outbreaks, technological advances, and urban development. Suddenly you’re not just reading about ancient bathrooms—you’re learning why sewer systems matter, why clean drinking water transformed public health, and why sanitation ranks among humanity’s greatest achievements.

It’s educational disguised as entertainment, and frankly, that’s one of the highest compliments you can give any nonfiction book.

Olivia Meikle Knows Her Audience

Writing for younger readers is deceptively difficult.

The language needs to be accessible without talking down to the audience. The pacing has to remain lively while conveying accurate information. Humor has to land without overwhelming the educational content.

Meikle strikes that balance remarkably well.

The chapters are concise, packed with interesting facts, and constantly moving. Just when you think you’ve learned everything there could possibly be about toilets, the book pivots toward another era, another invention, or another bizarre historical practice you’ve probably never encountered.

There’s an infectious enthusiasm throughout the writing. It never feels like someone reluctantly explaining history because they have to. Instead, it feels like someone excitedly saying, “Wait until you hear how weird this gets.”

That enthusiasm becomes contagious.

The Unsung Hero: Curiosity

Perhaps the book’s greatest accomplishment is encouraging readers to ask bigger questions.

Why were certain inventions adopted while others disappeared?

How did population growth force cities to rethink waste management?

What role did sanitation play in preventing epidemics?

Why do modern bathrooms look the way they do?

Books like this demonstrate that almost any topic becomes fascinating when approached with enough curiosity. It’s a reminder that history exists in every corner of daily life—even the rooms we spend the least amount of time thinking about.

In that sense, A Stinky History of Toilets isn’t really about toilets at all.

It’s about civilization.

It’s about engineering.

It’s about public health.

It’s about innovation.

It just happens to feature an awful lot of poop.

The Illustrations Keep Things Moving

A significant portion of the book’s charm comes from its presentation.

The illustrations, diagrams, sidebars, and humorous visual elements keep the pages lively without becoming distracting. Younger readers will likely appreciate how frequently the layout changes, while adults will enjoy the playful tone that accompanies the historical information.

The visual design complements the writing perfectly. Instead of interrupting the educational content, it reinforces it, making facts easier to remember and helping maintain a brisk pace.

Educational books sometimes forget that presentation matters.

This one doesn’t.

Not Every Joke Lands…

If there’s a minor criticism to make, it’s that some of the humor occasionally feels aimed squarely at its middle-grade audience. A handful of jokes are predictable, and adults may see certain punchlines coming long before they arrive.

But honestly?

That’s hardly a flaw.

The target audience isn’t literary critics searching for sophisticated satire. It’s readers discovering that learning can actually be fun. If a few extra toilet jokes encourage someone to finish an educational history book voluntarily, that’s probably a worthwhile trade.

Besides, a book with “stinky” in the title isn’t pretending to be highbrow literature.

It knows exactly what it wants to be.

Why This Book Works

There’s an old saying that civilization can often be judged by its sanitation.

Whether or not that’s entirely true, A Stinky History of Toilets makes a compelling case that toilets deserve far more historical attention than they usually receive.

It’s funny without being obnoxious.

Educational without becoming preachy.

Detailed without overwhelming younger readers.

Most importantly, it treats curiosity with respect.

Some books teach readers what happened.

The best books teach readers how to become interested in why things happened.

Olivia Meikle accomplishes both.

By the final chapter, you’ll almost certainly possess an alarming number of bathroom-related historical facts. You’ll probably annoy friends by casually mentioning Roman communal sponges or medieval sanitation practices over dinner. You may never look at your own bathroom quite the same way again.

And honestly?

That’s part of the fun.

Final Thoughts

A Stinky History of Toilets succeeds because it embraces an idea many educators have long understood: no subject is boring if it’s presented with enough passion and perspective.

This isn’t simply a novelty book filled with gross facts.

It’s an engaging introduction to public health, engineering, urban planning, and the evolution of civilization, all wrapped inside a package that’s accessible, funny, and genuinely memorable.

Whether you’re buying it for a curious young reader, a history buff with an appreciation for the unusual, or someone who insists there are no new topics left to explore, this book proves there’s always another fascinating story hiding in plain sight—or, in this case, hiding behind the bathroom door.

Just maybe don’t read it while you’re eating lunch.

My GoodReads Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
Global GoodReads Rating: 4.06 (as of 6.18.26)

Recommended For: History enthusiasts, curious middle-grade readers, teachers, parents looking for educational nonfiction, trivia lovers, and anyone who’s ever wondered how humanity managed before the invention of modern plumbing. Be warned: you’ll leave with more knowledge about toilets than you ever expected to have—and you’ll probably be glad you do.

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Book Review: Shock Induction (Chuck Palahniuk) https://thebeerthrillers.com/2026/03/14/book-review-shock-induction-chuck-palahniuk/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=book-review-shock-induction-chuck-palahniuk Sun, 15 Mar 2026 02:54:54 +0000 https://thebeerthrillers.com/?p=16816 Book Review: Shock Induction (Chuck Palahniuk)

Shock Induction (2024) is the latest novel from Chuck Palahniuk (note the standard spelling; the query used a common variant). Published by Simon & Schuster in October 2024, it’s a slim, roughly 240-page dark satirical parable that blends dystopian speculation, postmodern experimentation, and hypnotic literary tricks.

I have previously reviewed Palahniuk’s “Not Forever, But For Now”.


Another Chuck Palahniuk novel to review… and another disappointment and let down. Am I getting older and growing out of Chuck? Or is Chuck growing out of Chuck himself? Is he just a shell of his former self or is it that there are too many other authors in a similar vein? Perhaps my joy of his writing style just isn’t there anymore. I’m not sure, but lets dive into a bit with this review.

Shock Induction by Chuck Palahniuk

Back of Book Cover Blurb

The description and back of the cover blurb on Shock Induction, by Chuck Palahniuk, as per GoodReads:

From the bestselling author of Fight Club comes a dark, satirical parable about a string of mysterious high school disappearances, the seedy underbellies of billionaires, and the tough choices we make in the face of an uncertain future. In Shock Induction, the best and brightest students at a seemingly reputable high school are disappearing. Every day it seems another overachiever is lost to an apparent suicide. But something far more sinister is lurking beneath the surface. These kids have been under surveillance since birth, monitored and measured by an online service called “Greener Pastures.” It’s here, in Greener Pastures, that billionaires observe and recruit the next generation of talent. The highest test scores, the best grades, and the most niche extracurriculars just might land these teenagers an enticing offer at auction. A couple billion dollars in exchange for the remainder of your life and intellectual labor sounds like a pretty fair deal—doesn’t it? In a high school only Chuck Palahniuk could imagine, students must choose between the risk of following their dreams or the security of money and a lifetime of servitude to the world’s wealthiest and most elite—but how much of a choice do they truly have?

Shock Induction (GoodReads)

Book Review

Description

The story is set in 2037 and centers on Samantha Deel, a precocious, talented high-schooler (strong student and aspiring singer) trapped in a grotesque, abusive home life with pill-popping, gasoline-huffing parents and a lecherous uncle. At her school, the best and brightest students are vanishing one by one—officially chalked up to suicides, but something far more sinister is at play. These overachievers have been tracked since birth through “Greener Pastures,” a shadowy online surveillance and auction platform where billionaires and elites bid on young talent. The winning bid buys a teenager’s entire future: their intellectual labor, creativity, and life in exchange for vast wealth and “security.” It’s framed as an irresistible deal in a world where following your dreams looks riskier than selling your soul to the highest bidder.

Palahniuk layers in government experiments with “ERE poisoning” (chemicals supposedly laced into books to manipulate readers’ emotions and focus) and weaves in real hypnotic techniques. The title itself refers to “shock induction”—a sudden jolt (a word, image, or repetition) used in hypnosis to break someone out of their normal thought stream and make them suggestible. The narrative itself tries to do this to you, the reader: short, pointillistic chapters that mimic doom-scrolling on a phone, sudden fourth-wall breaks (“Psych!”), pages of repetitive mantras (like the word “avocado”), and interpolated passages or quotes from classics (The Great Gatsby, Moby Dick, Alice in Wonderland, Shakespeare, David Copperfield). The prose swings between minimalist and maximalist, surreal and deadpan, laced with Palahniuk’s signature grotesque humor, drugs, sexual weirdness, and off-color jokes.

At its core it’s a scathing update on themes he’s explored since Fight Club: the illusion of choice under late-stage capitalism, the commodification of human potential, the failures of the American education system, surveillance as the new normal, and language itself as the ultimate brainwashing tool. It’s pitched (by reviewers) as The Truman Show meets The Hunger Games meets Euphoria with an Alice in Wonderland twist—a “coming-of-rage” story about a rebellious misfit trying to seize control of her own narrative.

Critique

Shock Induction is Palahniuk doing what he does best—weaponizing the novel form itself—but pushed further into experimental territory than most of his post-Fight Club work. The meta-hypnosis gimmick is genuinely clever and ambitious: the book isn’t just about mind control and commodified youth; it tries to perform it on the reader through repetition, disorientation, and literary Easter eggs. When it works, the effect is unsettling and exhilarating; clarity dissolves, you feel the trance setting in, and the satire lands with real sting. Samantha is one of his stronger recent protagonists—empathetic, furious, and believable in her teen angst without tipping into caricature—and the surreal set pieces and dark humor keep the pages turning even when the structure gets labyrinthine.

Many longtime fans (including some reviewers) hail it as his strongest book in years—a return to the subversive, mind-bending energy of Rant, Haunted, Invisible Monsters, or Survivor after some recent misfires. It’s a love letter to reading itself, treating literature as a drug that can rewire you, while simultaneously daring casual readers to keep up. The collage style (short bursts juxtaposed like phone-scrolling potato chips) and pointillistic convergence of tiny disparate pieces can deliver more emotional punch in a few pages than many linear novels manage in hundreds.

That said, the very things that make it bold also make it divisive. Goodreads sits at a lukewarm ~3.2/5, and plenty of readers find the non-linear, confusion-inducing structure maddening or opaque rather than hypnotic. Supporting characters often feel thin, some sections read like scattered messes, and the second-person social-commentary passages occasionally tip from playful into preachy. It alienates fans who just want another tight, accessible gut-punch like Choke or Fight Club; this one demands endurance and rewards re-reading (you’ll almost certainly miss references the first time). The “hypnosis on the reader” trick can backfire into frustration instead of fascination.

Ultimately, Shock Induction is Palahniuk evolving on purpose—pushing away from the persona that made him famous thirty years ago and challenging readers to grow with him. It’s not a perfect or universally enjoyable novel, but it’s a fearless, fucked-up, thought-provoking one that lingers like a literary contact high (or poisoning). If you’re in the mood for a chaotic, satirical fever dream that treats the act of reading as both salvation and trap, it delivers. If you want straightforward storytelling, you’ll probably feel hypnotized… into putting it down early. Worth trying if you’ve ever loved Palahniuk at his weirdest.

In the lineage of writers who have stared into the abyss of human commodification—Camus’s stranger alienated from meaning, Orwell’s Winston broken by surveillance, Beckett’s figures reduced to waiting in ashbins, Ligotti’s puppets aware of their strings—Chuck Palahniuk has long positioned himself as the American heir apparent. His early work weaponized the grotesque to expose the hollow core of consumerist masculinity and corporate myth-making. Yet with Shock Induction (2024), that once-sharp blade has dulled into something closer to performative frenzy, a book that gestures toward profundity while mostly succeeding in exhausting the reader.

The premise arrives with the familiar Palahniuk bite: in a near-future 2037, elite high-school students are vanishing, not into suicide as the official story claims, but into literal auctions run by the shadowy “Greener Pastures” platform. Billionaires bid on youthful potential, purchasing entire futures in exchange for wealth and security. Samantha Deel, our narrator and aspiring singer, navigates this dystopia amid abusive parents, hallucinogenic experiments, and the book’s central gimmick: “shock induction” itself, a hypnotic technique mirrored in the prose through repetition, fourth-wall ruptures, interpolated passages from Gatsby, Moby-Dick, Shakespeare, and Alice in Wonderland, and pages that dissolve into mantras (“avocado” repeated ad nauseam) meant to disorient and entrance.

Palahniuk’s writing style has, over the past two decades, settled into a predictable pattern of these same formal tricks. What once felt revolutionary— the fractured timelines of Rant, the typographic assaults of Invisible Monsters, the oral-history collage of Snuff—now reads like a signature stamp applied to every new manuscript. Repetition is not a scalpel but a blunt instrument; gaps and white space are not voids of existential dread (as in Beckett or Ligotti) but literal breathing room inserted between micro-chapters. The fourth-wall asides, the sudden “Psych!” interruptions, the pages of single-word loops: these are no longer innovations but reflexes, the literary equivalent of muscle memory that has atrophied into tic.

One cannot escape the suspicion that an editor’s quiet directive hovers over every draft: hit the page quota. Where Steinbeck or Orwell achieved devastating economy by saying only what must be said, Palahniuk appears to pad deliberately—repeating phrases until they lose all charge, stretching single ideas across blank expanses, tossing in extraneous literary quotations not for resonance but for bulk. The result is a book that feels contractually obligated to be a novel rather than artistically compelled to exist. The hypnosis gimmick, meant to indict the reader’s own suggestibility under late capitalism, instead indicts the author’s reliance on the same old bag of effects to reach an arbitrary word count. What could have been a lean, Camus-like parable of commodified youth balloons into a repetitive fever dream that mistakes quantity for hypnotic depth.

The intent behind all this is clear, even admirable on paper. Palahniuk seeks to make the novel a literal instrument of mind control, turning reading into a drugged experience that critiques how language, surveillance, and late capitalism erode autonomy. One can almost hear the echo of Freud’s talking cure gone wrong, or Vonnegut’s meta-fictional winks in Slaughterhouse-Five, but stripped of restraint and replaced with frantic collage. Where Lewis (C.S.) might have layered allegory with moral gravity, Palahniuk opts for bombardment: short, pointillist chapters mimicking doom-scrolling, sudden “Psych!” interjections, grotesque sexual asides, and chemical-laced absurdities.

The result is less hypnotic than irritating. The experimental form—once innovative—here feels like exhaustion rather than revelation. The narrative fractures so relentlessly that coherence becomes optional; supporting characters blur into caricatures, and the satire lands with the subtlety of a sledgehammer. The commodification of youth is a potent theme, ripe for existential dread in the tradition of Orwell or Camus, yet it is buried under so much noise—and so much visible filler—that the critique flattens into gesture. One finishes the book not enlightened or unsettled, but merely relieved the assault has ended.

For readers who prize the stoic endurance of Beckett’s minimalism or the quiet terror of Ligotti’s cosmic pessimism, Shock Induction offers only sporadic glimpses of what might have been: a few razor-sharp lines on the illusion of choice, a haunting image of potential sold at auction. But these moments are drowned in excess. Palahniuk, who once channeled Lynchian surrealism with precision, now seems content to mimic its chaos without the underlying discipline.

This is not the abyss staring back; it is the abyss shouting over itself until the reader walks away. Two stars: for ambition that occasionally flickers, and for reminding us how far the once-vital provocateur has wandered from the clarity that made his best work endure.

See Also: Book Review: Not Forever But For Now (Chuck Palahniuk)

Chuck’s Writing Fall Off

Chuck Palahniuk arrived in the 1990s like a literary Molotov cocktail, his early novels—Fight Club, Choke, Lullaby—delivering a visceral, black-comic assault on consumerist masculinity and the hollow rituals of late capitalism. In those books the grotesque served the satire: every spilled bodily fluid or deadpan monologue felt necessary, the way Vonnegut’s absurdism or Orwell’s surveillance state felt necessary. The prose was economical, the formal tricks earned, and the reader emerged shaken but strangely clarified, as if the author had performed a controlled demolition on the American Dream. For a time Palahniuk stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the writers this ledger reveres: a pulp Camus, a Lynch of the paperback rack, a stoic who refused to look away from the abyss and instead spat into it.

By the mid-2000s the trajectory had already begun its slow, unmistakable descent. Snuff, Pygmy, and Tell-All retained the surface shocks but lost the underlying necessity; the transgressive elements started to feel like contractual obligations rather than organic eruptions. What had once been radical fragmentation—Invisible Monsters’ typographic violence, Rant’s oral-history collage—hardened into a reusable template. Repetition, once a hypnotic scalpel, became a blunt hammer. The fourth-wall asides, the sudden “Psych!” interjections, the pages of single-word loops or white space masquerading as existential pause: these no longer destabilized the reader so much as they announced, with increasing weariness, that Chuck Palahniuk was doing the Chuck Palahniuk thing again. Where Beckett pared language to the bone until silence itself screamed, Palahniuk began padding the silence with filler, as if an editor’s page-count quota had become the true antagonist.

The later novels—Adjustment Day, The Invention of Sound, and especially Shock Induction—confirm the pattern has calcified into self-parody. Each new book arrives with the same checklist: a dystopian premise commodifying human potential, a precocious narrator steeped in pop-culture detritus, interpolated literary quotations that feel less like dialogue with the canon and more like literary name-dropping to pad the word count. The hypnosis gimmick in Shock Induction is emblematic: what could have been a lean, Camus-like parable about the auctioning of youth instead bloats into repetitive mantras and micro-chapters that mimic doom-scrolling so faithfully they induce the very boredom they purport to critique. One senses the author no longer trusts the story to carry its own weight; instead he stretches, repeats, and inserts gaps the way a contractor adds unnecessary drywall to meet square-footage requirements.

This is not the gentle maturation of a Steinbeck or the deliberate minimalism of a Ligotti; it is artistic entropy. The once-fearless provocateur now seems trapped inside the very brand he helped create, recycling the same shocks until they lose their voltage. The result is work that gestures toward the abyss but never quite stares into it—content instead to shout the same slogans louder, longer, and with more white space. For readers who still demand the stoic clarity and moral gravity that once defined Palahniuk at his best, the decline is not merely disappointing; it is a quiet betrayal of the very transgressive promise that made his early books endure.

Overall Rating

I gave Chuck Palahniuk’s Shock Induction two stars in my review because, while the premise holds genuine promise, the execution ultimately collapses under the weight of its own exhausted tricks. The novel imagines a near-future where talented teenagers are auctioned off to billionaires through a platform called “Greener Pastures,” framed through the lens of hypnotic “shock induction” techniques that the prose itself tries to replicate via repetition, fourth-wall breaks, literary collages from Gatsby, Moby-Dick, and Shakespeare, and pages filled with looping mantras. I acknowledged the ambition—echoing themes from Camus, Orwell, and early Palahniuk—but found the fragmented, pointillist style and constant interruptions less hypnotic than irritating. What once felt radical in his work now reads like a tired formula: short chapters mimicking doom-scrolling, gratuitous white space, and repeated phrases that seem designed more to pad the page count than to deepen the satire on commodified youth and surveillance capitalism. The result is a book that gestures toward existential dread but delivers mostly noise and caricature, leaving the reader relieved when it ends rather than unsettled or enlightened.

Looking back at my review, I see it as a lament for Palahniuk’s artistic decline. His early novels delivered necessary grotesquerie with precision and purpose; now the same tools—repetition, meta asides, grotesque asides—feel recycled and obligatory, lacking the stoic economy of Beckett, the cosmic quiet of Ligotti, or the moral clarity of Orwell and Steinbeck. I rated it two stars to reflect that disappointment: flashes of potential exist, but they drown in excess and self-parody. In the future, I hope Palahniuk steps away from the branded formula that has calcified around him. A leaner, more disciplined novel—one that trusts the story instead of padding it—could rediscover the raw power that once made his voice essential, letting the abyss stare back with fresh clarity rather than shouting the same slogans louder and longer.

My GoodReads Rating: ** out of *****
My LibraryThing Rating: ** out of *****
Overall GoodReads Rating: 3.16 (as of 3.14.26)

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Thank you for visiting our blog. Please make sure to follow, bookmark, subscribe, and make sure to comment and leave feedback and like the blog posts you read. It will help us to better tailor the blog to you, the readers, likes and make this a better blog for everyone.

We are working on a massive project here at The Beer Thrillers. We are creating a map of all of the breweries across the United States. State by state we are adding maps of all of the different states with every brewery in each state. (We will eventually get to the US Territories, as well as the Canadian Provinces, and possibly more countries; as well as doing some fun maps like a map of all the breweries we’ve been to, and other fun maps.) You can find the brewery maps here:

We are also working on a project of creating printable and downloadable PDFs and resources to be able to check and keep track of all of the breweries you’ve been to. So stay tuned for that project once we are finished with the Brewery Maps of the US States.

You can check out our different directories here: Beer ReviewsHike ReviewsBook ReviewsBrewery News, Brewery OpeningsBrewer Interviews, and Travelogues.

Please be sure to follow us on our social media accounts – FacebookFacebook GroupTwitterInstagramYouTube, and Influence. As well as our brand new Tumblr page. Please be sure to also follow, like, subscribe to the blog here itself to keep updated. We are also now on BlueSky as well, so make sure to check us out there also. We love to hear from you guys, so be sure to leave a comment and let us know what you think!

You can now find us on our Discord Server here: The Beer Thrillers (Discord Server).

We also now have a SLACK channel – which acts as a hybrid chat room, message board, Reddit style; workspace and posting area for us. You can hang out with us there and chat about all kinds of things – not just beer, but “off topic” things like movies, TV, books, podcasts, hiking, sports, and more! Join us at: The Beer Thrillers on SLACK.

We’ve also joined LinkTree to keep track of all of our social media pages, as well as hot new articles we’ve written. The Beer Thrillers on LinkTree can be found here: The Beer Thrillers LinkTree.

We have partnered with an affiliateship with Beer Drop.com. You can check out that partnership and receive great discounts, coupons, and more here: Beer Drop. Going here and logging in and ordering will help you receive your discounts and coupons as well as help support our page. Thank you for helping to support The Beer Thrillers and to help us maintain the site and blog and to keep it running.

The Beer Thrillers are a blog that prides itself on writing beer reviews, brewery reviews, travelogues, news (especially local to the Central PA brewery scene), as well as covering other topics of our interests – such as hiking, literature and books, board games, and video games which we sometimes stream with our friends over at Knights of Nostalgia. We are currently listed as #5 on FeedSpot’s “Top 100 Beer Blogs” and #9 on FeedSpot’s “Top 40 Pennsylvania Blogs”. (As of May 2025.) Thank you for reading our site today, please subscribe, follow, and bookmark. Please reach out to us if you are interested in working together. If you would like to donate to the blog you can here: Donate to The Beer Thrillers. Thank you!

You can also check out our partnership and affiliation with Pretzels.com, where ordering pretzels and using our affiliate code – AFFILIATE CODE IS THEBEERTHRILLERS20 – will help you get wonderful pretzels and help us maintain and keep this blog running. Thank you!

If you would like to reach out to us for product reviews, beer reviews, press release writing, and other media – please contact us at thebeerthrillers@gmail.com. Thank you.

(Thank you for reading. The opinions, thoughts, and expressions of each article posted on The Beer Thrillers represents the author of the content and only themselves. It does not express the opinions, beliefs, or ideas held by The Beer Thrillers or any company in which the author themselves work for. Each piece of written content is written by the creator(s) listed in the authorial section on each article unless otherwise noted. Their opinions, comments, and words on screen do not represent any company in which they work for and / or are affiliated with or any non – profits that they contribute to. Thank you.)

]]> 16816 Book Review: The Legend of Zelda and Theology (edited by Jonathan L. Walls) https://thebeerthrillers.com/2026/03/10/book-review-the-legend-of-zelda-and-theology-edited-by-jonathan-l-walls/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=book-review-the-legend-of-zelda-and-theology-edited-by-jonathan-l-walls Tue, 10 Mar 2026 17:27:33 +0000 https://thebeerthrillers.com/?p=16849 Book Review: The Legend of Zelda and Theology (edited by Jonathan L. Walls)

There’s something almost inevitable about a book like Zelda and Theology. When a franchise like The Legend of Zelda has existed for nearly four decades—spanning generations, reinventing itself repeatedly, and embedding itself deeply into the emotional and imaginative lives of players—it stops being just a game and starts becoming something larger. It becomes myth. And once something becomes myth, interpretation inevitably follows.

In that sense, Zelda and Theology feels less like a novelty and more like a natural evolution of the franchise’s cultural footprint. Much like The Psychology of Zelda, this book is part of a growing body of work that treats games not as entertainment artifacts, but as texts worthy of serious analysis. Where Psychology examines how Zelda shapes the inner lives of players, Theology asks a different question: what kind of world does Zelda imagine, and what does that world say about morality, divinity, and meaning?

The result is a book that is often fascinating, occasionally insightful, sometimes overreaching—and ultimately deserving of a 3 out of 5 stars. It’s a worthwhile read, especially for fans who enjoy thinking deeply about the stories they love, but it never quite achieves the cohesion or depth needed to elevate it beyond a solid, middle-tier critical work.

See also: Book Review: The Psychology of Zelda (edited by Anthony M. Bean)

The Legend of Zelda and Theology (edited by Jonathan L. Walls)

Back of the Blurb Cover

The following is the GoodReads back of the blurb cover:

The level of interactive adventure, exploration, immersion and storytelling The Legend of Zelda brought to television screens across the world was unheard of and it planted an integral seed in the garden that one day would grow into the diverse gaming landscape we know today. Far from stopping there, The Legend of Zelda series has continued to release top-shelf games adored by critics and fans alike. Zelda, like all of our greatest fairy tales, legends and myths, presents that elusive and exclusive kind of enlightenment that only the fantastic can provide. In this collection, various contributors explore the connections between this cultural zeitgeist and theology.

-Good Reads: The Legend of Zelda and Theology

Book Review

A World Worth Interpreting

Before diving into the essays themselves, it’s worth acknowledging why Zelda is such fertile ground for theological analysis in the first place.

From its earliest days, the series has leaned heavily on mythic structure. The silent hero, the cyclical battle between good and evil, the sacred relic (the Triforce), and the recurring princess all evoke archetypes that stretch back centuries. Games like The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time and The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword explicitly frame their narratives in terms of origin myths, divine intervention, and eternal recurrence.

So the premise of Zelda and Theology—that Hyrule can be read as a kind of theological landscape—is not only valid, it’s compelling.

And to the book’s credit, many of its contributors take that premise seriously.


The Structure: A Collection of Voices

Like many books in this genre, Zelda and Theology is an edited volume, featuring essays from a variety of scholars, theologians, and writers. This format is both its greatest strength and its most persistent weakness.

On the positive side, the diversity of voices allows the book to explore a wide range of ideas:

  • The nature of divinity in Hyrule
  • The symbolic meaning of the Triforce
  • The role of Link as a moral agent
  • The tension between fate and free will
  • The presence of suffering, sacrifice, and redemption

Each essay brings its own lens, and at its best, the book feels like a conversation—multiple perspectives circling around the same mythos, each illuminating a different facet.

But that same diversity leads to a lack of cohesion. There’s no single, unifying thesis tying the essays together, and the quality varies noticeably from chapter to chapter. Some feel rigorous and thoughtfully argued; others feel more like extended thought experiments.


The Triforce as Theology: Strength and Symbolism

One of the most consistent—and effective—threads throughout the book is its treatment of the Triforce.

Rather than viewing it as a simple game mechanic, many essays interpret it as a theological symbol, representing a kind of triadic balance between power, wisdom, and courage. This opens the door to comparisons with real-world religious concepts—particularly the idea that virtue exists not in isolation, but in balance.

Some contributors draw parallels to the Christian Trinity, while others see echoes of Eastern philosophical traditions. Not all of these comparisons are equally convincing, but the core idea—that the Triforce represents a moral and metaphysical framework—is one of the book’s strongest insights.

It’s also one of the areas where Zelda and Theology arguably surpasses The Psychology of Zelda. While the latter often revisits familiar psychological frameworks, Theology feels more willing to stretch into symbolic and philosophical territory.

That said, this is also where the book begins to flirt with overreach.

At times, the interpretations become so broad that they risk losing specificity. When everything can be mapped onto everything else—when the Triforce is simultaneously a Christian symbol, a Buddhist concept, and a universal archetype—it starts to feel less like analysis and more like projection.


Link as Savior, Hero, or Something Else?

Another recurring theme is the figure of Link himself.

In The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, Ocarina of Time, and other entries, Link is often portrayed as a chosen hero—someone called to action by forces beyond his control. This naturally lends itself to theological interpretation.

Some essays frame Link as a Christ-like figure, emphasizing themes of sacrifice, resurrection, and salvation. Others resist that reading, instead positioning him as a more ambiguous moral agent—someone who acts not out of divine mandate, but out of necessity or personal conviction.

This tension is one of the more interesting aspects of the book.

When it works, it highlights the flexibility of Zelda’s storytelling. Link can be many things at once: a blank slate for the player, a mythic hero, a moral actor navigating a broken world.

But when it doesn’t work, the “Christ figure” comparisons can feel forced. Not every hero’s journey needs to be mapped onto Christian theology, and some essays lean so heavily on that framework that they flatten the uniqueness of Zelda’s world.


Cyclical Time and Eternal Return

If there’s one idea that truly defines the Zelda series, it’s recurrence.

The same conflict—Link, Zelda, Ganon—plays out again and again across different timelines and incarnations. This has long fascinated fans, and Zelda and Theology leans into it as a form of eternal return.

Several essays explore this through the lens of religious philosophy, drawing connections to:

  • Reincarnation in Eastern traditions
  • The cyclical nature of time in myth
  • The idea of an unending struggle between good and evil

This is one of the book’s strongest sections.

Unlike some of the more speculative interpretations, the cyclical structure of Zelda is an undeniable feature of the series, and examining it through theological frameworks feels both natural and illuminating.

It also ties nicely into the broader question of meaning. If the cycle never ends—if evil is never truly defeated—what does that say about the nature of heroism? Is Link’s journey meaningful because he succeeds, or because he continues to try?

These are the kinds of questions the book raises at its best.


Suffering, Loss, and the Cost of Heroism

Another highlight is the book’s attention to suffering and sacrifice.

Games like The Legend of Zelda: Majora’s Mask and Breath of the Wild are steeped in loss—failed timelines, ruined kingdoms, lingering grief. Several essays explore how these elements reflect theological ideas about suffering, redemption, and the human condition.

These chapters tend to be among the most grounded and compelling.

Rather than stretching for abstract parallels, they focus on emotional and narrative realities that players actually experience. The result is a more tangible kind of analysis—one that connects the theology not just to the text, but to the player’s engagement with it.


Where the Book Struggles

For all its strengths, Zelda and Theology is not without its issues.

1. Inconsistency in Quality

As with many edited volumes, the quality of the essays varies widely. Some chapters feel deeply researched and thoughtfully constructed; others feel more like speculative musings.

This unevenness makes the reading experience a bit uneven as well. You might find yourself fully engaged in one essay, only to hit a wall in the next.


2. Occasional Overinterpretation

There’s a fine line between interpretation and projection, and the book crosses it more than once.

Not every element of Zelda is meant to carry deep theological meaning. Sometimes a dungeon is just a dungeon. When essays try to assign profound symbolic weight to every detail, it can feel forced.


3. Western-Centric Lens

Despite occasional nods to Eastern philosophy, many essays rely heavily on Western theological frameworks, particularly Christianity.

Given that Zelda is a Japanese creation, this can feel like a missed opportunity. There’s room for deeper engagement with Shinto, Buddhism, and other traditions that may have influenced the series more directly.

As a Companion to The Psychology of Zelda

Reading Zelda and Theology alongside The Psychology of Zelda is an interesting experience.

Where Psychology focuses on the player’s internal world, Theology focuses on the game’s external meaning. One is introspective; the other is interpretive.

In some ways, Theology feels more ambitious. It asks bigger questions and is more willing to engage with abstract ideas.

But Psychology is often more grounded and accessible. Its arguments tend to feel more concrete, even when they’re repetitive.

Together, the two books form a kind of dual lens:

  • Psychology asks: What does Zelda do to us?
  • Theology asks: What does Zelda mean?

And the answer, as both books suggest, is that it depends on how far you’re willing to go.


Final Verdict — 3 out of 5 Stars

Zelda and Theology is a good but not great book.

It’s thoughtful, occasionally insightful, and clearly written by people who care deeply about both theology and the Zelda series. At its best, it offers genuinely compelling ways to think about Hyrule as a moral and metaphysical space.

But it’s also uneven, sometimes overreaching, and lacking the cohesion needed to fully land its ideas.

For fans of The Legend of Zelda—especially those interested in philosophy or religion—it’s absolutely worth reading. Just go in with the understanding that not every essay will resonate, and not every interpretation will convince.

My GoodReads Rating: *** out of *****
Global Average GoodReads Rating: 3.60 as of (3.10.26)
My LibraryThing Rating: *** out of *****

Other Book Reviews

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Zelda:

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Game of Thrones:

The Simpsons:

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Scrooged:

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A Christmas Story:

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If you like this article, please check out our other many articles, including news, beer reviews, travelogues, maps, and much much more. We greatly appreciate everyone visiting the site!

Cheers.

Thanks again for reading everyone. Take some time to check out the site, we greatly appreciate it. We have affiliates and sponsors with Pretzels.com and Beer Drop.com, which can save you money on their products if you are interested. Check out our articles on them. Make sure to check out our beer reviews, brewery reviews, Amy’s weekly column, book reviews, hike reviews, and so much more.

As always, thank you everyone for reading! Leave your likes, comments, suggestions, questions, etc, in the comments section. Or use the Feedback – Contact Us – page, and we’ll get right back to you! You can also reach out to us at our direct e-mail address: thebeerthrillers@gmail.com

Thank you for visiting our blog. Please make sure to follow, bookmark, subscribe, and make sure to comment and leave feedback and like the blog posts you read. It will help us to better tailor the blog to you, the readers, likes and make this a better blog for everyone.

We are working on a massive project here at The Beer Thrillers. We are creating a map of all of the breweries across the United States. State by state we are adding maps of all of the different states with every brewery in each state. (We will eventually get to the US Territories, as well as the Canadian Provinces, and possibly more countries; as well as doing some fun maps like a map of all the breweries we’ve been to, and other fun maps.) You can find the brewery maps here:

We are also working on a project of creating printable and downloadable PDFs and resources to be able to check and keep track of all of the breweries you’ve been to. So stay tuned for that project once we are finished with the Brewery Maps of the US States.

You can check out our different directories here: Beer ReviewsHike ReviewsBook ReviewsBrewery News, Brewery OpeningsBrewer Interviews, and Travelogues.

Please be sure to follow us on our social media accounts – FacebookFacebook GroupTwitterInstagramYouTube, and Influence. As well as our brand new Tumblr page. Please be sure to also follow, like, subscribe to the blog here itself to keep updated. We are also now on BlueSky as well, so make sure to check us out there also. We love to hear from you guys, so be sure to leave a comment and let us know what you think!

You can now find us on our Discord Server here: The Beer Thrillers (Discord Server).

We also now have a SLACK channel – which acts as a hybrid chat room, message board, Reddit style; workspace and posting area for us. You can hang out with us there and chat about all kinds of things – not just beer, but “off topic” things like movies, TV, books, podcasts, hiking, sports, and more! Join us at: The Beer Thrillers on SLACK.

We’ve also joined LinkTree to keep track of all of our social media pages, as well as hot new articles we’ve written. The Beer Thrillers on LinkTree can be found here: The Beer Thrillers LinkTree.

We have partnered with an affiliateship with Beer Drop.com. You can check out that partnership and receive great discounts, coupons, and more here: Beer Drop. Going here and logging in and ordering will help you receive your discounts and coupons as well as help support our page. Thank you for helping to support The Beer Thrillers and to help us maintain the site and blog and to keep it running.

The Beer Thrillers are a blog that prides itself on writing beer reviews, brewery reviews, travelogues, news (especially local to the Central PA brewery scene), as well as covering other topics of our interests – such as hiking, literature and books, board games, and video games which we sometimes stream with our friends over at Knights of Nostalgia. We are currently listed as #5 on FeedSpot’s “Top 100 Beer Blogs” and #9 on FeedSpot’s “Top 40 Pennsylvania Blogs”. (As of May 2025.) Thank you for reading our site today, please subscribe, follow, and bookmark. Please reach out to us if you are interested in working together. If you would like to donate to the blog you can here: Donate to The Beer Thrillers. Thank you!

You can also check out our partnership and affiliation with Pretzels.com, where ordering pretzels and using our affiliate code – AFFILIATE CODE IS THEBEERTHRILLERS20 – will help you get wonderful pretzels and help us maintain and keep this blog running. Thank you!

If you would like to reach out to us for product reviews, beer reviews, press release writing, and other media – please contact us at thebeerthrillers@gmail.com. Thank you.

(Thank you for reading. The opinions, thoughts, and expressions of each article posted on The Beer Thrillers represents the author of the content and only themselves. It does not express the opinions, beliefs, or ideas held by The Beer Thrillers or any company in which the author themselves work for. Each piece of written content is written by the creator(s) listed in the authorial section on each article unless otherwise noted. Their opinions, comments, and words on screen do not represent any company in which they work for and / or are affiliated with or any non – profits that they contribute to. Thank you.)

 

]]>
16849
Book Review: The Psychology of Zelda (edited by Anthony M. Bean) https://thebeerthrillers.com/2026/02/26/book-review-the-psychology-of-zelda-edited-by-anthony-m-bean/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=book-review-the-psychology-of-zelda-edited-by-anthony-m-bean Fri, 27 Feb 2026 03:45:30 +0000 https://thebeerthrillers.com/?p=16773 Book Review: The Psychology of Zelda (edited by Anthony M. Bean)

The Psychology of Zelda isn’t your typical gaming book: it’s a collection of academic essays by different psychologists and scholars examining The Legend of Zelda series through the lens of psychological theory—ranging from Jungian archetypes to grief models to music and identity. It’s a concept that will delight some fans and frustrate others.

On the positive side, the book brings a fresh way to think about a franchise many of us grew up with. Essays like those on Majora’s Mask and Link’s psychological journey can genuinely make you reflect on why these games resonate so deeply. On the less positive side, the content can feel repetitive, and for readers already familiar with basic psychology or Zelda lore, a lot of the material might seem introductory or obvious.

Overall: a solid 3.5 out of 5—a worthwhile read for devoted Zelda fans and casual psychology buffs, but it lacks the depth and cohesion that would make it essential reading – but read on for the review!

(Also — see our article on Zelda and Craft Beer)

The Psychology of Zelda: Linking Our World to the Legend of Zelda Series (edited by Anthony M. Bean)

The 40th Anniversary Year of Zelda

2026 is the 40th anniversary year of the original game – The Legend of Zelda (1986) released in Japan in 1986 and in America in 1987. I have many, many, many incredible fond memories of the Zelda series as a whole, and particularly the first game, A Link to the Past, and then the N64 games – Ocarina of Time and Majora’s Mask. I’ve played nearly every game of the series (minus the Oracle of Ages and Oracle of Seasons, which I intend to this year with the Switch Online, and the only other ones being Twilight Princess and Tears of the Kingdom [though I have played it a little], and the newest one based around Zelda).

2026 marks the 40th anniversary of the original The Legend of Zelda, which debuted in 1986 and laid the foundation for one of gaming’s most enduring and beloved franchises. That history casts an interesting shadow over The Psychology of Zelda: much of what the book discusses—the archetypal hero’s journey, the cycle of conflict and rebirth, and the symbolic elements like the Triforce—is rooted in storytelling patterns that have kept Zelda relevant for four decades. The games’ influence on players’ identities and emotional lives, as explored in the book, speaks to the series’ longevity and cultural impact.

The Psychology of Zelda: Linking Our World to the Legend of Zelda Serie

The following is the GoodReads “back of the book blurb”:

It’s dangerous to go alone! Take this (book).

For more than 30 years, The Legend of Zelda—which immerses players in a courageous struggle against the shadowy forces of evil in a world of high fantasy—has spanned more than 30 different installments, selling over 75 million copies. Today, it is one of the most beloved video game franchises around the globe.

Video game sales as a whole have continued to grow, now raking in twice as much money per year as the entire film industry, and countless psychologists have turned their attention to the effects gaming has on us: our confidence, our identity, and our personal growth. The Psychology of Zelda applies the latest psychological findings, plus insights from classic psychology theory, to Link, Zelda, Hyrule, and the players who choose to wield the Master Sword.

In The Psychology of Zelda, psychologists who love the games ask:

How do Link’s battles in Ocarina of Time against Dark Link, his monstrous doppelganger, mirror the difficulty of confronting our personal demons and the tendency to be our own worst enemies? What lessons about pursuing life’s greater meaning can we take away from Link’s quests through Hyrule and beyond the stereotypical video game scenario of rescuing a Princess (Zelda)? What do we experience as players when we hear that familiar royal lullaby on the ocarina, Saria’s spirited melody in the Lost Woods, or the iconic main theme on the title screen? How do the obstacles throughout Majora’s Mask represent the Five Stages of Grief? What can Link’s journey to overcome the loss of the fairy Navi teach us about understanding our own grief and depression? Why are we psychologically drawn to the game each and every time a new version becomes available even when they all have a similar storyline? Think you’ve completed the quest? The Psychology of Zelda gives you new,  thrilling dungeons to explore and even more puzzles to solve.

GoodReads “The Psychology of Zelda”

Book Review

Lets get into it, and we’ll break it down chapter by chapter.

Chapter Highlights (Themes & Takeaways)

Thanks to published chapter listings, we can unpack what each essay focuses on.

1. Embodying the Virtual Hero: A Link to the Self

This opening essay explores how players identify with Link and project themselves into his role, using psychological concepts of projection and selfhood. It argues that embodying Link can reflect aspects of our own identity and growth.

2. It’s Dangerous to Go Alone: The Hero’s Journey

A classic motif in the Zelda games, this chapter ties Link’s quests to the monomyth Hero’s Journey framework—which frames Link’s progression from humble beginnings to heroic maturity.

3. The Nocturne of (Personal) Shadow

Drawing on Carl Jung, this essay looks at enemy figures (like Dark Link) as symbolic representations of the player’s inner fears and unresolved aspects of the self.

4. The Archetypal Attraction

This broader psychological perspective investigates why the Zelda mythos consistently engages players: the universal appeal of archetypes like the Hero, Mentor, and Threshold Guardian.

5. Unmasking Grief: Applying the Kübler-Ross Five Stages

One of the most praised chapters looks at how Majora’s Mask mirrors the five stages of grief, using regions of the game world to symbolically reflect emotional states like denial, anger, and acceptance.

6. The Protective Power of Destiny: Posttraumatic Growth

This essay links Link’s repeated confrontation with adversity to psychological posttraumatic growth, showing how overcoming challenges can become a source of resilience.

7. The Quest for Meaning in the Legend of Zelda

Explores deeper existential themes, showing how the series reflects humanity’s search for meaning through adversity and purpose.

8. The Song of the Ritos: The Psychology of Music

A unique entry: it considers how Zelda’s music influences player emotions and strengthens memory and immersion—tying sound design to psychological engagement.

9. Triforce Heroes and Heroines

Focuses on the Triforce’s symbolic meanings—balance, unity, and integration of opposites—and how it reflects broader psychological concepts.

10. The Legend Herself: From Damsel in Distress to Princess of Power

This final essay looks at how Princess Zelda’s role has evolved from a passive figure to one of agency and power, reflecting changing societal views on gender and identity.

What Works

  • Fun for Zelda fans: Makes you see familiar games in new ways.

  • Accessible psychology: Even non-psychology majors can follow the essays.

  • Diversity of topics: From grief to music to meaning, there’s a broad range.

What Falls Short

  • Repetition across essays: Jungian concepts crop up often.

  • Introductory depth: Experienced psychologists or readers might want deeper analysis.

  • Western-centric viewpoints: Some interpretations lean heavily on Western psychological frameworks.

  • Dating Throughout the Work – Theres a few times, even sometimes within the same chapters where games are dated inaccurately or differently. One chapter I can recall, talks about Wind Waker being (2003) and then also saying (2002), which is odd when they even say it came out five years after Ocarina of Time (1998).

Final Thoughts

If The Psychology of Zelda were a video game, it would be like a Zelda title you enjoy for the worldbuilding and unique ideas, even if some dungeons feel familiar. It’s insightful, thoughtful, at times eye-opening—but imperfect. For the 40th anniversary of the Zelda franchise, this book adds an interesting layer of reflection on why those pixelated trips through Hyrule meant so much—and still do—for players.

My Overall Rating: 3.5 out of 5
For GoodReads: *** out of 5
For LibraryThing: ***.5 out of 5
Global Average GoodReads Rating: 3.72 (as of 2.26.26)

Other Book Reviews

All of Our Nerd Content

Here’s all of our nerd content, served up best in one single place. Enjoy!

I know ya’ll here for the nerd reviews. So check out our other nerd reviews below:

Star Wars:

Futurama

Lord of the Rings:

Magic the Gathering:

Heroes of Barcadia:

Zelda:

Rick and Morty:

Space Balls:

Game of Thrones:

The Simpsons:

Back to the Future:

Scrooged:

Groundhog Day:

A Christmas Story:

The Peanuts:

Pro Wrestling:

Soccer:

World Cup:

Phillies:

Philadelphia Eagles:

Matrix:

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles:

Mario:

HP Lovecraft / Cthulhu:

Seinfeld:

The Muppets:

Jason Voorhees / Friday the 13th:

Other:

 


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For more updates on Pennsylvania brewery news, closures, openings, and expansions, follow The Beer Thrillers on social media and subscribe for the latest articles on the state’s ever-evolving craft beer scene.

Thank You For Reading

If you like this article, please check out our other many articles, including news, beer reviews, travelogues, maps, and much much more. We greatly appreciate everyone visiting the site!

Cheers.

Thanks again for reading everyone. Take some time to check out the site, we greatly appreciate it. We have affiliates and sponsors with Pretzels.com and Beer Drop.com, which can save you money on their products if you are interested. Check out our articles on them. Make sure to check out our beer reviews, brewery reviews, Amy’s weekly column, book reviews, hike reviews, and so much more.

As always, thank you everyone for reading! Leave your likes, comments, suggestions, questions, etc, in the comments section. Or use the Feedback – Contact Us – page, and we’ll get right back to you! You can also reach out to us at our direct e-mail address: thebeerthrillers@gmail.com

Thank you for visiting our blog. Please make sure to follow, bookmark, subscribe, and make sure to comment and leave feedback and like the blog posts you read. It will help us to better tailor the blog to you, the readers, likes and make this a better blog for everyone.

We are working on a massive project here at The Beer Thrillers. We are creating a map of all of the breweries across the United States. State by state we are adding maps of all of the different states with every brewery in each state. (We will eventually get to the US Territories, as well as the Canadian Provinces, and possibly more countries; as well as doing some fun maps like a map of all the breweries we’ve been to, and other fun maps.) You can find the brewery maps here:

We are also working on a project of creating printable and downloadable PDFs and resources to be able to check and keep track of all of the breweries you’ve been to. So stay tuned for that project once we are finished with the Brewery Maps of the US States.

You can check out our different directories here: Beer ReviewsHike ReviewsBook ReviewsBrewery News, Brewery OpeningsBrewer Interviews, and Travelogues.

Please be sure to follow us on our social media accounts – FacebookFacebook GroupTwitterInstagramYouTube, and Influence. As well as our brand new Tumblr page. Please be sure to also follow, like, subscribe to the blog here itself to keep updated. We are also now on BlueSky as well, so make sure to check us out there also. We love to hear from you guys, so be sure to leave a comment and let us know what you think!

You can now find us on our Discord Server here: The Beer Thrillers (Discord Server).

We also now have a SLACK channel – which acts as a hybrid chat room, message board, Reddit style; workspace and posting area for us. You can hang out with us there and chat about all kinds of things – not just beer, but “off topic” things like movies, TV, books, podcasts, hiking, sports, and more! Join us at: The Beer Thrillers on SLACK.

We’ve also joined LinkTree to keep track of all of our social media pages, as well as hot new articles we’ve written. The Beer Thrillers on LinkTree can be found here: The Beer Thrillers LinkTree.

We have partnered with an affiliateship with Beer Drop.com. You can check out that partnership and receive great discounts, coupons, and more here: Beer Drop. Going here and logging in and ordering will help you receive your discounts and coupons as well as help support our page. Thank you for helping to support The Beer Thrillers and to help us maintain the site and blog and to keep it running.

The Beer Thrillers are a blog that prides itself on writing beer reviews, brewery reviews, travelogues, news (especially local to the Central PA brewery scene), as well as covering other topics of our interests – such as hiking, literature and books, board games, and video games which we sometimes stream with our friends over at Knights of Nostalgia. We are currently listed as #5 on FeedSpot’s “Top 100 Beer Blogs” and #9 on FeedSpot’s “Top 40 Pennsylvania Blogs”. (As of May 2025.) Thank you for reading our site today, please subscribe, follow, and bookmark. Please reach out to us if you are interested in working together. If you would like to donate to the blog you can here: Donate to The Beer Thrillers. Thank you!

You can also check out our partnership and affiliation with Pretzels.com, where ordering pretzels and using our affiliate code – AFFILIATE CODE IS THEBEERTHRILLERS20 – will help you get wonderful pretzels and help us maintain and keep this blog running. Thank you!

If you would like to reach out to us for product reviews, beer reviews, press release writing, and other media – please contact us at thebeerthrillers@gmail.com. Thank you.

(Thank you for reading. The opinions, thoughts, and expressions of each article posted on The Beer Thrillers represents the author of the content and only themselves. It does not express the opinions, beliefs, or ideas held by The Beer Thrillers or any company in which the author themselves work for. Each piece of written content is written by the creator(s) listed in the authorial section on each article unless otherwise noted. Their opinions, comments, and words on screen do not represent any company in which they work for and / or are affiliated with or any non – profits that they contribute to. Thank you.)

 

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Book Review: Strengths Finder 2.0 (Tom Rath) https://thebeerthrillers.com/2026/02/04/book-review-strengths-finder-2-0-tom-rath/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=book-review-strengths-finder-2-0-tom-rath Wed, 04 Feb 2026 21:52:05 +0000 https://thebeerthrillers.com/?p=16762 Book Review: Strengths Finder 2.0 (Tom Rath)

Every so often I’ll peruse the aisles of the Hershey Public Library and pick things almost at random. Career books, management books, leadership style books, they all fit into this category; where every so often I’ll pick one up and read it, see what I could possibly learn from it, and see if it could help me in my career(s) or life in general. And thus, how I got reading Strengths Finder 2.0 by Tom Rath.

Strengths Finder 2.0 by Tom Rath

GoodReads Book Blurb

This is the back of the book blurb based on GoodReads:

**Once you have purchased this ebook, the unique access code will be sent to the email address you have registered with Kindle.**DO YOU HAVE THE OPPORTUNITY TO DO WHAT YOU DO BEST EVERY DAY?Chances are, you don’t. All too often, our natural talents go untapped. From the cradle to the cubicle, we devote more time to fixing our shortcomings than to developing our strengths.To help people uncover their talents, Gallup introduced the first version of its online assessment, StrengthsFinder, in the 2001 management book Now, Discover Your Strengths. The book spent more than five years on the bestseller lists and ignited a global conversation, while StrengthsFinder helped millions to discover their top five talents.In its latest national bestseller, StrengthsFinder 2.0, Gallup unveils the new and improved version of its popular assessment, language of 34 themes, and much more (see below for details). While you can read this book in one sitting, you’ll use it as a reference for decades.Loaded with hundreds of strategies for applying your strengths, this new book and accompanying website will change the way you look at yourself — and the world around you — forever.AVAILABLE EXCLUSIVELY IN THE NEW & UPGRADED EDITION OF STRENGTHSFINDER 2.0(using the unique access code included with each book)* A new and upgraded edition of the StrengthsFinder assessment* A personalized Strengths Discovery and Action-Planning Guide for applying your strengths in the next week, month, and year* A more customized version of your top five theme report* 50 Ideas for Action (10 strategies for building on each of your top five themes)* The more user-friendly StrengthsFinder 2.0 companion website, with a strengths community area, library of downloadable discussion guides and activities, a strengths screensaver, and a program for creating display cards of your top five themes

Strengths Finder 2.0 by Tom Rath (GoodReads)

My Book Review

There’s a certain kind of book you don’t really read so much as you experience, and StrengthsFinder 2.0 very much lives in that space. It’s less a traditional self-help book and more a personality diagnostic with a spiral-bound instruction manual attached. You crack it open, take the assessment, get your Top 5 strengths, and then… well, then it’s sort of up to you what happens next.

At its core, StrengthsFinder 2.0 is built on a solid and refreshing premise: stop obsessing over your weaknesses and start developing what you’re already good at. That alone puts it ahead of a lot of grindset, “fix everything that’s wrong with you” literature. The book argues—convincingly—that most people plateau not because they lack self-awareness, but because they’re investing energy in areas where they’ll never be great. Fair point.

The real star of the show, though, is the assessment itself. It’s quick, intuitive, and oddly revealing in the way personality tests often are—enough specificity to feel personal, enough vagueness to apply broadly. When you read your results, there’s that familiar mix of “Oh wow, that’s me” and “Sure, I guess that fits.” It’s accurate enough to spark reflection, which is ultimately the point.

Where StrengthsFinder 2.0 stumbles is in what comes after. The book is extremely light on actionable depth. Once you’ve read about your Top 5 strengths, you may find yourself flipping pages thinking, Is that it? The descriptions are clean, corporate-friendly, and clearly designed for HR departments and team-building workshops. That’s not inherently bad—but it does mean the book feels more like a workplace tool than a personal roadmap.

There’s also the subtle (and sometimes not-so-subtle) sense that this book works best if your life problems can be solved with better communication, productivity, or leadership alignment. If you’re looking for something more existential, messy, or human—something that grapples with doubt, burnout, or meaning—this probably won’t scratch that itch.

That said, StrengthsFinder 2.0 does what it promises. It’s efficient, polished, and accessible. It won’t change your life, but it might help you reframe how you see yourself at work—or at least give you a cleaner vocabulary for explaining why you operate the way you do. Think of it less like a deep, barrel-aged stout and more like a dependable, middle-of-the-road pale ale. Drinkable, useful, but not something you’ll be talking about months later.

Final Verdict:
StrengthsFinder 2.0 is a solid tool with a limited shelf life. Worth reading (and taking) once, especially if you enjoy personality frameworks or work in a team-heavy environment. Just don’t expect it to deliver profound transformation.

My Rating: *** out of 5 on GoodReads
On LibraryThing – *** out of 5 as well
Global Average Rating is 3.93 out of 5 on GoodReads (as of 2.4.26).

Other Book Reviews

 


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For more updates on Pennsylvania brewery news, closures, openings, and expansions, follow The Beer Thrillers on social media and subscribe for the latest articles on the state’s ever-evolving craft beer scene.

Thank You For Reading

If you like this article, please check out our other many articles, including news, beer reviews, travelogues, maps, and much much more. We greatly appreciate everyone visiting the site!

Cheers.

Thanks again for reading everyone. Take some time to check out the site, we greatly appreciate it. We have affiliates and sponsors with Pretzels.com and Beer Drop.com, which can save you money on their products if you are interested. Check out our articles on them. Make sure to check out our beer reviews, brewery reviews, Amy’s weekly column, book reviews, hike reviews, and so much more.

As always, thank you everyone for reading! Leave your likes, comments, suggestions, questions, etc, in the comments section. Or use the Feedback – Contact Us – page, and we’ll get right back to you! You can also reach out to us at our direct e-mail address: thebeerthrillers@gmail.com

Thank you for visiting our blog. Please make sure to follow, bookmark, subscribe, and make sure to comment and leave feedback and like the blog posts you read. It will help us to better tailor the blog to you, the readers, likes and make this a better blog for everyone.

We are working on a massive project here at The Beer Thrillers. We are creating a map of all of the breweries across the United States. State by state we are adding maps of all of the different states with every brewery in each state. (We will eventually get to the US Territories, as well as the Canadian Provinces, and possibly more countries; as well as doing some fun maps like a map of all the breweries we’ve been to, and other fun maps.) You can find the brewery maps here:

We are also working on a project of creating printable and downloadable PDFs and resources to be able to check and keep track of all of the breweries you’ve been to. So stay tuned for that project once we are finished with the Brewery Maps of the US States.

You can check out our different directories here: Beer ReviewsHike ReviewsBook ReviewsBrewery News, Brewery OpeningsBrewer Interviews, and Travelogues.

Please be sure to follow us on our social media accounts – FacebookFacebook GroupTwitterInstagramYouTube, and Influence. As well as our brand new Tumblr page. Please be sure to also follow, like, subscribe to the blog here itself to keep updated. We are also now on BlueSky as well, so make sure to check us out there also. We love to hear from you guys, so be sure to leave a comment and let us know what you think!

You can now find us on our Discord Server here: The Beer Thrillers (Discord Server).

We also now have a SLACK channel – which acts as a hybrid chat room, message board, Reddit style; workspace and posting area for us. You can hang out with us there and chat about all kinds of things – not just beer, but “off topic” things like movies, TV, books, podcasts, hiking, sports, and more! Join us at: The Beer Thrillers on SLACK.

We’ve also joined LinkTree to keep track of all of our social media pages, as well as hot new articles we’ve written. The Beer Thrillers on LinkTree can be found here: The Beer Thrillers LinkTree.

We have partnered with an affiliateship with Beer Drop.com. You can check out that partnership and receive great discounts, coupons, and more here: Beer Drop. Going here and logging in and ordering will help you receive your discounts and coupons as well as help support our page. Thank you for helping to support The Beer Thrillers and to help us maintain the site and blog and to keep it running.

The Beer Thrillers are a blog that prides itself on writing beer reviews, brewery reviews, travelogues, news (especially local to the Central PA brewery scene), as well as covering other topics of our interests – such as hiking, literature and books, board games, and video games which we sometimes stream with our friends over at Knights of Nostalgia. We are currently listed as #5 on FeedSpot’s “Top 100 Beer Blogs” and #9 on FeedSpot’s “Top 40 Pennsylvania Blogs”. (As of May 2025.) Thank you for reading our site today, please subscribe, follow, and bookmark. Please reach out to us if you are interested in working together. If you would like to donate to the blog you can here: Donate to The Beer Thrillers. Thank you!

You can also check out our partnership and affiliation with Pretzels.com, where ordering pretzels and using our affiliate code – AFFILIATE CODE IS THEBEERTHRILLERS20 – will help you get wonderful pretzels and help us maintain and keep this blog running. Thank you!

If you would like to reach out to us for product reviews, beer reviews, press release writing, and other media – please contact us at thebeerthrillers@gmail.com. Thank you.

(Thank you for reading. The opinions, thoughts, and expressions of each article posted on The Beer Thrillers represents the author of the content and only themselves. It does not express the opinions, beliefs, or ideas held by The Beer Thrillers or any company in which the author themselves work for. Each piece of written content is written by the creator(s) listed in the authorial section on each article unless otherwise noted. Their opinions, comments, and words on screen do not represent any company in which they work for and / or are affiliated with or any non – profits that they contribute to. Thank you.)

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Book Review: Atomic Habits (James Clear) https://thebeerthrillers.com/2025/11/09/book-review-atomic-habits-james-clear/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=book-review-atomic-habits-james-clear Mon, 10 Nov 2025 00:21:06 +0000 https://thebeerthrillers.com/?p=16703 Book Review: Atomic Habits by James Clear

I finally got around to Atomic Habits, but instead of reading it, I went with the audiobook version — which, for a book about systems, structure, and personal rhythm, actually worked pretty well. James Clear has a smooth, steady delivery that makes the material easy to digest during commutes, walks, or while doing absolutely anything else you’re trying to turn into a “habit.”

Overall, I found Atomic Habits to be a genuinely positive, practical, and well-packaged guide to incremental improvement. Clear excels at breaking down why small changes matter, and the principles — identity-based habits, habit stacking, and reducing friction — are solid, intuitive, and broadly applicable. There’s a reason this book sits on so many bestseller lists and gets recommended endlessly: the content is accessible, actionable, and encouraging without being preachy.

Atomic Habits by James Clear

Libby

Libby is a wonderful resource. If you have a library card and a smart phone, you can get access to hundreds, if not thousands, of free audiobooks through the app. Even better, is some very large libraries – such as the Philadelphia Library – offer free library cards no matter where in the world you live and therefore you then have access to their full audiobook library via Libby. I cannot recommend this enough for long car rides, chores at home, etc. Its how I’ve gotten up to nearly 200 books read for the year.

Book Review

This is the book blurb via GoodReads:

The instant New York Times bestseller. Over 1 million copies sold!

Tiny Changes, Remarkable Results

No matter your goals, Atomic Habits offers a proven framework for improving–every day. James Clear, one of the world’s leading experts on habit formation, reveals practical strategies that will teach you exactly how to form good habits, break bad ones, and master the tiny behaviors that lead to remarkable results.

If you’re having trouble changing your habits, the problem isn’t you. The problem is your system. Bad habits repeat themselves again and again not because you don’t want to change, but because you have the wrong system for change. You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems. Here, you’ll get a proven system that can take you to new heights.

Clear is known for his ability to distill complex topics into simple behaviors that can be easily applied to daily life and work. Here, he draws on the most proven ideas from biology, psychology, and neuroscience to create an easy-to-understand guide for making good habits inevitable and bad habits impossible. Along the way, readers will be inspired and entertained with true stories from Olympic gold medalists, award-winning artists, business leaders, life-saving physicians, and star comedians who have used the science of small habits to master their craft and vault to the top of their field.

Learn how to:
make time for new habits (even when life gets crazy);
overcome a lack of motivation and willpower;
design your environment to make success easier;
get back on track when you fall off course;
…and much more.

Atomic Habits will reshape the way you think about progress and success, and give you the tools and strategies you need to transform your habits–whether you are a team looking to win a championship, an organization hoping to redefine an industry, or simply an individual who wishes to quit smoking, lose weight, reduce stress, or achieve any other goal.

GoodReads Back of the Book Blurb

That said, I did come away with a bit of skepticism. Not in the sense that the book is wrong, but more that it sometimes oversimplifies. Many of the examples feel polished to the point of being almost too neat, too convenient. Real-life change is often messier than the frameworks suggest, and the book occasionally feels like it’s smoothing the edges a little too much. There’s also an element of repetition — the core ideas are strong, but they’re stretched over more chapters than they truly need.

One of the things I did appreciate, though, was how flexible the methods are. Clear doesn’t lock you into a rigid system or a one-size-fits-all routine. Instead, he lays out principles you can adapt to your own life. For someone juggling work, personal projects, parenting, or whatever else life throws at you, having a modular approach is refreshing. It’s less “follow these exact steps” and more “here’s how habits work; now apply the pieces that make sense.”

The storytelling aspect is also one of the book’s strengths. Even when I found some examples a little too smooth, they’re undeniably memorable. Clear has a knack for weaving in psychology, personal anecdotes, sports stories, and business cases in a way that keeps the material from feeling dry. Listening to the audiobook gave these stories a bit more punch, and it helped keep my attention even during moments where the core message repeated itself.

Where the book fell short for me — and why I hover around a 3.5/5 — is in its depth. It gives you a fantastic overview of habit formation and behavior change, but if you’ve read other titles in this space (Duhigg, Fogg, Newport, etc.), a lot of the ideas will feel familiar. Atomic Habits is an excellent entry point, maybe even the best one, but it’s not necessarily the definitive or final word on the topic. It’s more of a gateway book — a spark that gets you thinking, rather than a deep dive that transforms everything on its own.

Still, for what it aims to be — a motivational blueprint for thinking about how habits shape your life — it absolutely succeeds. I’d recommend it to anyone who’s looking for a gentle push toward better routines or who wants a mental model for incremental change. Listening to it rather than reading gave it a more conversational, almost coaching style that I found effective.

In the end, I’d land at 3.5 out of 5. Useful, inspiring at times, worth the listen — even if I don’t think it’s the all-encompassing life-changer some people make it out to be. It’s a good tool, not a magic wand.

The GoodReads overall rating is currently sitting at a 4.32 (as of 11.9.25).

Other Book Reviews

Follow The Beer Thrillers

For more updates on Pennsylvania brewery news, closures, openings, and expansions, follow The Beer Thrillers on social media and subscribe for the latest articles on the state’s ever-evolving craft beer scene.

Thank You For Reading

If you like this article, please check out our other many articles, including news, beer reviews, travelogues, maps, and much much more. We greatly appreciate everyone visiting the site!

Cheers.

Thanks again for reading everyone. Take some time to check out the site, we greatly appreciate it. We have affiliates and sponsors with Pretzels.com and Beer Drop.com, which can save you money on their products if you are interested. Check out our articles on them. Make sure to check out our beer reviews, brewery reviews, Amy’s weekly column, book reviews, hike reviews, and so much more.

As always, thank you everyone for reading! Leave your likes, comments, suggestions, questions, etc, in the comments section. Or use the Feedback – Contact Us – page, and we’ll get right back to you! You can also reach out to us at our direct e-mail address: thebeerthrillers@gmail.com

Thank you for visiting our blog. Please make sure to follow, bookmark, subscribe, and make sure to comment and leave feedback and like the blog posts you read. It will help us to better tailor the blog to you, the readers, likes and make this a better blog for everyone.

We are working on a massive project here at The Beer Thrillers. We are creating a map of all of the breweries across the United States. State by state we are adding maps of all of the different states with every brewery in each state. (We will eventually get to the US Territories, as well as the Canadian Provinces, and possibly more countries; as well as doing some fun maps like a map of all the breweries we’ve been to, and other fun maps.) You can find the brewery maps here:

We are also working on a project of creating printable and downloadable PDFs and resources to be able to check and keep track of all of the breweries you’ve been to. So stay tuned for that project once we are finished with the Brewery Maps of the US States.

You can check out our different directories here: Beer ReviewsHike ReviewsBook ReviewsBrewery News, Brewery OpeningsBrewer Interviews, and Travelogues.

Please be sure to follow us on our social media accounts – FacebookFacebook GroupTwitterInstagramYouTube, and Influence. As well as our brand new Tumblr page. Please be sure to also follow, like, subscribe to the blog here itself to keep updated. We are also now on BlueSky as well, so make sure to check us out there also. We love to hear from you guys, so be sure to leave a comment and let us know what you think!

You can now find us on our Discord Server here: The Beer Thrillers (Discord Server).

We also now have a SLACK channel – which acts as a hybrid chat room, message board, Reddit style; workspace and posting area for us. You can hang out with us there and chat about all kinds of things – not just beer, but “off topic” things like movies, TV, books, podcasts, hiking, sports, and more! Join us at: The Beer Thrillers on SLACK.

We’ve also joined LinkTree to keep track of all of our social media pages, as well as hot new articles we’ve written. The Beer Thrillers on LinkTree can be found here: The Beer Thrillers LinkTree.

We have partnered with an affiliateship with Beer Drop.com. You can check out that partnership and receive great discounts, coupons, and more here: Beer Drop. Going here and logging in and ordering will help you receive your discounts and coupons as well as help support our page. Thank you for helping to support The Beer Thrillers and to help us maintain the site and blog and to keep it running.

The Beer Thrillers are a blog that prides itself on writing beer reviews, brewery reviews, travelogues, news (especially local to the Central PA brewery scene), as well as covering other topics of our interests – such as hiking, literature and books, board games, and video games which we sometimes stream with our friends over at Knights of Nostalgia. We are currently listed as #5 on FeedSpot’s “Top 100 Beer Blogs” and #9 on FeedSpot’s “Top 40 Pennsylvania Blogs”. (As of May 2025.) Thank you for reading our site today, please subscribe, follow, and bookmark. Please reach out to us if you are interested in working together. If you would like to donate to the blog you can here: Donate to The Beer Thrillers. Thank you!

You can also check out our partnership and affiliation with Pretzels.com, where ordering pretzels and using our affiliate code – AFFILIATE CODE IS THEBEERTHRILLERS20 – will help you get wonderful pretzels and help us maintain and keep this blog running. Thank you!

If you would like to reach out to us for product reviews, beer reviews, press release writing, and other media – please contact us at thebeerthrillers@gmail.com. Thank you.

(Thank you for reading. The opinions, thoughts, and expressions of each article posted on The Beer Thrillers represents the author of the content and only themselves. It does not express the opinions, beliefs, or ideas held by The Beer Thrillers or any company in which the author themselves work for. Each piece of written content is written by the creator(s) listed in the authorial section on each article unless otherwise noted. Their opinions, comments, and words on screen do not represent any company in which they work for and / or are affiliated with or any non – profits that they contribute to. Thank you.)

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Book Review: A Significant Life (Todd May) https://thebeerthrillers.com/2025/10/27/book-review-a-significant-life-todd-may/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=book-review-a-significant-life-todd-may Tue, 28 Oct 2025 01:08:59 +0000 https://thebeerthrillers.com/?p=16706 Book Review: A Significant Life – Human Meaning in a Silent Universe (Todd May)

First off, Todd May has quickly become one of my favorite philosophers of the present. I first got acquainted with Todd May via the show “The Good Place”. His first work I read was Death, which helped me a lot with my own understandings, feelings, and thoughts about death. Especially around the time of Bart‘s death, and I remember going for a hike at Governor Dick and reading it. This year through AbeBooks I’ve gone and gotten all of his (affordable anyway, there’s a few ones that are 45$ plus shipping and handling, for used copies) works, and been reading them. Alongside my full read through of William Shakespeare and Kurt Vonnegut this year, I’ve also been doing a (nearly) full read through of Todd May. I am planning on posting reviews of the other works as well.

I feel like this review I leaned a bit more cynic and harsh though, but I think the review stands as it does.

A Significant Life by Todd May

A Significant Life

The following is the back of the book blurb on GoodReads:

What makes for a good life, or a beautiful one, or, perhaps most important, a meaningful one? Throughout history most of us have looked to our faith, our relationships, or our deeds for the answer. But in A Significant Life , philosopher Todd May offers an exhilarating new way of thinking about these questions, one deeply attuned to life as it actually a work in progress, a journey—and often a narrative. Offering moving accounts of his own life and memories alongside rich engagements with philosophers from Aristotle to Heidegger, he shows us where to find the significance of our in the way we live them.

May starts by looking at the fundamental fact that life unfolds over time, and as it does so, it begins to develop certain qualities, certain themes. Our lives can be marked by intensity, curiosity, perseverance, or many other qualities that become guiding narrative values. These values lend meanings to our lives that are distinct from—but also interact with—the universal values we are taught to cultivate, such as goodness or happiness. Offering a fascinating examination of a broad range of figures—from music icon Jimi Hendrix to civil rights leader Fannie Lou Hamer, from cyclist Lance Armstrong to The Portrait of a Lady ’s Ralph Touchett to Claus von Stauffenberg, a German officer who tried to assassinate Hitler—May shows that narrative values offer a rich variety of criteria by which to assess a life, specific to each of us and yet widely available. They offer us a way of reading ourselves, who we are, and who we might like to be.

Clearly and eloquently written, A Significant Life is a recognition and a comfort, a celebration of the deeply human narrative impulse by which we make—even if we don’t realize it—meaning for ourselves. It offers a refreshing way to think of an age-old question, of quite simply, what makes a life worth living. 

A Significant Life by Todd May – GoodReads

Book Review: A Significant Life by Todd May

Todd May sets out to offer an answer—rather than the answer—to the question of life’s meaning, a topic he notes is surprisingly underdeveloped in philosophy. Unfortunately, I found the book largely unsatisfying, and often emblematic of what I think of as “classic philosopher pitfalls.”

For one, May devotes a great deal of time summarizing what long-dead philosophers believed about meaning. But if their ideas were wrong—and May clearly thinks they were—why spend so much of the book rehearsing them? When we teach calculus, we don’t trace every mistaken detour taken before Newton and Leibniz; we teach the useful parts. May also shows little interest in what contemporary science—biology, psychology, evolutionary theory—might contribute to the discussion. That blind spot becomes increasingly glaring.

More puzzling still, May defers the most important chapter—the actual core of his argument—until the very end. The result is a reading experience filled with “But what about…?” questions the book refuses to address until it’s nearly over.

He begins by quickly clearing some expected ground: neither the universe nor God can provide meaning. Fair enough, and it’s well-trodden territory, so I appreciated his brevity. But then nearly a fifth of the book is spent recounting what Aristotle (wrong), Bentham (wrong), and Mill (wrong) thought about meaning. Only one-third of the way in does the book finally begin in earnest, when May turns to Susan Wolf’s 2010 work Meaning in Life and Why It Matters. Everything before this feels like padding.

Wolf proposes a now-influential approach to meaningfulness—note: “meaningfulness,” not “the meaning of life”—summed up in her well-known formula:

Meaning arises when subjective attraction meets objective attractiveness.

It’s an intriguing idea, but I never felt May convincingly defended it. I’ll need to read Wolf directly. In May’s gloss, something is meaningful only when you value it (subjective attraction) and others also see its worth (objective attractiveness). He identifies this social dimension with what he calls “narrative values.”

But is this really “objective attractiveness”? It sounds far more like “whatever our society currently approves of.” And societies are often mistaken. What sense does it make to say, “Her life wasn’t meaningful to her contemporaries, but people centuries later think it was”? Meaning becomes historically and geographically contingent in a way that strains the framework.

May insists that meaningfulness and moral goodness are distinct. One can lead a meaningful life that isn’t morally good—and vice versa. Yet his handling of this distinction is unconvincing. At times, the framework produces absurd results:

A devoted Nazi officer could, by this account, have led a meaningful life—steadfastly committing himself to values his society (however horrifically) deemed admirable.

What does “meaningful life” even mean in that context?

Even May seems aware that his theory struggles to deliver the existential weight he wants it to have. He writes loftily that meaningfulness can

“…give heft to our projects… redeem the arc of our lives…”

and that it might

“…address the haunting fear that there is nothing more to our days than being born, dying, and the land increasing.”

He claims it could spare us from looking back on our lives with “desolation.” Yet why should embodying a narrative value like steadfastness produce any of these effects? Why would it add to the world, or redeem anything? The connection is asserted, not demonstrated.

Eventually May even concedes that meaningfulness isn’t necessary:

People whose lives are not meaningful… have not failed in any duty to themselves or others.

And further:

If someone says, “Not interested,” I would have no complaint… I have no argument for why he should feel obliged to express some narrative value.

If meaningfulness is unnecessary and carries no normative force, then what, exactly, is the point of defining it?

Despite all this, there is a small, compelling thread in May’s reflections. He observes:

We find our meaning not beneath or beyond our lives, but within them.

That seems right. Perhaps the problem is that May tries too hard to make “meaning” conduct more philosophical weight than it can bear. The concept raises deeper questions he never touches: What would it mean for a dog or chimp to lead a meaningful life? When in human evolution would “meaningfulness” have begun to apply? If it emerged gradually, doesn’t that suggest a biologically rooted craving rather than a metaphysical condition? And would a non-tribal species ever agree that “objective attractiveness” — i.e., the approval of the group — is essential to meaning?

These questions linger long after May’s framework has exhausted itself, and they are more thought-provoking than anything his own thesis ultimately puts forward.

My rating on GoodReads is *** out of 5. And on LibraryThing it is a 3.5 out of 5.

The overall average rating on GoodReads is a 3.70 as of 10.27.25.

Todd May

As I said earlier, stay tuned for the other books and works of his to be reviewed. I will interlink them all here.

Other Book Reviews


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Thank You For Reading

If you like this article, please check out our other many articles, including news, beer reviews, travelogues, maps, and much much more. We greatly appreciate everyone visiting the site!

Cheers.

Thanks again for reading everyone. Take some time to check out the site, we greatly appreciate it. We have affiliates and sponsors with Pretzels.com and Beer Drop.com, which can save you money on their products if you are interested. Check out our articles on them. Make sure to check out our beer reviews, brewery reviews, Amy’s weekly column, book reviews, hike reviews, and so much more.

As always, thank you everyone for reading! Leave your likes, comments, suggestions, questions, etc, in the comments section. Or use the Feedback – Contact Us – page, and we’ll get right back to you! You can also reach out to us at our direct e-mail address: thebeerthrillers@gmail.com

Thank you for visiting our blog. Please make sure to follow, bookmark, subscribe, and make sure to comment and leave feedback and like the blog posts you read. It will help us to better tailor the blog to you, the readers, likes and make this a better blog for everyone.

We are working on a massive project here at The Beer Thrillers. We are creating a map of all of the breweries across the United States. State by state we are adding maps of all of the different states with every brewery in each state. (We will eventually get to the US Territories, as well as the Canadian Provinces, and possibly more countries; as well as doing some fun maps like a map of all the breweries we’ve been to, and other fun maps.) You can find the brewery maps here:

We are also working on a project of creating printable and downloadable PDFs and resources to be able to check and keep track of all of the breweries you’ve been to. So stay tuned for that project once we are finished with the Brewery Maps of the US States.

You can check out our different directories here: Beer ReviewsHike ReviewsBook ReviewsBrewery News, Brewery OpeningsBrewer Interviews, and Travelogues.

Please be sure to follow us on our social media accounts – FacebookFacebook GroupTwitterInstagramYouTube, and Influence. As well as our brand new Tumblr page. Please be sure to also follow, like, subscribe to the blog here itself to keep updated. We are also now on BlueSky as well, so make sure to check us out there also. We love to hear from you guys, so be sure to leave a comment and let us know what you think!

You can now find us on our Discord Server here: The Beer Thrillers (Discord Server).

We also now have a SLACK channel – which acts as a hybrid chat room, message board, Reddit style; workspace and posting area for us. You can hang out with us there and chat about all kinds of things – not just beer, but “off topic” things like movies, TV, books, podcasts, hiking, sports, and more! Join us at: The Beer Thrillers on SLACK.

We’ve also joined LinkTree to keep track of all of our social media pages, as well as hot new articles we’ve written. The Beer Thrillers on LinkTree can be found here: The Beer Thrillers LinkTree.

We have partnered with an affiliateship with Beer Drop.com. You can check out that partnership and receive great discounts, coupons, and more here: Beer Drop. Going here and logging in and ordering will help you receive your discounts and coupons as well as help support our page. Thank you for helping to support The Beer Thrillers and to help us maintain the site and blog and to keep it running.

The Beer Thrillers are a blog that prides itself on writing beer reviews, brewery reviews, travelogues, news (especially local to the Central PA brewery scene), as well as covering other topics of our interests – such as hiking, literature and books, board games, and video games which we sometimes stream with our friends over at Knights of Nostalgia. We are currently listed as #5 on FeedSpot’s “Top 100 Beer Blogs” and #9 on FeedSpot’s “Top 40 Pennsylvania Blogs”. (As of May 2025.) Thank you for reading our site today, please subscribe, follow, and bookmark. Please reach out to us if you are interested in working together. If you would like to donate to the blog you can here: Donate to The Beer Thrillers. Thank you!

You can also check out our partnership and affiliation with Pretzels.com, where ordering pretzels and using our affiliate code – AFFILIATE CODE IS THEBEERTHRILLERS20 – will help you get wonderful pretzels and help us maintain and keep this blog running. Thank you!

If you would like to reach out to us for product reviews, beer reviews, press release writing, and other media – please contact us at thebeerthrillers@gmail.com. Thank you.

(Thank you for reading. The opinions, thoughts, and expressions of each article posted on The Beer Thrillers represents the author of the content and only themselves. It does not express the opinions, beliefs, or ideas held by The Beer Thrillers or any company in which the author themselves work for. Each piece of written content is written by the creator(s) listed in the authorial section on each article unless otherwise noted. Their opinions, comments, and words on screen do not represent any company in which they work for and / or are affiliated with or any non – profits that they contribute to. Thank you.)

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Average Number of Books Read Per Year: Global and Demographic Breakdown https://thebeerthrillers.com/2025/05/01/average-number-of-books-read-per-year-global-and-demographic-breakdown/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=average-number-of-books-read-per-year-global-and-demographic-breakdown Thu, 01 May 2025 15:40:41 +0000 https://thebeerthrillers.com/?p=16446 Average Number of Books Read Per Year: Global and Demographic Breakdown

This is a look at the books read per year, based on statistics from 2024, using metric sources from various different sites. Sources will be listed at the end of this article. Sources are primarily compiled up to March of 2025.

Ever wondered how your reading habits stack up against the rest of the world? Whether you’re a voracious bookworm or an occasional reader, the numbers might surprise you. Here’s a comprehensive look at the average number of books read per year—broken down by country, age, gender, and race—plus tips for tracking your own stats and making sense of your reading life.

A look at statistics in reading (and well, why not, have a beer with it too!).

By Country: Top 10 Countries

Based on surveys and aggregated data from 2024–2025, the average number of books read per person annually in the top 10 countries is as follows. Let’s start with a global snapshot. Here’s how the top 10 book-loving countries compare in average books read per person per year:

Rank Country Books Read Annually
1 United States 17
2 India 16
3 United Kingdom 15
4 France 14
5 Italy 13
6 Canada 12
7 Russia 11
8 Australia 10
9 Spain 9
10 Netherlands 8

By Race/Ethnicity (U.S. Data)

  • White Americans: Spend the most time reading, with higher daily averages than other groups.

  • Asian Americans: Average about 17.4 minutes of reading per day.

  • Hispanic Americans: Average only 6 minutes of reading per day.

  • Black Americans: Data shows lower reading proficiency scores compared to White Americans, with disparities persisting post-pandemic.

While time spent reading does not directly equate to books finished, these differences in daily reading time and literacy performance suggest White and Asian Americans read more books on average per year than Black and Hispanic Americans.

By Age Bracket (U.S. Data)

  • 18–29 years: 83% read at least one book per year, the highest among all age groups.

  • 30–49 years: 73% read at least one book per year.

  • 50–64 years: 70% read at least one book per year.

  • 65+ years: 67% read at least one book per year.

Millennials (roughly corresponding to the 18–34 age group) are noted as the generation reading the most books, with high library usage and a preference for both print and digital formats.

By Gender (U.S. Data)

  • Women: Consistently read more books than men. In recent surveys, 77% of women reported reading at least one book in the previous year, compared to 68% of men.

  • Fiction Reading: The gap is even wider for fiction; in 2022, 46.9% of women read fiction compared to just 27.7% of men, a persistent 19-point difference over the last decade.

Overall: The gender gap in reading is widening, especially among younger generations, with women leading in both quantity and frequency of book reading.


Summary Table: U.S. Book Reading Percentages by Demographic

Demographic % Reading at Least 1 Book/Year Notes
Women 77% Higher fiction and overall book reading
Men 68% Lower, with a widening gender gap
18–29 years 83% Highest among age groups
30–49 years 73%
50–64 years 70%
65+ years 67%
White Americans Highest reading time
Asian Americans 17.4 min/day
Hispanic Americans 6 min/day Lowest average

Key Insights

  • The United States leads the world in average books read per year, followed closely by India and the United Kingdom.

Women, younger adults, and White/Asian Americans are the most active book readers in the U.S.

  • The gender gap in reading persists and is growing, especially among younger generations.

Millennials are the most avid readers by age group.

Sources

A list of sources used to compile the above data and information:

Some Other Literature Based Articles

Thank You For Reading

If you like this article, please check out our other many articles, including news, beer reviews, travelogues, maps, and much much more. We greatly appreciate everyone visiting the site!

Cheers.

Thanks again for reading everyone. Take some time to check out the site, we greatly appreciate it. We have affiliates and sponsors with Pretzels.com and Beer Drop.com, which can save you money on their products if you are interested. Check out our articles on them. Make sure to check out our beer reviews, brewery reviews, Amy’s weekly column, book reviews, hike reviews, and so much more.

As always, thank you everyone for reading! Leave your likes, comments, suggestions, questions, etc, in the comments section. Or use the Feedback – Contact Us – page, and we’ll get right back to you! You can also reach out to us at our direct e-mail address: thebeerthrillers@gmail.com

Thank you for visiting our blog. Please make sure to follow, bookmark, subscribe, and make sure to comment and leave feedback and like the blog posts you read. It will help us to better tailor the blog to you, the readers, likes and make this a better blog for everyone.

We are working on a massive project here at The Beer Thrillers. We are creating a map of all of the breweries across the United States. State by state we are adding maps of all of the different states with every brewery in each state. (We will eventually get to the US Territories, as well as the Canadian Provinces, and possibly more countries; as well as doing some fun maps like a map of all the breweries we’ve been to, and other fun maps.) You can find the brewery maps here:

We are also working on a project of creating printable and downloadable PDFs and resources to be able to check and keep track of all of the breweries you’ve been to. So stay tuned for that project once we are finished with the Brewery Maps of the US States.

You can check out our different directories here: Beer ReviewsHike ReviewsBook ReviewsBrewery News, Brewery OpeningsBrewer Interviews, and Travelogues.

Please be sure to follow us on our social media accounts – FacebookFacebook GroupTwitterInstagramYouTube, and Influence. As well as our brand new Tumblr page. Please be sure to also follow, like, subscribe to the blog here itself to keep updated. We are also now on BlueSky as well, so make sure to check us out there also. We love to hear from you guys, so be sure to leave a comment and let us know what you think!

You can now find us on our Discord Server here: The Beer Thrillers (Discord Server).

We also now have a SLACK channel – which acts as a hybrid chat room, message board, Reddit style; workspace and posting area for us. You can hang out with us there and chat about all kinds of things – not just beer, but “off topic” things like movies, TV, books, podcasts, hiking, sports, and more! Join us at: The Beer Thrillers on SLACK.

We’ve also joined LinkTree to keep track of all of our social media pages, as well as hot new articles we’ve written. The Beer Thrillers on LinkTree can be found here: The Beer Thrillers LinkTree.

We have partnered with an affiliateship with Beer Drop.com. You can check out that partnership and receive great discounts, coupons, and more here: Beer Drop. Going here and logging in and ordering will help you receive your discounts and coupons as well as help support our page. Thank you for helping to support The Beer Thrillers and to help us maintain the site and blog and to keep it running.

The Beer Thrillers are a blog that prides itself on writing beer reviews, brewery reviews, travelogues, news (especially local to the Central PA brewery scene), as well as covering other topics of our interests – such as hiking, literature and books, board games, and video games which we sometimes stream with our friends over at Knights of Nostalgia. We are currently listed as #5 on FeedSpot’s “Top 100 Beer Blogs” and #9 on FeedSpot’s “Top 40 Pennsylvania Blogs”. (As of May 2025.) Thank you for reading our site today, please subscribe, follow, and bookmark. Please reach out to us if you are interested in working together. If you would like to donate to the blog you can here: Donate to The Beer Thrillers. Thank you!

You can also check out our partnership and affiliation with Pretzels.com, where ordering pretzels and using our affiliate code – AFFILIATE CODE IS THEBEERTHRILLERS20 – will help you get wonderful pretzels and help us maintain and keep this blog running. Thank you!

If you would like to reach out to us for product reviews, beer reviews, press release writing, and other media – please contact us at thebeerthrillers@gmail.com. Thank you.

(Thank you for reading. The opinions, thoughts, and expressions of each article posted on The Beer Thrillers represents the author of the content and only themselves. It does not express the opinions, beliefs, or ideas held by The Beer Thrillers or any company in which the author themselves work for. Each piece of written content is written by the creator(s) listed in the authorial section on each article unless otherwise noted. Their opinions, comments, and words on screen do not represent any company in which they work for and / or are affiliated with or any non – profits that they contribute to. Thank you.)

 

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Book Review: Siddhartha’s Brain: Unlocking the Ancient Science of Enlightenment (James Kingsland) https://thebeerthrillers.com/2025/02/27/book-review-siddharthas-brain-unlocking-the-ancient-science-of-enlightenment-james-kingsland/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=book-review-siddharthas-brain-unlocking-the-ancient-science-of-enlightenment-james-kingsland Thu, 27 Feb 2025 05:52:23 +0000 https://thebeerthrillers.com/?p=16424 Book Review: Siddhartha’s Brain: Unlocking the Ancient Science of Enlightenment (James Kingsland)

In a world increasingly captivated by the promises of mindfulness and meditation, Siddhartha’s Brain: Unlocking the Ancient Science of Enlightenment by James Kingsland offers a timely and illuminating exploration of the intersection between ancient Buddhist wisdom and cutting-edge neuroscience. Blending the life and teachings of the Buddha with contemporary findings on how meditation reshapes the brain, Kingsland crafts a compelling narrative that speaks to both the spiritually curious and the scientifically inclined. This review dives into the book’s key insights, evaluates its accessibility and depth, and recommends similar titles for readers eager to continue the journey inward.

Siddhartha’s Brain by James Kingsland

Book Review: Siddhartha’s Brain

In Siddhartha’s Brain, science journalist James Kingsland embarks on an ambitious journey: to trace the roots of mindfulness and meditation practices back to the Buddha himself, while weaving in modern neuroscience to explain their enduring power. The result is a thoughtful, well-researched, and accessible book that connects ancient wisdom with contemporary science.

Kingsland draws from both the life of Siddhartha Gautama—the man who became the Buddha—and from the latest discoveries in brain science. Through this dual lens, he explores how mindfulness, meditation, and other contemplative practices can rewire the brain, reduce stress, and foster well-being. What sets the book apart is its balance; Kingsland never strays too far into mysticism nor loses himself in technical jargon. Instead, he bridges the two worlds with clarity and care.

The narrative benefits from Kingsland’s journalistic instincts. He grounds the science in real-world stories and anecdotes, making complex ideas feel tangible and relevant. Whether discussing how focused attention strengthens the prefrontal cortex, or how letting go of the “self” concept changes our neural patterns, Kingsland makes a compelling case for why ancient meditative traditions remain so vital in the 21st century.

If there’s any drawback, it might be that readers looking for a deep dive into either Buddhist philosophy or hardcore neuroscience might find it somewhat introductory. However, for those seeking a thoughtful, integrated perspective—one that respects the spiritual while valuing the scientific—Siddhartha’s Brain delivers.

Ultimately, this is a book that not only informs but invites personal reflection. Whether you’re a seasoned meditator, a neuroscience enthusiast, or simply curious about how the mind works, Siddhartha’s Brain offers both insight and inspiration.

Bridging Ancient Wisdom and Modern Neuroscience

Kingsland takes readers on a skillful journey into the ancient teachings of Siddhartha Gautama, while artfully weaving in contemporary neuroscience. Through lucid prose, he explores how meditation and mindfulness restructure neural pathways—enhancing focus, emotional regulation, and even resilience against stress. He connects, for example, focused-attention practices to strengthening prefrontal circuits and discusses how “pain versus suffering” is reframed through a neurological lens. In doing so, Kingsland honors both the spiritual tradition and scientific progress.

Clear, Engaging Storytelling

True to his background as a Guardian science journalist, Kingsland brings anecdotal richness—from clinical studies to real-life meditators. These stories make dense topics like neuroplasticity, the default mode network, and concentration meditation intuitive and relatable. His journalism rigor ensures the science is credible, yet he never sacrifices readability—making the book accessible to novices and intriguing to seasoned practitioners alike .

Balanced Appeal: Spirituality Meets Science

What makes this book stand out is its balanced voice. Kingsland doesn’t lean too heavily into spiritual idealism, nor does he reduce Buddhist insight to mere brain scans. Instead, he holds both perspectives with respect, showing how secular mindfulness and traditional Buddhist concepts like impermanence and non-self complement one another. He explores how these teachings can mitigate conditions ranging from addiction to cognitive decline .

Depth Without Overload

While not a technical neuroscience textbook nor a deep Buddhist treatise, Siddhartha’s Brain finds a sweet spot. Though some readers seeking exhaustive academic detail may feel it’s introductory, that same clarity makes it ideal for anyone curious about the intersection of mind and brain.

Critics Agree—It’s Worth Reading

Critics across mainstream outlets echo this praise:

  • Publishers Weekly praises its “neurological picture of the mind without devaluing Buddhism’s spiritual image”

  • Kirkus calls it “brain science and Buddhist lore combine[d] in a compelling treatise”

  • Library Journal gives it a starred review, citing its readability and integration of science and practice .

GoodReads Rating

My GoodReads Rating: ***
Global GoodReads Rating: 4.10 (out of 1,200 ratings) (as of 2.27.25)

GoodReads “Back of Book Blurb”

The back of the book blurb, according to GoodReads:

By the longtime Guardian science journalist, a groundbreaking exploration of the science of enlightenment and mental wellness, illuminated by twin perspectives, ancient and the spiritual wisdom of Siddhartha Gautama and the revelations of today’s scientists, who are confirming the Buddha’s profound insights into the human mind In the fifth century BCE, in northern India, Siddhartha, the wandering sage who became the Buddha, developed a program, rooted in meditation and mindfulness, for mastering the mind and achieving lasting peace and contentment. Twenty-five centuries later, humans have transformed everything about our world—except our brains, which remain the same powerful yet flawed instruments possessed by our ancestors. What if the solution we seek to the psychological problems of life in the digital age—distraction, anxiety, addiction, loss of deep meaning—had already been worked out by the Buddha in ancient India? Appealing to readers of Eastern wisdom and Jon Kabat-Zinn, as well as to fans of bestsellers by Oliver Sacks and Malcolm Gladwell, acclaimed science writer and practicing Buddhist James Kingsland reveals how scientists are now unlocking the remarkable secrets of Siddhartha’s brain. Moving effortlessly between science and scripture, Kingsland charts Siddhartha’s spiritual journey and explains how new research by leading neuroscientists and clinical psychologists—many of whom are interviewed in these pages—suggests that mindfulness practice reconfigures our brains to make us sharper, smarter, healthier, and happier, and that it can help treat stress, anxiety, depression, chronic pain, hypertension, and substance abuse. There have even been hints that meditation can enhance immune function, slow cellular aging, and keep dementia at bay. Featuring six guided meditations, Siddhartha’s Brain is a practical and inspiring odyssey of mind and spirit. “Our life is shaped by our mind; we become what we think.”—Siddhartha
Siddhartha’s Brain – James Kingsland (GoodReads)

 

Similar & Recommended Reads

If you enjoyed Siddhartha’s Brain, these titles explore related themes of mindfulness, neuroscience, and the self:

  • The Art of Living by Thich Nhat Hanh (Goodreads avg 4.42): Gentle wisdom on mindfulness in daily life

  • The Heart of the Buddha’s Teaching by Thich Nhat Hanh (4.32): A clear guide to Buddhist teachings and how they foster compassion

  • Zen and the Brain by James H. Austin: A classic that blends Zen practice with in-depth neuroscience

  • Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain by David Eagleman: A compelling exploration of unconscious brain activity, praised for its lucid, engaging style

  • The Tell-Tale Brain by V.S. Ramachandran: Investigates consciousness, creativity, and neurological disorders through fascinating case studies

  • The Master and His Emissary by Iain McGilchrist: An illuminating dive into how left and right brain hemispheres influence culture and perception

  • The Idiot Brain by Dean Burnett: A humorous, entertaining and insightful look at cognitive quirks and brain science


🧘 Final Thoughts

Siddhartha’s Brain shines as a bridge—offering enough neuroscience to engage your curiosity, while retaining the heart and purity of Buddhist wisdom. It invites readers not just to learn, but to experiment with mindfulness in their own lives. With strong reviews, solid science, and spiritual depth, it’s a meaningful addition to anyone’s library on consciousness, meditation, or the mind.

Other Book Reviews

Thank You For Reading

If you like this article, please check out our other many articles, including news, beer reviews, travelogues, maps, and much much more. We greatly appreciate everyone visiting the site!

Cheers.

Thanks again for reading everyone. Take some time to check out the site, we greatly appreciate it. We have affiliates and sponsors with Pretzels.com and Beer Drop.com, which can save you money on their products if you are interested. Check out our articles on them. Make sure to check out our beer reviews, brewery reviews, Amy’s weekly column, book reviews, hike reviews, and so much more.

As always, thank you everyone for reading! Leave your likes, comments, suggestions, questions, etc, in the comments section. Or use the Feedback – Contact Us – page, and we’ll get right back to you! You can also reach out to us at our direct e-mail address: thebeerthrillers@gmail.com

Thank you for visiting our blog. Please make sure to follow, bookmark, subscribe, and make sure to comment and leave feedback and like the blog posts you read. It will help us to better tailor the blog to you, the readers, likes and make this a better blog for everyone.

We are working on a massive project here at The Beer Thrillers. We are creating a map of all of the breweries across the United States. State by state we are adding maps of all of the different states with every brewery in each state. (We will eventually get to the US Territories, as well as the Canadian Provinces, and possibly more countries; as well as doing some fun maps like a map of all the breweries we’ve been to, and other fun maps.) You can find the brewery maps here:

We are also working on a project of creating printable and downloadable PDFs and resources to be able to check and keep track of all of the breweries you’ve been to. So stay tuned for that project once we are finished with the Brewery Maps of the US States.

You can check out our different directories here: Beer ReviewsHike ReviewsBook ReviewsBrewery News, Brewery OpeningsBrewer Interviews, and Travelogues.

Please be sure to follow us on our social media accounts – FacebookFacebook GroupTwitterInstagramYouTube, and Influence. As well as our brand new Tumblr page. Please be sure to also follow, like, subscribe to the blog here itself to keep updated. We are also now on BlueSky as well, so make sure to check us out there also. We love to hear from you guys, so be sure to leave a comment and let us know what you think!

You can now find us on our Discord Server here: The Beer Thrillers (Discord Server).

We also now have a SLACK channel – which acts as a hybrid chat room, message board, Reddit style; workspace and posting area for us. You can hang out with us there and chat about all kinds of things – not just beer, but “off topic” things like movies, TV, books, podcasts, hiking, sports, and more! Join us at: The Beer Thrillers on SLACK.

We’ve also joined LinkTree to keep track of all of our social media pages, as well as hot new articles we’ve written. The Beer Thrillers on LinkTree can be found here: The Beer Thrillers LinkTree.

We have partnered with an affiliateship with Beer Drop.com. You can check out that partnership and receive great discounts, coupons, and more here: Beer Drop. Going here and logging in and ordering will help you receive your discounts and coupons as well as help support our page. Thank you for helping to support The Beer Thrillers and to help us maintain the site and blog and to keep it running.

The Beer Thrillers are a blog that prides itself on writing beer reviews, brewery reviews, travelogues, news (especially local to the Central PA brewery scene), as well as covering other topics of our interests – such as hiking, literature and books, board games, and video games which we sometimes stream with our friends over at Knights of Nostalgia. We are currently listed as #5 on FeedSpot’s “Top 100 Beer Blogs” and #9 on FeedSpot’s “Top 40 Pennsylvania Blogs”. (As of May 2025.) Thank you for reading our site today, please subscribe, follow, and bookmark. Please reach out to us if you are interested in working together. If you would like to donate to the blog you can here: Donate to The Beer Thrillers. Thank you!

You can also check out our partnership and affiliation with Pretzels.com, where ordering pretzels and using our affiliate code – AFFILIATE CODE IS THEBEERTHRILLERS20 – will help you get wonderful pretzels and help us maintain and keep this blog running. Thank you!

If you would like to reach out to us for product reviews, beer reviews, press release writing, and other media – please contact us at thebeerthrillers@gmail.com. Thank you.

(Thank you for reading. The opinions, thoughts, and expressions of each article posted on The Beer Thrillers represents the author of the content and only themselves. It does not express the opinions, beliefs, or ideas held by The Beer Thrillers or any company in which the author themselves work for. Each piece of written content is written by the creator(s) listed in the authorial section on each article unless otherwise noted. Their opinions, comments, and words on screen do not represent any company in which they work for and / or are affiliated with or any non – profits that they contribute to. Thank you.)

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Three Questions and a Pint With Joel Gaier https://thebeerthrillers.com/2024/12/12/three-questions-and-a-pint-with-joel-gaier/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=three-questions-and-a-pint-with-joel-gaier Thu, 12 Dec 2024 17:27:56 +0000 https://thebeerthrillers.com/?p=15791 Three Questions and a Pint With Joel Gaier

Joel is the author of the new book Flights Across America: A Brewery Lover’s Journey. As the host of the popular “Brewery Travels” podcast, he hit the road (and the sky) to visit nearly 1400 breweries across all 50 states, including 26 in PA. He began his travels
in 2017 and his book releases on December 17th . I caught up with him by phone to share a beer and a quick chat.

Flights Across America – Cover

Three Questions

Flights Across America – blurbs

1) What was the biggest takeaway from all the breweries you visited?

Not surprisingly, that they’re all different. Breweries are sort of like fingerprints—they’re unique. But in their uniqueness, they all have a story to tell. Sometimes it’s an owner’s story about how he or she got into the business. Other times, it’s the story about a particular beer they make and why people like it. And yet another story might be about how the location for the brewery was chosen. All in all, every brewery has a story to share with the community.

2) What would people be most surprised to know about your beer travels?

Oh, how much work I put into the project. From being a hobby to visit breweries in a state where I was with my family to becoming a true obsession of visiting them in every state. We would re-route trips in order to visit a brewery. It was pretty meticulous planning at times; it wasn’t willy-nilly. While it wasn’t a job, it was still a lot of work.

3) If someone wanted to plan a “beercation” to visit a bunch of breweries, what are few things they should know before they go?

I have a few sections in my book about beer tourism and how to plan your visits. The two big tips would be to make sure to double check a brewery’s hours. Sometimes they’re inconsistent and you don’t want to make a big plan and show up on say a Thursday when a brewery is closed, thinking its hours are like the weekend’s. Or, if it is closed for maintenance or some other reason. And two, might sound obvious, but find out what type of beer the place serves—if you don’t like a certain type of beer—like sours or IPA—but that’s the type of beer a brewery specializes in, you may want to skip it.

You can see Paul’s other ‘Three Questions and a Pint’ here:

Flights Across America – Promotional

The Pint

Joel was spending some time back at home with his kids while we were talking and wasn’t having a beer. I was enjoying a Sierra Nevada Narwhal as we talked. (Sierra Nevada Narwhal.)

You can follow Joel Gaier on his Instagram at — @brewery_travels.

You can purchase the book from Amazon here: Flights Across America: A Brewery Lover’s Journey

You can read more about it on GoodReads here: Flights Across America: A Brewery Lover’s Journey (GoodReads).

Paul R. Kan

Paul R. Kan is the author of Hawai’i Beer:  A History of Brewing in Paradise which was a North American Guild of Beer Writers’ award winner and a #1 new release on Amazon’s Books on Beer.  He has written for Good Beer Hunting and is Editor-at-Large at The Beer Thrillers.  Along with beer reviews, book reviews and interviews, he also writes about the interesting ways beer intersects with people and society.  His current book project is Red, White and Brew:  The Beers and Battles that Shaped America. He lives in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.

ʻOi kau ka lā, e hana i ola honua (While the sun yet shines, do all you can).

Paul R. Kan Articles

The following are articles that Paul R. Kan has written here for The Beer Thrillers:

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