Friday, December 20, 2019

The Last LectureThe Last Lecture by Randy Pausch
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

"Time is all you have. And you may find one day that you have less than you think."

The Last Lecture (2008), a New York Times bestseller, is a wonderful book indeed. For once, even such an avowed cynic and elitist as this reviewer agrees with most other readers. The book was written by a professional author, Jeffrey Zaslow, from tapes recorded by Randolph Pausch, a professor of computer science who died of cancer before reaching the age of 48. The book expands on the main topics of the actual last lecture that Dr. Pausch gave at Carnegie Mellon University after he had been given a diagnosis of only a few months to live. Yet The Last Lecture is not about dying, but an upbeat meditation on how to live:
"I lectured about the joy of life, about how much I appreciated life, even with so little of mine left. I talked about honesty, integrity, gratitude, and other things I hold dear."
The leading motif in Dr. Pausch's book is the life-driving importance of striving to achieve one's childhood dreams:
Whatever my accomplishments, all of the things I loved were rooted in the dreams and goals I had as a child... and in the ways I had managed to fulfill almost all of them."
Naturally, there is a lot about teaching in this short book and as a university professor myself I read these passages with great interest. I agree with the author that although
"[i]t is an accepted cliché in education that the number one goal of teachers should be to help students learn how to learn"
a better teaching goal is
"...to help students learn how to judge themselves."
One will find a lot of first-class, non-trivial advice on how to live, where some of the recommendations are real pearls of wisdom. Just take this:
"I'll take an earnest person over a hip person every time, because hip is short-term. Earnest is long term."
And the deepest and most beautiful sentence in the entire book about one of these things that make life worth living:
"It's a thrill to fulfill your own childhood dreams, but as you get older, you may find that enabling the dreams of others is even more fun."
Down-to-earth, simple wisdom is there too, for instance about shortcuts to success
"A lot of people want a shortcut. I find the best shortcut is the long way, which is basically two words: work hard."
Very, very strongly recommended read.
(This review is dedicated to EVK.)

Four-and-a-half stars.

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