How to Think like Shakespeare is my love letter to the craft of thought — pondering what we’ve lost in education today, and how we might begin to recover it.

Princeton University Press

 

In fourteen brief, lively chapters that draw from Shakespeare’s world and works, and from other writers past and present, How to Think like Shakespeare distills vital habits of mind that can help you think more deeply, write more effectively, and learn more joyfully.

 

Challenging a host of today’s questionable notions about education, I show how mental play emerges through work, creativity through imitation, autonomy through tradition, innovation through constraint, and freedom through discipline. It was these practices, and a conversation with the past — not a fruitless obsession with assessment — that nurtured a mind like Shakespeare’s. Written in a friendly, conversational tone and brimming with insights, this book enacts the thrill of thinking on every page, reviving timeless — and timely — ways to stretch your mind and hone your words.

 

Praise


A wonderful new book.

Martha Barnette, A Way with Words

How to Think like Shakespeare is a witty and wise incitement to shape our minds in old ways that will be new to almost all of us. By description and by imitation, Scott Newstok performs an improbable but delightful resurrection of five-hundred-year-old methods of engagement with words and thoughts. And hey: if they worked for Shakespeare, why shouldn’t they work for you?

Alan Jacobs, author of How to Think: A Survival Guide for a World at Odds

A lucid, human, terrifically engaging call to remember our better selves and a supremely unstuffy celebration of what’s essential.

Pico Iyer, author of The Art of Stillness: Adventures in Going Nowhere

Ranging widely from the classics right up to the present with apt quotations, all in service of ideas we lose at our peril, How to Think like Shakespeare winningly blends respect for tradition with thoughtful steps toward a more equitable society. It is the work of a Renaissance man in both senses.

Robert N. Watson, author of Cultural Evolution and Its Discontents: Cognitive Overload, Parasitic Cultures, and the Humanistic Cure

Splendid, tremendously clever, and obviously inspired by a real love of Shakespeare. The whole basic idea is terrific, with wonderful passages to illustrate each new idea.  Bravo!

Ken Ludwig, author of How to Teach Your Children Shakespeare

How to Think Like Shakespeare is not the work of an activist militating for his cause but a thinker reveling in his work. Newstok reminds us that this work is, above all, fun, and the calling on display is infectious.

Karl Schuettler, A Patient Cycle

Hugely illuminating and insightful. It should be obligatory reading for all involved in education.

David Crystal, co-author of Shakespeare’s Words

Conversationally warm and shot through with sudden connections and piercing insights . . . reading the book is a singularly convincing lesson in the very style the book is proposing as being the ideal way to learn.

— Andrew Muir, author of The True Performing of It: Bob Dylan & William Shakespeare

A fun educational tool . . . easy to digest, and the style of writing is fairly easy to follow as well. It reads like a conversation (if you annotate your book) with a very well-read friend who is sharing some ideas with you. . . . If you are looking for a book to make you think, I would highly recommend Scott Newstok’s How to Think Like Shakespeare.

— Bailey Cavender, The Educator’s Room

How to Think like Shakespeare takes the reader on a wild ride through histories of thought and habits of mind. The soil is rich and dense — much like the work of Shakespeare . . . thought stretches across areas as diverse as sociology, neuroscience, literature, languages, history, philosophy and so much more — as it should. I feel dizzy while reading and my to be read list is growing with each page.

— Jessica Manuel, Book Oblivion

Heavily but delightfully peppered with great quotes from great minds throughout history, How to Think like Shakespeare makes for a thoroughly enjoyable read. . . . through metaphor and wit, it makes just as compelling an argument as you’d expect from a mathematical proof. . . . All in all, this is a book I couldn’t do justice in any way in a simple review. Newstok has a deep and wide-ranging knowledge of literature, insight into why words have power, and an understanding of how to craft them. It presents valuable ideas in an engaging format, and will help you understand both our education systems and your own mind better.

Alexandru Micu, ZME Science

A book that caused me to think and is still nagging at me to continue thinking. . . .The book is one that that will stick with you at the edge of your mind and encourage dabbling.

Andrew Spencer, Ethics and Culture

A delight to read, the kind of book to carry with you and read in spare moment. . . . this book on education is a bit of an education itself.

Benjamin Myers, Oklahoma Baptist University

"Newstok has done a remarkable job of bringing together centuries’ worth of thinkers, putting them into conversation, and inviting us to join in”

Jenny Rebecca Rytting, SMART: Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Teaching

Scott Newstok argues persuasively for a return to some of the pedagogical methods that proved so effective in the 1500s.

Paul Muldoon, Times Literary Supplement

Scott Newstok has written an urgent account of Renaissance education and our own impoverished equivalent. Learned, pacey, full of witty observation — I loved the idea of thinking as humanity’s ‘killer app’ — it is a brilliant enactment of its own central ideas about the importance of liberated thinking and the constitutive pleasures of rhetoric. The chapter titles recall Bacon and Montaigne, essayists of Shakespeare’s time: Newstok is their worthy successor.

Emma Smith, author of This is Shakespeare

Insightful and joyful, this book is a masterpiece. It invokes and provokes rather than explains. It reminds rather than lectures. It is different from any book I have ever read. And it works. Drawing on the past in the best sense of the term, it reminds us that we are part of a long tradition. Few books make the case for liberal education as creatively as this one does.

Johann N. Neem, author of What's the Point of College? Seeking Purpose in an Age of Reform

Scott Newstok’s latest book, How to Think Like Shakespeare, could be just the game changer the teacher (and administrator should have) ordered. . . . I couldn’t help but be won over by his earnest enthusiasm for the subject and ended up wanting to hear still more.

— Robert M. LoAlbo, PlayShakespeare.com

A lively and evocative new volume . . . a beautifully written, succinct description of educational principles derived from the best features of a renaissance education. The book is “deliberately short,” but packed with quotations from the Bard and scores of great authors, all combined to make us think – and, with a little luck, to think more like “our myriad-minded Shakespeare.” I highly recommend Newstok’s book for its pith, clarity, and insight – and the sheer breadth of its bibliography, including delightful footnotes, a bibliographic essay, and an index of Shakespearean cornucopia.

Robert JacksonInstitute for Classical Education

The author’s enthusiasm, a comprehensive coverage of his subject matter, and the common sense inherent in his value judgments, work together to whip up a likeminded enthusiasm in his readers. . . . no one can deny the passion, the brilliance of the thought, the cogency of the argument, and the depth and breadth of the writer’s knowledge.

Ian Lipke, Queensland Reviewers Collective

Great energy and clarity . . . entertaining throughout: the writer convinces us that he is learning with us, that we are learning with him . . . One of the great features of this eloquent, uplifting, enthusiastic yet realistic and beautifully produced book is its strong sense of moment.

Tony Voss, Shakespeare in Southern Africa

Its surface pleasures take the shape of an inviting complexity of argument, quotation, and enthusiasm that dress a body of learning in bright colors of conversation; its deeper reward is nothing less than a stance toward life, and a mode of making meaning, that is by turns practical and profound. . . . An uncommon commonplace book, a convivial defense of liberal education, and a toolbox of practices and inspirations, How to Think Like Shakespeare is flirtatious in its learning and altogether captivating.

Jim Mustich, author of 1000 Books to Read before you Die

A slim, surprising exploration of the value that deeply human engagement has in a world full of data points and distractions.

Rebecca Koenig, EdSurge

How to Think Like Shakespeare playfully juxtaposes early modern and contemporary habits of thought by way of wide-ranging examples. . . . thought-provoking and enjoyable, it’s the type of book that I would like to recommend to my university students to read for pleasure — precisely because it is brief and lively and could easily engender serious reflection about how we think.

Michael Cop, Parergon

The single best book I ever read on understanding Shakespeare's mind!

Jacopo della Quercia, author of License to Quill

A lovely little book.

Phillip Dolitsky, First Things

How to Think Like Shakespeare dangles insights woven from dozens of sources and it enticed me to try to think in ways toward which it gestures, to turn and assemble them, to sit at this table and be touched by the unexpected in the well-known.

William West, Studies in English Literature

It’s short and sweet. It’s lovely — a beautiful little book.

Russ Roberts, EconTalk

With crisp, lapidary prose, Newstok writes authoritatively about the educational norms and practices that helped shape Shakespeare’s mind. . . . As Newstok essays the contours of a Renaissance education, he demonstrates with verve the effect it’s had on his own thinking. Put otherwise, the book is Newstok’s essay at thinking—and it’s a sterling attempt. . . . It will be of interest to any reader or teacher of Shakespeare—and it should be of interest to any serious reader or teacher. Watching Newstok think with Shakespeare is inspiring, and he proves an amiable guide. — Nathan M. Antiel, Principia: A Journal of Classical Education

A fine, playful new book . . . it is delightful to read. . . . The elegance of the physical book, each essay/chapter prefaced with a gorgeous image that comments on its subject matter . . . embodies the artisanal practice Newstok celebrates, as does the craftiness of his own style . . . its method is exuberantly positive.

Elizabeth Hanson, Shakespeare Studies

A wonderfully light-footed and erudite investigation of education (and so much more), by means of Shakespeare (and so much more). Scott Newstok’s book, a playful delight, also delivers a serious pedagogical punch.

Sarah Bakewell, author of How to Live: Or a Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at an Answer

A beautiful study of how we learn, why we write, what our education is for — and by “we,” I mean everyone. Lovely book for anyone who wants to write, read, think better . . .

Arthur Phillips, author of The King at the Edge of the World

Scott Newstok’s How to Think like Shakespeare is something to treasure. The book lays out a case for Shakespeare’s vital connection to the lives we live today, opening the door to new ways of thinking and experiencing the world, which are essential to a life well lived.

Michael Witmore, director of the Folger Shakespeare Library

As a concise history of Western pedagogical development, How To Think Like Shakespeare succeeds beautifully. . . . By the end of How To Think Like Shakespeare, [Newstok] has us thoroughly convinced. To think and create effectively requires one to train and practice. By apprenticing ourselves to the past, we can ourselves become links in the glorious chain of human intellectual achievement.

— Fernanda Moore, Chapter 16



This is a little gem of a book. It builds on a brilliant piece that appeared in The Chronicle of Higher Education a couple of years ago, but goes far beyond its scope. It combines an exploration of Humanist ideas of education with a devastating critique of the disease of managerialism that has invaded so many parts of our life, including education. Among other things, it offers the pleasures of a modern commonplace book, brimming with so many choice thoughts that you feel the urge to scribble them down. The book is written with elegance and wit; the last chapter in particular is a tour de force.
Indira Ghose, University of Fribourg, Switzerland

This delightful book is an odd treasure. . . . [it’s] an educational manifesto that should make for better people, better schools, colleges and universities, and better social relations between and among free citizens. There is a potential revolution in this odd treasure of a little book. Give it to some of your colleagues, if you think it isn't too late for them, but give it to all of your students. Let them know what they may have been missing – before it is too late.

Scott Crider, Ben Jonson Journal

What a joy it was to read a book about Renaissance literature and education that not only describes these things with full respect for their historical peculiarities, but also entertains the idea that they belong (or could belong) to us in the present, as equipment for living! And what a pleasure to read essays rather than articles! . . . an achievement worthy of celebration . . . I thoroughly enjoyed this book and recommend that anyone who cares about teaching and learning read it again and again.

Sean Keilen, Cahiers Élisabéthains

A lucid, attractive essay that wears its learning lightly and with style. . . . How to Think Like Shakespeare would have been a good book at any time; now it is a necessary one.

David Randall, Academic Questions

A bracing, witty argument for a pedagogy that is at once old and new. . . . what he demonstrates in his playful, infectiously enthusiastic pages is a more modest and more proximate idea of freedom: the kind that appears in the sheer joy of reading and learning.

Samuel Fallon, Renaissance Quarterly

If to think like Shakespeare may appear as an arduous if not impossible task, thinking with Shakespeare, trying to absorb the complexity of his reasoning, would be a good enough exercise in nuanced thinking and daring creativity.

Gabriela Dragnea Horvath, Voyages Journal of Contemporary Humanism

Newstok’s passion for his subject comes across to the reader throughout the book.

Peter Sutton, Forum for Modern Language Studies

Words, words, words


Awards and Book of the Year

Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year, Paul Muldoon

Shortlist, Memoria College's Parnassus Prize

Finalist, Professional and Scholarly Excellence (PROSE) Awards, Association of American Publishers (AAP)

Nominee, Frederick W. Ness Book Award, American Association of Colleges & Universities

Nominee, Grawemeyer Award for Education, University of Louisville

Nominee, Teaching Literature Book Award, Idaho State University

Nominee, Falstaff Book Award, PlayShakespeare.com

A Few of My Favorite Things, Stephen J. Anderson

Humanities Books of the Year, David Auerbach

Non-Fiction Books of the Year, Julian Girdham

Memorable Reading from 2020, Timothy Huebner

My Favorite Reads of 2020, David Wells

Audio Book

Narrated by Gabriel Vaughan (founding member of the Tennessee Shakespeare Company) for Tantor Media — available on libro.fm (which shares revenue with local bookstores), audiobooks.com, audible.com, Google Play, Recorded Books

Essays

How to Speak with ShakespeareThe First Person (TFP) with Michael Judge

Well, Shakespeare, He’s in the AlleyThe First Person (TFP) with Michael Judge

Letting Hamnet Net HamletThe Shakespeare Newsletter

By Going Virtual During the Pandemic, We’ve Lost Our Sense of PlaceDallas Morning News

Suggestions for First-Year Seminars

How to Think like a Hypocrite: A Letter to My ChildrenNexus Institute

The Best Books on Shakespeare’s Sonnets — with Sophie Roell for Five Books

Of CraftInstitute for Classical Education

What’s Past is Prologue (Preface) — Resilience.org

James Baldwin on ShakespeareLitHum

A Brief Note on Riots and ShakespeareNo Sweat Shakespeare

We Would All Do Well to Think More Like ShakespeareDallas Morning News

Happy Birthday, Bob Dylan — LinkedIn

How to Think like a Sonnet, or, Fourteen Ways of Looking Around a RoomShakespeare & Beyond, Folger Shakespeare Library

Lorraine Hansberry on Shakespeare — LinkedIn

Happy Birthday Shakespeare!The Book Haven

How to Think like Shakespeare (Quarantine edition) — LinkedIn

Book Noteslargehearted boy

Of ConversationShakespeare & Beyond, Folger Shakespeare Library

The Page 99 TestCampaign for the American Reader

Remote — But CloseRhodes College

Of Thinking — Princeton University Press preview

The Truth about Shakespeare in DuluthPerfect Duluth Day

How to Think like ShakespeareThe Chronicle of Higher Education

The Crafts of FreedomChapter 16

A Plea for ‘Close Learning’ — Inside Higher Ed

Interviews

New Books NetworkJustin McGeary

The Arts of LanguageAndrew Pudewa

Old Books with GraceGrace Hamman

Recovering the Lost Art of Thinking in Education, with David Hogsette and Selina Lai-Henderson

Friday FeaturesMars Hill Audio

Plague, Power, and Poetry - PBK Triennial 2021, with Katherine Steele Brokaw, Ruben Espinosa, and Ayanna Thompson

Mechanics’ InstituteTaryn Edwards

Virtual Memories ShowGil Roth

Mars Hill Audio Ken Myers

Read More BooksJeremy Anderberg

How to Think like Marlowe: Orson Welles’s Detour from ShakespeareShakespeare Birthplace Trust with Paul Edmondson

The Good Life PodcastSean Murray

How and Where I WriteDavid Moore

European Speechwriter Network

EdSurgeRebecca Koenig; reposted at StayCurious

The Art of Manliness Brett McKay

EconTalk Russ Roberts

National Humanities Center

This is Not a PipeChris Richardson

Shakespeare for All Maria Devlin McNair

Works of GeniusMichael Goldberg’s Stay Human program on KAXE radio

Historically ThinkingAl Zambone

Innovation Talk Michael Lester

The Stage Show Michael Cathcart

bUneke radio Mary Brotherton and Gene Albertson

Thinking to Be WisePaul Massari for Colloquy, Harvard’s GSAS alumni magazine

Christian Humanist Nathan Gilmour

Stay Human Michael Goldberg

Raj Persaud in Conversation

A Conversation with Andrew Hui, Zena Hitz and Scott Newstok

UCI New Swan Shakespeare CenterJulia Lupton

That Shakespeare Life Cassidy Cash

The Morning ShowKAXE Northern Community Radio with Heidi Holtan and John Bauer

The Nearness of Shakespeare’s ThinkingTimothy Kircher, Humanities Watch

Advice to WritersJon Winokur

State of ShakespeareJames Elliott and Gerritt VanderMeer

Look Another Way — with Emma Smith, James Shapiro, and Theatre for a New Audience founding director Jeffrey Horowitz

Books Q&ADeborah Kalb

Great BooksJohn Miller

LitHub — roundtable with Vanessa CorrederaJames Shapiro, Emma Smith, and Jeffrey R. Wilson

Writing Routines

Daily Stoic

Inside Higher Ed

The Chronicle of Higher Education

Phi Beta Kappa

Big Beacon Radio

Memphis Magazine

Reviews

QuidditasSteven Hrdlicka

Principia: A Journal of Classical EducationNathan M. Antiel

Shakespeare StudiesElizabeth Hanson

Studies in English Literature William West

All Manner of Thing — Craig Burrell

Fortnightly ReviewAnthony O’Hear

Socrates - Head of SchoolMark Engstrom

The European Legacy Oren Harman

Bard Blogger Charlotte Gehring

ATTENTION Ronald K. L. Collins

The Little White Attic Hai Di Nguyen

Cocreatively ThinkingWillis Jensen

Voyages Journal of Contemporary HumanismGabriela Dragnea Horvath

Ethics and CultureAndrew Spencer

Parergon Michael Cop

Learning StrategiesLarry Davidson

ZME ScienceAlexandru Micu

Renaissance QuarterlySamuel Fallon

Soldiers and CivilizationReed Bonadonna

StyleJohn D. Schaeffer

Word.Image.DesignSimon Nazer

Chicago TribuneJohn Warner

Better Thinking & Incentives: Lessons From ShakespeareFarnam Street

Slow ReadsPeter Stephens

Academic QuestionsDavid Randall

A Book Owl’s CornerNaemi Fischer

Cahiers Élisabéthains: A Journal of English Renaissance StudiesSean Keilen

Robin Lithgow

In the Company of BooksJim Mustich

Brian Jenner

Teachers College RecordMelissa Johnson

Bob on BooksBob Trube

To Think or Not to ThinkAaron J. Brown

Theresa Smith

Nuova informazione bibliograficaGilberta Golinelli

Ripe Good ScholarSarah Plaskett

This Ain’t the LyceumKelly Mantoan

Tweetspeak PoetryGlynn Young

Moreana — Christopher D. Schmidt

Thinking Like Shakespeare – TodayShakespeare in Southern Africa, Tony Voss

Yale Historical Review — London Johns

San Francisco Book ReviewAxie Barclay

Get Your Shakespeare OnThomas C. Foster

Thinking, Writing, Reading, TeachingJulian Girdham

Innovation Through ConstraintUniversity Bookman, Matthew Stewart

Space Station MirMiriam Laufer

The Educator’s RoomBailey Cavender

Ben Jonson JournalScott Crider

George Kelley

Five BooksSophie Roell

The Northern Review of BooksAlan Dent

Book Marks

Bringing Back the Art of ThinkingStandpoint India, Sakshi Shivpuri

Renaissance Education for our TimeBad Assessment, Erik Gilbert

Australian Book ReviewDavid McInnis

A Way with Words at Home

Shakespeare GeekDuane Morin

No Sweat Shakespeare — Ralph Goldswain

What Is College For?Inside Higher Ed, Steven Mintz

La vocación intelectual El debate de hoy, Joshua P. Hochschild

In Search of Shakespeare’s MindLos Angeles Review of Books, Daniel Blank

The Key ReporterLouis J. Kern

The American ConservativeCasey Chalk

Tes (Times Educational Supplement)Victoria Addis

Mine Eyes Be Blessed MadeFourteen Lines, Tom Fry

The Intellectual Vocation First Things, Joshua P. Hochschild

sententiae antiquae, Erik Robinson

Yak ShavingA Way With Words radio (review excerpt)

Jumper NationEma Klugman

Giving new validity to old formAndrew Muir

Queensland Reviewers CollectiveIan Lipke

Institute for Classical EducationRob Jackson

Chocolate ’n Children

A Patient CycleKarl Schuettler

Chapter 16; Commercial Appeal —Fernanda Moore

PlayShakespeare.comRobert M. LoAlbo

Scott Newstok’s 2020 Book about Renaissance Education and Walter J. Ong’s ThoughtThomas Farrell

Cameos

What Progressive Educators Get Wrong about EducationDaniel Buck

Close Reading — some recent work

Imitation as Progress — Learning to WriteJohn Nielsen

For the love of memorizationDaniel Buck

A Winter Break Reading List on Skills for ScholarsJames M. Lang

The best books about thinkingShepherd

Teacher Guide for The Tempest Core Knowledge Foundation

Why Renaissance Educators Were “Incredibly Invested” in the Verbal ArtsRichard Rabil, Jr.

The best books on Shakespeare's shelf to grow your mind & your gardenGerit Quealy

Shakespeare Festival ReadsLeft Bank Books

Substack Reads: Inside Top Gun, pigeon keeping in NYC, and what Shakespeare taught Dylan

An Open Book: May 2022 Reads

Human FundamentalsCommonweal Magazine

Shakespeare’s Education and What It Teaches UsDuncan Driver

Peter Case

Rujiazg

7 Best Books for Intellectual Growth

Wylie High SchoolCaitlin Waits

Catholic School MattersTimothy Uhl

Civic RenaissanceAlexandra Hudson

Support for Teaching — Rhodes College

Marveling at Shakespeare’s Work: What If the Texts Were the Standards?John Robert Reynolds

The Month in BooksNerdishly

A Closer Look at “Skills for Scholars”

High Minded Self-Help! Enriching life through deep thought

Why Johnny Can’t ThinkRob Jenkins

Words Matter – 7 Takeaways for July 11, 2021

The Capacity to be Alone – 7 Takeaways for June 13, 2021

Education Must be About Thinking – 7 Takeaways for June 6, 2021

Instructional Materials for Wayne Smith's courses

Summer Reading ListPhi Beta Kappa

Revolutions of Virtues: Revisiting the Underpinnings of Rhetorical Education — Eric Reid Hamilton

Phillips Academy Andover 2021 summer reading listMichael Legaspi

St. John’s College Bookstore — Education

Shelf AwarenessRobert DiYanni

Less Wrong Recommended Reading

Lukas Murdock

Ripe Good Scholar Sarah Plaskett

Shakespeare’s Sonnets

Hannah Arendt Center

Front Porch Republic

Education | Academic Best SellersLibrary Journal

By the Time You Read This, We Will Already Be Dead — Maria Ugas

¿Generaciones perdidas? Parte II; Parte II— Luisa Fernanda Pasillas Pliego

How to Think like Ira Aldridge

The Agency Reading List

Screenwriting

Dana Gioia on Learning, Poetry, and Studying with Miss Bishop

Common reading when dorm rooms become dorm Zooms

Common Reading; Princeton University Press catalog

You are What You ReadRobert DiYanni

Constrained Writing: It’s a Thing!

To Learn to Desire to Learn: On Shakespeare and Education

Omaha Public Library

Five Books for Shakespeare Lovers, or Those Who Want to Be: Doorways In

Roundhouse Poetry Circle

Shakespeare’s Sonnets Podcast

Dinesh Holmes

Michael Brosnan

In the Company of BooksJames Mustich

Only the brave launched books in 2020George Anders

Books for Readers with Big QuestionsPrinceton University Press

Debugging the Grace of Great Things with Kafka and Other Great WritersJohn Robert Reynolds

The Paradoxes of Liberal Learning: From Aphthonius to Shakespeare to Bob Dylan — podcast discussion of the book with my generous friend Clinton Brand.

Lee Hinman

Top 10 Best Shakespeare Literary Criticism of 2020

Front Porch Republic

The Shakespeare Guild

Prufrock — Daily newsletter on books, art, and ideas.

Rick Dixon

Critical Thinking in PsychologyRon Sheese

15+ Best Books for TeachersAli Kaya, Abakcus

Shakespeare FestivalThrift Books

Public ShakespeareJeffrey R. Wilson

7 Best Books for Intellectual GrowthLost in Book

Swiss Association of Medieval and Early Modern English Studies

A Compendium of Recent Research and Books of Interest to Higher Education ProfessionalsThe Council of Independent Colleges (CIC)

LibraryThing

How to Think Like . . .GoodReads

The Elm — Washington College student newspaper, Sophie Kerr lecture series

Long Distance Call — podcast with Eliza Harvey and Geraldine Doogue

The South Roan AgrarianWinged Elm Farm

The Thrill of Thinking — online seminar offered by Clinton Brand

Alumni Updates — Graduate School of Arts and Sciences

Why Smart Satire Soothes the Psyche — Ian Warden, Canberra Times

The Critic’s NotebookThe New Criterion

Grinnell College

Historically Thinking podcast

Skills for Scholars — Princeton University Press

100 Academic Books Daily

National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS)

Interview with Zena HitzAthwart

(Roughly) DailyLawrence Wilkinson

Inspire Thought — Princeton University Press

Arts & Letters Daily

Shakespeare’s LifetimeThe Best of Shakespeare

Saturday Morning Reading RecommendationsBenjamin McEvoy

We made 2020. How do we make the future from here?Maitri Erwin

Recent Books with Harvard ConnectionsHarvard Magazine

Paper Kingdoms 4Adam G. Hooks interviewed by Benjamin Higgins

Spotlight on Lifelong LearningLaura Loth, WKNO

Book OblivionJessica Manuel

Fifteen on FridayDavid Wells

Humanitas Unbound

Cal Newport Study Hacks Blog

High School Graduation GiftsUnique Gifter

Suddenly they all died. The end. — Kay Kauffman

Home, Holding the PenJames Diedrick

The Real Mr. Fitz

Bugün Ne Okuyoruz?

What We Are Reading TodayArab News

Rhodes College News

Liberal Arts Seminar, Asbury University

Bad Assessment

Opera Memphis

About Masks (Plus a personal note at the end)David R. Kotok

King Lear’s Inner Breakdowns — and OursThomas Farrell