Wednesday, November 28, 2007

The Solitaire Mystery



The Solitaire Mystery by Jostein Gaarder - I picked this book up on a whim at Barnes and Noble. I had read Sophie's World a few years ago. And I loved his style and his story. So I decided to give myself a treat.

And what a treat this was. A wonderful tale within a tale. A young boy on a journey with his father to find their mother is given a magnifying glass along his journey. Then, in another town he is given a bag of sticky buns. The baker tells the boy to keep the biggest stickey bun for himself and not to tell anyone about it. Later that night, hungry, the boy decides to devour the last stickey bun. He is surprised to find a book baked inside. The book has the tiniest writing he has ever seen. So tiny it would require a magnifying glass. Which, he just happened to have been given days earlier by a strange little man.

So begins the adventure................you'll have to read it for yourself to find out what happens.

A mix of life, mystery, adventure, and philosophy. This is a wonderful wonderful story.

Sophie's World



Sophie's World by Jostein Gaarder - I read this book a few years back. I picked it up because I had always enjoyed the idea of Philosophy and the great philosophers but found the reading material about them very dry. And the classes I took in college seemed to always put me in a coma.

This book should be required reading in Philosophy 101. It is fantastic. The story of a young girl, Sophie, who is taught philosophy by Albert. I enjoyed this book as a fictional novel in and of itself. But it was the philosophy lessons interwoven amongst the story that really made this an enjoyable book. I felt like I got more bang for the proverbial buck. A great story and an education.

Curious about understanding philosophy - this is a great place to start.