Monday, February 16, 2026

Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl

I finally understand hwy Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl is a classic read. Through his experience at Auschwitz, Frankl solidifies his psychoanalytic framework taken from Nietzche's "He who has a Why to live for can bear almost any How" (p6). Frankl makes the distinction that suffering on its own is not meaningful, it is masochistic. However,  Frankl saw three possible sources for meaning in life: 1) work 2) love 3) courage during difficult times. This meaning making forms the basis of Frankl's philosophy and he uses his own experience as an extreme example of this. 

That said, meaning making was not only masochistic or moral. Frankl felt that those who had a rich inner life had a better rate of survival saying that memories of love, his writing work-in-progress, and philosophy kept those were less physically strong alive. In that way, those who thought only of the past inherently rendered their current lives as worthless: "Regarding our “provisional existence” as unreal was in itself an important factor in causing the prisoners to lose their hold on life; everything in a way became pointless. Such people forgot that often it is just such an exceptionally difficult external situation which gives man the opportunity to grow spiritually beyond himself" (p76). All of this - the experience of the camps, meaning making, the cruelty, the resilience, the humor; all of it was so human. Frankl cites his experience of mercy at the hands of a certain officer because Frankl listened to his love stories (p35). We have come to know Man as he really is. After all, man is that being who invented the gas chambers of Auschwitz; however, he is also that being who entered those gas chambers upright, with the Lord’s Prayer or the Shema Yisrael on his lips (Harold Kushner, p9). 

Frankl's telling of his experience is so important because it dignifies and demystifies the concentration camps in such an earnest way - "it is easy for the outsider to get the wrong conception...mingled with sentiment and pity. [There] was an unrelenting struggle for daily bread and for life itself, for one's own sake or for that of a good friend," (p16).

On a personal note, Frankl said that, sometimes, during their lunch hour, a prisoner would sing Italian arias. My grandfather used to sing Italian arias at our biweekly dinners as a child. I wonder if that was new or if he had experiences 

Anyway, this book was excellent!

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Churchill: A Life by Martin Gilbert

Churchill: A Life by Martin Gilbert is the authoritative biography of Sir Winston Churchill. This book is so long and Churchill's story so robust, it's hard to know where to start with this review. Churchill truly was a phenom and a world leader in a way that not many people have been since. The biggest theme in this book was that Churchill was relentlessly eager, lively, and prescient. 

Starting in childhood with his foundation, Churchill grew up kind of a sad little boy; he missed his parents and when he was sent off to boarding school he wrote them "you must be happy without me" (p8). He was scarred by the early loss of his father, a significant political figure in his own right, and was quite close to his mother, an American aristocrat. Much of Churchill's early success from childhood to his early career can be accredited to his own grit and determination as well as the support of his mother, Lady Randolph. It seems like Churchill's personality and drive was heavily informed by a sense that he had to prove his worth to his parents and he felt sort of neglected. This made him eager and driven, working without pause from bed at all hours until the end of his life. 

Additionally, Churchill was lively and energetic. He lived to 90 years old - a long time by any standard - and lived a lot of life in those 90 years. Churchill was an adventure seeker- was a prisoner of war eager to keep going back to the front and a highly successful author in the meantime. He saw battle in the colonial empire in India, South Africa and then later in WWI and WWII. Churchill was a venturesome aristocrat whose parents traveled frequently as a child and he later did the same, gallivanting and painting around Europe, the British Isles, political trips to the USA, Canada, and Russia. He was shaped by the time; an imperialist power broker eager to get in on and stay in the action until the very last days when he was in his eighties. In this way, his story reminded me of former President Joe Biden- someone who made major policy reforms but stayed in power after his advisers recommended retirement.

Finally, a major theme of this book is the veneration of Churchill as prescient. While a liberal, he was far ahead of his time in establishing a minimum wage and a right to a break while working in the Mines Eight Hours Bill. Later, as a Conservative, the party in which he spent most of his career, he invented tanks, predicted the pace of WWI, foresaw the critical importance of air power in the coming wars, and identified specific battles to come years in advance. He was highly strategic and tuned into the world around him in nearly every way. The best example of a wise investment by his government was the cypher by which the UK decrypted German messages. Without that, they may have lost the war. Churchill deserves the credit given here as his predictions were astoundingly accurate and far reaching. 

Overall, this biography of Churchill was a major challenge to read. It probably took me the longest of any book in a long time, going day by day in Churchill's activities. Unless you're really passionate about Churchill, I wouldn't recommend it. 

Miscellaneous quotes & facts - 

"Take a reasonable position & argue it persistently" (p162)

"You have only to endure to conquer. You have only to persevere to save yourselves, and to save all those who rely upon you," (p279). 

"Things never turn out as well as you expect them, it is also true they never turn out as badly" (p343)

"To be great, one's actions must be able to be understood by simple people," (p359) a quote from Clementine

Germany held an election in which only the Nazi Party was allowed to canvass, so they won 95% of the vote and he later ordered the murder of his senior rivals in the Nazi Party (p523, 529).

Churchill's important criticism of the neutral states: "Each one hopes that if it feeds the crocodile enough, the crocodile will eat him last. They all hoped that the storm would pass before their turn comes to be devoured," (p632). 

"There never was a war in all history easier to prevent by timely action than [WWII]," (p867). 

Questions to Italy about fascism:

"1) Is there the right to free expression of opinion and of opposition and criticism of the Government of the day? Have the people the right to turn out a Government of which they disapprove, and are constitutional means provided by which they can make their will apparent? 

2) Are their courts of justice free from violence by the Executive and from threats of mob violence, and free of all association with particular political parties? Will these courts administer open and well-established laws which are associated in the human mind with the broad principles of decency and justice? 

3) Will there be fair play for poor as well as for rich, for private persons as well as Government officials? 

4) Will the rights of the individual, subject to his duties to the State, be maintained and asserted and exalted? 

5) Is the ordinary peasant or workman, who is earning a living by daily toil and trying to bring up a family, free from the fear that some grim police organisation under the control of a single Party like the Gestapo, started by the Nazi and Fascist Parties, will tap him on the shoulder and pack him off without fair or open trial to bondage or ill-treatment?" (p789,790)


I picked this book up because Winston Churchill is arguably one of the most significant figures of the last 150 years. Separately from the Churchill part of this, this book also made me realize I really don't know much detail about WWII, so I'm going to work on that this year. It was interesting to contextualize Indian Independence and Mahatma Ghandi, the independence of Myanmar/Burma, independence of South Africa, etc, with Churchill and the world wars. It is also crazy how much political mistakes were made - the administration immediately prior to and even during the beginning of WWII was defunding their military, per the advice of Lord Chamberlain (p513). I wonder how many Londoners could have been saved had there been more adequate air power available. I wouldn't recommend this book to other people but I do want to read more about WWII now.

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

2025 Books in Review

2025 was an okay year in books for me. I read 17 books, a little lower than my typical. I am in progress of reading what would have been my longest book, Churchill: A Life by Martin Gilbert, which is 960 pages. That will probably be one of my first finished books in 2026.  

Overall, this year was full of solid books and diverse topics ranging from politics to anthropological histories of people such as freed slaves from the South, Polynesian cultures, and the Irish. Most of my books this year were either memoirs or those types of cultural histories. All 17 were non-fiction. In 2026, I might try to throw in a fiction book for the first time since February 2023! I really loved Tevye the Dairy Man so I may try a folk fiction book. 

Normally, I do a pseudo-unit of topics and I'll read a couple of books about that topic. This year I strayed away from that and struggled to feel consistently inspired by some of the books on my list. In 2026, I hope to read more like 20 books, my usual, and do some deeper dives. I'm more interested in political histories so I'm hoping to find some good books that dive deeper into wars and power brokers across the world and also spend more time reading about the brain & body. 

Some interesting stats:

My shortest book: On Tyranny (127 pages)

My longest book: Warmth of Other Suns (640 pages)

My average length of book: 381 pages

Total number of pages read: 6,388. 


Rather than giving an official ranking, I prioritized my favorite books qualitatively. 

Most useful book: Leadership in the US Senate 

This book was a great resource as a practitioner of political processes and I'd highly recommend it

Easiest to read: I'm Glad My Mom Died by Jeanette McCurdy, but Born a Crime by Trevor Noah is second. 

Jeanette McCurdy & Trevor Noah both struck a balance of the writing style being relatable and easy to read but each book was filled with incredibly thoughtful insights.  

Most unexpected book: Say Nothing by Patrick Radden Keefe

This is the second book I've read by this author. His writing is nonfiction that is impossible to put down. The other book I read by him was Empire of Pain a couple of years ago and it blew my mind. I read  knew nothing about the Troubles in Ireland before and I could barely put this book down plus I learned so much! 

Honorable Mention: Price of Power: How Mitch McConnell Mastered the Senate, Changed America, and Lost His Party

This book was probably the most relevant book I read all year and was incredibly good. I can't recommend this book enough for those who are interested in understanding today's political system. Reading this book with Leadership in the US Senate was a tiny unit of political history. I found them both to be extremely insightful, honest, highly informed, and like a reliable source of information much more so than the political chatter flying around most pundits. I put this as an honorable mention because I absolutely loved the book but I'm not sure it fits in cleanly into a reason why. 


Best Blog Posts

Admittedly, most of my blog posts this year were pretty short. This year was busy and, because I wasn't inspired by a lot of my books, the blog posts weren't the best. That being said, my best are listed below- 

Too Big To Fail by Andrew Ross Sorkin 

Leadership in the US Senate by Colton C Campbell 


Prior Years:

2024 I didn't do one!

2023 Books In Review


I enjoyed writing this and will try to start doing these in future years!

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

The Woman in Me by Britney Spears

 The Woman in Me by Britney Spears was a diary-style memoir of Britney Spears life & career from childhood though conservatorship to today. The book was very easy to read because it used short sentences & simple syntax. It wasn't bad, but I don't think I'd recommend it. 


Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl

I finally understand hwy  Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl is a classic read. Through his experience at Auschwitz, Frankl soli...