Friday, March 13, 2026

Ancient Wisdom: I Want to Die with a Book in My Hands

 Ancient Wisdom: I Want to Die with a Book in My Hands


We read differently in old age. After a lifetime of living, we have a different perspective on the things we read, often holding authors to a higher standard.


Welcome back to Ancient Wisdom, our weekly series in which writers over 70 tell us how they are aging gracefully. This week, we brought back the literary critic Joseph Epstein, 88, for a return engagement to explain why his reading habits have changed as he’s gotten older.


One often hears about those books people would like to have along if marooned alone on a desert island. The selection, at least among my fellow graybeards, doesn’t often contain many surprises: Homer, Dante, Michel de Montaigne, Dickens, Tolstoy, Proust, and a few other standbys are usually mentioned. Old age is a kind of desert island of its own. In old age one figures to have lost some friends and family to death and seen others of them lapse into ill health, perhaps even dementia. If one has arrived at old age with enough money to retire, reading, for some of us, becomes one’s main activity. That certainly includes me.
“The reading of all good books is like a conversation with the finest minds of past centuries,” Immanuel Kant wrote. And so in a sense it is, but with the obvious qualification that it is a one-way conversation, the book speaking to you, not you to it. Kant himself of course had one of those finest minds, which may have limited his reading. I don’t, which makes my own prospects for reading material nearly endless.
But reading what? Or better, reading how? My sense is that one reads differently in old age than when younger. For one thing, some writers who once seemed vital, central, indispensable, no longer seem so. For another, with one’s time before departing the planet limited, one tends to have less patience. Then, too, after a lifetime of living, one’s experience has widened; and with any luck it has also deepened, and so one has a different perspective on the things one reads or has read, often holding them to a higher standard.
In a 1978 essay in The American Scholar called “On Reading Books: A Barbarian’s Cogitations,” a Harvard historian named Alexander Gerschenkron set out three criteria for a good book: 1. It should be intrinsically interesting; 2. it should be memorable; and 3. it should be rereadable. The writing of Ernest Hemingway, fascinating to a reader in his 20s, fails to meet these criteria in one’s 80s. The same is true of F. Scott Fitzgerald, who seems callow and at times pathetically snobbish, and also of that great windbag (as he now seems to me) Ralph Waldo Emerson. While at it, add to the list Henry David Thoreau, who does not seem worth reading past the age of 18.

I consider myself moderately well read. Nobody of course is entirely well read; only some have read more than others. The best-read person I have known was the classical scholar Arnaldo Dante Momigliano (a name one can dance to). I was once in his room at the faculty club at the University of Chicago where I saw a single book on his desk, a Dostoyevsky novel, in Russian. A few days later at the same club I was having breakfast with Leon Edel, who was beginning work on a book on the Bloomsbury Group, when Arnaldo joined us. The conversation soon turned to Bloomsbury, and if you didn’t know otherwise you would have thought that Arnaldo had just finished a book on Bloomsbury, that’s how knowledgeable he was on the subject.
I find that life is too short to read about politics in any detail, too short to read anything about Pakistan or Bolivia and 20 other countries I could name, too short to read about artificial intelligence.
Proust claimed that books have it over friends. “In reading, friendship is restored immediately to its original purity. With books there is no forced sociability. If we pass the evening with those friends—books—it’s because we really want to. When we leave them, we do so with regret and, when we have left them, there are none of those thoughts that spoil friendship: ‘What did they think of us?’—‘Did we make a mistake and say something tactless?’—‘Did they like us?’—nor is there the anxiety of being forgotten because of displacement by someone else. All such agitating thoughts expire as we enter the pure and calm friendship of reading.”

I have read through Proust’s great novel, In Search of Lost Time, twice. If I thought time permitted, I would give it a third go, for on my second reading I discovered many new riches. As much as any book I can think of, it passed the Alexander Gerschenkron test: intrinsically interesting, memorable, rereadable. The novel also nicely fits Italo Calvino’s definition of a classic: “A book that has never stopped saying what it has to say.” Proust was still working on his novel as his death neared.

Once one hits 80 the phrase “Life’s too short” takes on a new reality. I find that life is too short to read about politics in any detail, too short to read anything about Pakistan or Bolivia and 20 other countries I could name, too short to read about artificial intelligence. I now also find less and less to read in The New York Review of Books, The New Yorker, the Times Literary Supplement; so, too, The Atlantic and Harper’s. I prefer reading books—those I should have read when younger, those that might awaken me to things I should have known long ago—and rereading those I failed to read carefully enough the first time round.

For example, I recently reread a reissue of Tolstoy’s last novel, Resurrection (1899), which I found disappointing in a way I did not remember when I first read it 30 or so years ago. I felt that in the novel Tolstoy had given up the role of novelist for that of critic of Russia’s military and court and prison systems, with the great artist in Tolstoy taking a back seat to the prophet.

I am also rereading Henry James’s The American Sceneand finding James, who wrote the book in his late, late style, not easygoing. Paragraphs can run two pages or more, sentences are splotched with eight or 10 semicolons, insights are not always easily come by—and I happen to be on record as a registered Jamesian. At times I feel as if I am reading in a foreign language, but of no known country.

It’s not all reruns.

I’m also reading a biography, Scipio Africanus, about the man who defeated Hannibal at the Battle of Zama in 202 BCE, giving Rome control over the Mediterranean. I have come to Roman history fairly late in life, and read everything I can find about it. Another book I am reading is Barbara Rosenwein’s Winter Dreams: A Historical Guide to Old Agean account of the way in which the elderly have been regarded over the centuries—a subject you might say in which I, at the age of 88, have a small but genuine personal interest.

Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes notes in one of his letters to Harold Laski that up to the age of 75 he finished every book he ever started, lest at the gates of heaven he be quizzed on the book he deserted. What gives this anecdote an odd twist is that Holmes was an agnostic. I am not, but am ready to desert a book I find disappointing, though this hasn’t happened very often to me, at least in recent years.

And then some kinds of books I have given up on before beginning them. Here, sadly, I have to adduce the contemporary novel. I once wrote an essay with the title “Educated by Novels,” and I still believe that at its best the novel is the genre with the highest truth content, surpassing both biography and history, for the novel is about that most fascinating of subjects, human nature. But something has happened to the form, which seems to have lost both its reach and its depth. I continue to read older novels—I not long ago immensely enjoyed Joseph Roth’s The Radetzky March (1932), and decided that Joseph, not Philip, was my Roth. I have read novels by Ian McEwan and John Banville, but they do not light my fire. Now that England is no longer a first-rank country, perhaps it can no longer produce first-rank novelists.

Fortunately, one can live quite well on the literary culture of the past. I find myself rereading, among others, George Eliot and Willa Cather, Shakespeare and Anthony Trollope, Honoré de Balzac and Stendhal. A nice thing about the reading life is you are never out of business.

I used to say that, given a choice, I should prefer to die while watching a Chicago Cubs game on television. Now I find I should prefer to die while reading a serious and entertaining book. If this were to come about, my last words figure to be, “Damn, wish I could have finished the chapter.”

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I’m glad I started before I turned 80. I just turned 60 and read around 130 books in 2025. Omar Towles has fast become my favorite author. I give books the 100 page test. If not enthralled at 100 I put down and pick up the next. I’ll never take novels for granted.
Frederick Hastings's avatar
Retired, having turned 80, and spurred by the Covid lockdown, this English major is finally reading all those great books I should have read or read more closely when young, and my experience reflects everything Epstein is writing about. I've followed him since subscribing to The American Scholar years ago because of his Aristides essays and he continues to confirm, in so many ways, my own views. I started my deep dive with the great Russian novelists ("The Brothers Karamazov" and "Anna Karenina"), Shakespeare's political trilogy ("Coriolanus," "Julius Caesar," "Antony and Cleopatra"), followed by Willa Cather's "My Antonia" and "The Death of the Archbishop." I recently read for the first time "Huckleberry Finn" and Homer's "The Odyssey," books most read when young. But I suspect I got more out of them from my present perspective than I would have in my teens. I've avoided so far "War and Peace" and Proust, partly because of their daunting length which would force me to forego other activities, but more likely it is because I know there is so much waiting for me there—a case of wanting to put off the best for last.


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The Effect: Bad Bunny — How Benito Became a Global Cultural Phenomenon (FULL EPISODE)



Taking to social media to complain about hot subway rides? You're not alone, study says

How to Check if Your Home Address Shows Up Online

CNET: “Your home address may be sensitive information but you’d be amazed at how many places you can find it online — even if you’ve recently moved. There’s a whole industry behind collecting your address and selling it, not to mention all the random places it can crop up online. That may be a concern for your security, especially if you have concerns about stalking or really want to cut down on junk mail. But how do you know where your home address is appearing? The best way to find out is to check yourself. I’ve tested out the tools and tricks below: This is exactly where you need to begin..”

The Governance Gap That Moltbook Reveals and OpenAI Just Made Urgent

Tech Policy: “When Matt Schlicht instructed his AI agent to create a social network for other AI agents, the result, Moltbook, was initially treated as a novelty. But by late February, more than 2.8 million AI agents had signed up and begun posting about Star Trek, debatingmorality and developing a religion called “Crustafarianism 

Amid media coverage that has largely framed Moltbook as either a curiosity or as a human-driven puppet show, Jing Wang’s recent analysis of the platform cut through the noise. TLDR: Moltbook is largely humans operating at a massive scale through AI proxies. Agents exhibit what Wang calls “profound individual inertia,” meaning their behavior is driven by initial prompts and underlying models, not by genuine adaptation to social interaction and feedback. As she notes, ninety-three percent of posts receive no response, there’s no shared social memory, and the 88:1 ratio of agents to human owners tells a different story than the “AI-only society” narrative.

This analysis is correct, but it misses a more important issue. Even without genuine emergent coordination, Moltbook is already producing measurable harms. It exposes a governance blind spot that extends far beyond a single platform. Wang references a Stanford study that foundwhen AI models compete for engagement metrics, as they do on Moltbook, disinformation can spike dramatically even when individual models are instructed to be truthful. Essentially, the competitive incentive structure overrode explicit instructions to be truthful. And researchers at Wiz found 1.5 million API keys were exposed in Moltbook’s infrastructure. Novel attack chains are spreading through the ClawHub marketplace, where malicious agent personas recruit other agents into cryptocurrency scams through social engineering (“Bots: They’re Just Like Us!”)..”

Does the government create wealth?

 Hitler felt that Jews should be destroyed. Whites in South Africa felt that apartheid was right, that blacks shouldn’t be allowed to use white bathrooms or white restaurants or go to white businesses or live in white neighborhoods. Feelings cannot determine what is right.

If There Is No God: The Battle Over Who Defines Good and Evil



Does the government create wealth?

People are often told that only the private sector creates wealth and that government simply wastes taxpayers' money.

That claim is everywhere in modern political debate. It underpins austerity. It justifies privatisation. And it shapes how people think about the economy.

But it is wrong.

In this video, I explain what wealth really is and how it is actually created. Wealth is not just private profit. It includes infrastructure, education, health, security, and social stability.

Historically, public enterprise built much of modern Britain. Local government created the systems that allowed private enterprise to function: sewers, electricity networks, public transport, housing, and water systems.

I also explain the money myth that underpins many of these arguments. In a modern monetary economy, government spending creates money first, and taxation later helps manage inflation. Public spending can therefore increase national wealth rather than destroy it.

The real issue is not public versus private. The real issue is whether economic activity meets social need and maintains the capitalon which our society depends.

If we want a better economy, we need to rebuild public enterprise and reject the myth that only private companies create wealth


Defence begins at home

Politicians talk endlessly about defence spending, weapons, and armies. But the first line of defence in any country is not military hardware. It is the stability of the society itself.

Do people feel secure?

Do they trust their institutions?

Do they believe government works for them?

When living standards fall, housing becomes unaffordable, and public services collapse, a country becomes divided and fragile. And a fragile society cannot defend itself.


Disinformation on U.S.-Iran war takes over the internet

Mashable: “Before the dust had settled on the ruins of the Shajareh Tayyebeh school — a casualty of the recent U.S.-Israel military strikes against Iran, and one which resulted in the deaths of up to 168 adults and children — people were already engagement-farming online. Clips of digital flight simulators were passed off as real-time ops footage, while out-of-context images of battleships and old videos of aerial missile attacks were repurposed to sell users a tale of Iranian dominance. AI-edited content proliferated. According to experts, the posts had accumulated hundreds of millions of views in just a handful of days…”


Trump administration says it can’t process tariff refunds because of computer problems

CNBC: “U.S. Customs and Border Protectiontold a U.S. Court of International Trade judge on Friday that it is not currently able to comply with his order to begin refunding about $166 billion collected in reciprocal tariffs imposed last year by President Donald Trump. CBP, in a court filing, cited its existing technology, processes and manpower requirements as the reasons it could not immediately comply with the conditions of Judge Richard Eaton’s order on the so-called IEEPA tariffs. The Supreme Court recently ruled those duties are illegal. But CBP also suggested in the new filing that it could begin issuing refunds by late April after revamping its technology. Brandon Lord, executive director of the trade programs directorate at CBP’s Office of Trade, in the filing said that as of Wednesday, more than 330,000 importers have made a total of over 53 million entries “in which they have deposited or paid duties imposed pursuant to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.” Trump had invoked that act to slap reciprocal tariffs in various amounts on imported products from most of the world’s countries, without authorization from Congress…”



Jeffrey Epstein liked to run in powerful circles.

The trove of emails and documents released by the Justice Department in January show Epstein maintained connections to a wide swath of famous people — from Elon Musk and Bill Gates to Bill Clinton and Donald Trump.

But Epstein’s own inner circle — unlike his social and professional ones — was kept small and relatively anonymous, while they facilitated his day-to-day operations as a mysteriously wealthy financier.

Inside Jeffrey Epstein’s inner circle — the aides, lawyers and confidantes who ran his world

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Dare to Act Differently and Be Happier

Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do!

 

Dare to Act Differently and Be Happier 


In financial circles, the investment strategy many people pursue during chaotic times is known as the “flight to safety.” That means dumping risky assets such as stocks and buying safer ones such as government bonds. This is not just a financial strategy, but a human one. When things get chaotic, eliminate your exposure to risk and hunker down. That’s the safe bet.




What seems the safe option is not necessarily the best one in challenging times.


Or is it? In 1932, when economic circumstances were far scarier than anything we face today—unemployment had soared to 23.6 percent and economic growth was negative 12.9 percent—Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was running for president that year, gave a speech at Oglethorpe University, in Atlanta, in which he proposedexperimenting and risk-taking as a response to trouble. “It is common sense to take a method and try it,” he told the students. “If it fails, admit it frankly and try another. But above all, try something.” He won, and he did try something—launching the New Deal, which permanently changed the role of the federal government in American life.

Just as the flight to safety has a human dimension beyond financial advice, Roosevelt’s exhortation to adopt an experimental mindset holds a daring bit of advice for all of us—one that applies not just to our economic choices but to our life more generally. Are you in a period of particular personal turbulence, feeling like a cork tossed about in currents beyond your control? Is your well-being showing red numbers as the American economy was in 1932? Consider what FDR famously went on to say at his inauguration in 1933: “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” Forget flying to safety in your old routines and familiar habits. Instead, go experiment with your happiness.

Read: The United States of fear

So what might a happiness experiment be? In effect, the academic literature that I cite almost every week in this column is loaded with examples. Such studies are behavioral interventions that, in their scientific methodology, are designed to mimic the sort of clinical trials used in testing new drugs; these tests are considered the gold standard for establishing causality.

Take, for example, a 2022 experiment about gratitude that was published in the journal Affective Science. College students recruited to this psychological study were randomly given one of four assignments: write a letter expressing gratitude to someone (without sending it), text someone a gratitude message, share a post about gratitude on social media, or make a list of ordinary daily activities. (In this experiment, the last group is the control, meaning no gratitude intervention is involved.) All three of the gratitude-sharing methods led to higher feelings of life satisfaction for the assigned participants compared with those in the control group.

This finding offers information that should be extremely useful for ordinary life: If you want to get happier, simply adopt a protocol of regularly thinking about someone for whom you feel grateful and telling them so. Maybe so, but we need to bear in mind an important proviso: This is an excellent study, but there are no absolute guarantees that you will see the same effect in your life—because either you or your benefactor for whom you’re grateful might be an outlier or have some special circumstance that creates an exception. In fact, no experiment, however perfectly designed, can guarantee a constant result.

Still, that 2022 paper is good evidence that this approach to gratitude is worth trying in your own, private experiment. You might not think of it in these terms, but you probably already conduct experiments in many areas of your life. For example, if all of your friends are following a particular TV show and rave about it, you are unlikely to say to yourself, My tastes might be different, so I’m not going to bother watching it. You’ll probably try it yourself to see. After watching an episode, you’ll see how you feel—or, to put it in more formal language, you will gauge your well-being level to see if the intervention had a positive effect. If you think it has, you keep watching; if not, you don’t.

This isn’t a perfect method—there’s no control group, and you are a sample of one!—but if you reconceive this process as your own experimental practice, it can yield many new ideas and habits for your life. This mindset can be really productive, especially when times are rough and you need to get out of a rut.

When measuring happiness, researchers have generally found the strongest positive results after focusing their experiments in a few specific areas. One 2023 literature review, in the journal Nature Human Behaviour, looked at 57 recent happiness studies and found that the most common happiness interventions were in the areas of gratitude, social interaction, mindfulness, exercise, and exposure to nature. (One job of such a systematic review is to assess the quality of available research; in this case, the study found that the gratitude experiment I cited above was among the most flawlessly executed.) An important common feature of the interventions involved in these studies is that they aim to disrupt the behavioral routines and habits that reduce people’s well-being. I mention this trait because it’s exactly why you might need the experimental mindset in your life.

If you feel you could do with a happiness boost, and are willing to do something different, try out these protocols for each of Nature Human Behaviour’s five buckets:

Week one: gratitude 
Each day for a week, start your morning by thinking for five minutes about someone who has improved your life. If that person is no longer alive, write them a note and keep it for yourself. If the individual is still living, send them a quick text or email.

Week two: social interaction 
Each day when you are in public, make a point of speaking in a friendly way with a stranger for just a few minutes. This could be the person sitting next to you on the bus or subway, or it might be someone walking their dog in your neighborhood.

Week three: mindfulness 
For 10 minutes first thing in the morning, put away your phone, sit quietly in a comfortable place, and simply pay attention to what is happening around you. Make a nonjudgmental note of what you see and what you happen to hear, and be aware of your other sensations, such as sunlight, temperature, and odors.

Week four: exercise 
Try to fit in a workout for at least half an hour each morning. If you haven’t done so in a long time—or ever—get up early every day and just walk outside for an hour, or run if you like. Whatever the activity, do it without a device so you are fully present in the experience.

Week five: nature 
Find a green space in your environment, and visit it each day for half an hour, weather permitting. If doing so is possible, sit on the grass and touch it with your hands.

To get the full benefit of making each activity your own personal experiment, write down the results. Every day, you should track a few metrics by rating variables such as positive and negative mood levels, overall life satisfaction, and your sense of connectedness with others. When each week’s experiment is complete, keep collecting your data to see whether the positive effects you recorded during the test endure or evaporate. If you follow this approach, I can virtually guarantee that you will end up with fewer negative habits and more positive ones. The ultimate success of your home-laboratory testing will be a measurable rise in your well-being.

Especially when chaos strikes, pursuing this experimental philosophy will feel neither comfortable nor natural at first. This is what Roosevelt told his young audience about that challenge in his 1932 commencement address:

Probably few will disagree that the goal is desirable. Yet many, of faint heart, fearful of change, sitting tightly on the roof-tops in the flood, will sternly resist striking out for it, lest they fail to attain it. Even among those who are ready to attempt the journey there will be violent differences of opinion as to how it should be made.

Experimenting will get easier as you experience greater success and have fun doing it. Furthermore, your experiments will spark curiosity and imitation in others, as they see you changing yourself for the better, even in a difficult outside world. They might even try it themselves—in which case your own progress will be a gift to others. As FDR concluded, “May every one of us be granted the courage, the faith and the vision to give the best that is in