A blog full of book reviews. Every book review is exactly one hundred words long.
The Concept
I want to write reviews of all the books I read, but in the hectic hurley-burley of this fleeting life I seldom do. Then I bethought me, what if I limited myself to just one hundred words? The sheer concision would present a challenge, yet a review could be done within an hour. Hyphenated words which occur in The Oxford English Dictionary would count as one word. I permitted myself the liberty of choosing up to three quotations from the book which would be appended to the review. The author's surname should appear somewhere in the review at least once.
Stephen Covey's bestseller discusses how to integrate seven basic principles of effective living into your basic character to improve your performance from the inside out.
The principles are: Be proactive; begin with the end in Mind; put first things first; think win-win; seek first to understand; synergize; sharpen the saw.
Covey uses a computing metaphor to emphasise that "you are the programmer" of your own thoughts. By setting a mission statement, goals and roles for yourself, and seeking greater interdependence, you will, he argues, become a more effective person.
Key Quotations
Between stimulus and response, man has the freedom to choose.
Our behaviour is a function of our decisions, not our conditions.
...you simply can't think efficiency with people. You think effectiveness with people, efficiency with things.
Stephen R. Covey Born October 24, 1932 in Salt Lake City, Utah. His latest book is The 8th habit, published in 2004. Covey lives with his wife Sandra, and their family in Provo, Utah, home to Brigham Young University where Dr. Covey taught prior to the publication of his best selling book. He is a father of nine and a grandfather of forty-seven; he received the Fatherhood Award from the National Fatherhood Initiative in 2003.
No comments:
Post a Comment