Thanks for recommending the book and doing this podcast with the author.
I'm pretty busy right now so I've only gotten into the first chapter. 2 young children and writing a course on AI have me tied up at the moment, but I hope to scrape together a little time to read more. I'm always interested in a book that goes into depth on mental i…
Thanks for recommending the book and doing this podcast with the author.
I'm pretty busy right now so I've only gotten into the first chapter. 2 young children and writing a course on AI have me tied up at the moment, but I hope to scrape together a little time to read more. I'm always interested in a book that goes into depth on mental illness - "A Mother's Reckoning" by Sue Klebold would be one.
Wanted to let you know that I come at this book from a different background and it has already taught me some very important lessons. Thought my observations might be of some interest to you.
First, that 1 in 3 Jews were murdered in the Holocaust. Second, that communities like the one in Mr. Rosen's childhood had members who survived it. Third, that children were named after murdered relatives. Perhaps you think these are small things, they are not. I thought I had some concept of the Holocaust - obviously I was naive at best. I'm looking forward to the rest of the book, Mr. Rosen is an exceptional author.
Thanks for recommending the book and doing this podcast with the author.
I'm pretty busy right now so I've only gotten into the first chapter. 2 young children and writing a course on AI have me tied up at the moment, but I hope to scrape together a little time to read more. I'm always interested in a book that goes into depth on mental illness - "A Mother's Reckoning" by Sue Klebold would be one.
Wanted to let you know that I come at this book from a different background and it has already taught me some very important lessons. Thought my observations might be of some interest to you.
First, that 1 in 3 Jews were murdered in the Holocaust. Second, that communities like the one in Mr. Rosen's childhood had members who survived it. Third, that children were named after murdered relatives. Perhaps you think these are small things, they are not. I thought I had some concept of the Holocaust - obviously I was naive at best. I'm looking forward to the rest of the book, Mr. Rosen is an exceptional author.
Thank you.