Purpose is an active expression of our values and our compassion for others—it makes us want to get up in the morning and add value to the world. The Power of Purpose details a graceful, practical, and ultimately spiritual process for making it central to your life. This revitalized guide will help you integrate it into everything you do.
This fourth edition has been completely revised and updated. With a new co-author, new stories and examples and resources, it taps into the broader need for purpose in our post-pandemic world. With more than 40% new content, readers will discover new insights on purpose, a new chapter on Becoming a Purposeful Leader, and The Purpose Formula which includes mind-opening questions to help you unlock your purpose and to live a life of meaning and fulfillment.
If you're injuring someone, you should stop—and pay for the damage you've caused. Why, this book asks, does this simple proposition, generally accepted, not apply to climate change? In Climate Justice, a bracing challenge to status-quo thinking on the ethics of climate change, renowned author and legal scholar Cass Sunstein clearly frames what’s at stake and lays out the moral imperative: When it comes to climate change, everyone must be counted equally, regardless of when they live or where they live—which means that wealthy nations, which have disproportionately benefited from greenhouse gas emissions, are obliged to help future generations and people in poor nations that are particularly vulnerable.
Throughout your life, you’ve been slowly indoctrinated to believe that money is the only type of wealth. In reality, your wealthy life may involve money, but in the end, it will be defined by everything else.
After three years of research, personal experimentation, and thousands of interviews across the globe, Sahil Bloom has created a groundbreaking blueprint to build your life around five types of wealth: Time Wealth, Social Wealth, Mental Wealth, Physical Wealth, and Financial Wealth. A life of true fulfillment engages all five types—working dynamically, in concert across the seasons of your journey.
Emily Walker hates having her carefully crafted world disrupted by anyone, most of all her legendary nemesis, Jack Bennett. He’s the opposite of the wonderful heroes she dreams up in her double life as a romance writer, which is why Emily was perfectly happy when Jack left Rome, Kentucky, mid-school year with his fiancée. The last thing Emily saw coming was Jack’s return at the start of the summer after calling off the wedding and ending his relationship, but he’s here to stay—as her colleague and her neighbor.
Jack is glad to be back, eager to renovate his house and work on the next mystery novel under his bestselling pen name. But when he realizes he’s now neighbors with the one woman who has always pushed his buttons, he discovers something he’s even more excited about—thwarting Emily and her petty plans to sabotage his return.
With their chemistry-fueled animosity at an all-time high, Emily accidentally sends an email to their school’s principal that could reveal her secret literary side hustle. She needs to steal back her manuscript, and Jack—she hates to admit—is just the man to help her. Surprisingly, he agrees. Will their unlikely alliance put an end to their rivalry? Or could it lead to a steamy plot twist they never saw coming?
«Que, entendidas en términos extremos, la libertad y la igualdad sean opciones alérgicas la una a la otra no puede querer decir que estemos condenados a la injusticia. Sino, más sencillamente, que hay que renunciar a las utopías, a las opciones extremas».
Firme defensor de ideales como la libertad y la democracia, durante más de cinco décadas Mario Vargas Llosa ha reflexionado en su obra literaria y en sus textos periodísticos sobre los problemas que conlleva la utopía política. Las piezas reunidas en este volumen colocan en el foco tres contextos que el autor conoce de primera mano.
«A pesar de que América Latina, Israel e Irak son lugares distantes, con historias culturales y políticas difícilmente equiparables, no es tan difícil encontrar un hilo invisible que los une. […] Aquel periodo de tranquilidad ideológica que parecía haber llegado con la caída del comunismo demostró ser una ilusión. La historia seguía viva, más que nunca. El radicalismo islámico, el nacionalismo y el populismo no han dejado en estos años de ser amenazas serias para la libertad y la democracia. Estos ideales se han alejado un poco más, lamentablemente. América Latina no se convirtió en un oasis purgado de todos los vicios modernos, ni en la región donde surgiría un socialismo humanista y libertario. Al contrario, ha sido la política del resto de Occidente la que ha terminado pareciéndose a la latinoamericana: los demonios incubados en el reverso de la utopía —el fanatismo, el nacionalismo, el odio sectario, el populismo— andan sueltos, y ahora acechan a la humanidad entera». — Del prólogo de Carlos Granés
Solemos identificar a María Moliner con su diccionario, «el más completo, útil y divertido de la lengua castellana», según García Márquez. ¿Pero por qué se sentó a escribirlo a los cincuenta años, en plena dictadura franquista? ¿Cómo pudo completar, prácticamente sola, el diccionario de autora más importante de todos los tiempos?
Hasta que empieza a brillar cuenta la historia íntima de María Moliner, partiendo de una atractiva premisa literaria: narrar de cuerpo entero a la protagonista a través de su vínculo con la lengua. A la vez, nos propone una sugerente hipótesis: ¿y si su diccionario fuese también una suerte de autobiografía oculta?
Esta es la vida novelada de una figura apasionante, retratada desde una infancia difícil hasta un final insospechado, pasando por su extraordinaria labor como bibliotecaria en la República o su polémica candidatura a la Real Academia. Entre la investigación y la imaginación, combinando la comedia, el drama familiar y la tragedia colectiva, se abre paso la historia de una resistencia secreta. Un acto de justicia con el legado de una mujer que vivió a contracorriente y exploró las palabras hasta que empezaron a brillar.