- Rating
- Category
- non-fiction
- Read
- 2013-04-07
- Pages
- 318
This would be five stars if the repetition was stripped out. It was a conscious decision to repeat stories about the featured “contemporary master” (it’s called out in the intro), but I just found it redundant.
Aside from that, excellent writing on mastery - what is is, how to go about developing it, plenty of case studies. Lots of interesting biographical detail and morsels to think about.