Malcolm Gladwell opens his bestselling book Outliers: The Story of Success with the story of Stewart Wolf‚ a physician who revolutionized our understanding of health. Wolf studied digestion at the University of Oklahoma and spent his summers at a farm in Pennsylvania. One summer‚ Wolf was astounded to hear from a colleague that it was extremely rare to “find anyone from Roseto under the age of sixty-five with heart disease” (Gladwell 6). At the time‚ heart attacks “were the leading cause of death
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for a shot at the summit. About half of those people make it to the top. 280 people have died trying to climb Everest or make it back down. Yet despite the cost‚ even your life‚ the number of attempts and summits is on its way up every year. In Into Thin Air by Jon Krakauer‚ Everest stands as symbol of dreams and hopes; for the westerners. To the workers of the mountain‚ the Sherpas‚ it was a symbol of God and their way of life. Above all Everest was a symbol that commanded respect. Throughout the
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Over my four-month summer break my goal was to get my hands on as many books as possible. One of the books that I came across was called “Outliers” by Malcolm Gladwell. After reading this book on my flight to Asia I fell in love with the book and admired the author. His writing was organized in a way where it was easy to comprehend and he was able to support his evidence with research and statistics. Although there are a lot of scholarly terms that is used to support his study‚ he uses a more simplified
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and tablets are there to give us entertainment when we suffer from boredom. We all need a break occasionally‚ right? Yes‚ but this technology is consuming us. Plastered all over these different ways to cure boredom‚ are unrealistic expectations. Too-thin bodies‚ filtered faces‚ photoshopping to the extreme. Commercials and movies are over sexualizing women‚ making a woman’s worth based on her body. The overload of make-up adverts claiming to hide “imperfections‚” various weight loss solutions and implanting
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Gladwell opens "Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking" with the tale of a kouros‚ an ancient Greek statue of a youth that entered the market‚ catching the eye of the Getty Museum in California. It was close to seven feet tall‚ perfectly preserved‚ and just under $10 million. The museum went through the voluminous processes to prove its authenticity. A geologist determined that the statue originated in the island of Thasos‚ sheathed in a thin layer of calcite‚ a substance that accumulates
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In this passage from Jon Krauaker’s Into Thin Air‚ Jon Krauaker does not display the sense of accomplishment that one would expect from achieving such a difficult endeavor. He really displays a sense of grief and dissatisfaction from what he had accomplished. For taking a risk as life threatening as this‚ in Krauaker’s eyes‚ he couldn’t possibly be proud of what he had done when so many men had lost their lives during the same excursion that he journeyed on. Throughout this novel‚ Jon Krauaker
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Book Title: Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking Genre: Psychology/Self-Help Author: Malcolm Gladwell Number of Pages: 286 Brief Summary and “Arrangement” of the Book: Malcom Gladwell published the most pleasant book‚ “Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking‚” which he extended the landmark style of his number one international bestseller The Tipping Point. Gladwell transformed the ideas of how people understand the world within its rapid decisions. The Blink is about the
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He first speaks on the behalf of his grandmother‚ who was bought on the slave trade in Jamaica. She regarded her lighter color of skin as an advantage‚ because the slave owner treated her better because of it. Gladwell believes that his family never escaped this perception‚ as he tells the story of his mother’s close relative- whom he refers to as Aunt Joan. Joan had married a man with darker skin than hers‚ and because of this their child was born with darker
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Sociology/SS310 Cultural pressures to be thin Have you ever taken a second to compare the size of men and women today to the sizes years ago? Recently there is a huge new trend of becoming as thin and fit as possible and thinking this how one becomes beautiful. No one actually knows where this idea has emerged from. In the past big has been known as being healthy and beautiful. Take for instance Marilyn Monroe‚ she was the pin up girl for many men and wasn’t exactly thin to today’s standards. Today’s
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Hawthorne’s Thin Line When thinking of great American authors‚ one usually thinks of Nathaniel Hawthorne. Hawthorne is best known for his classic work‚ The Scarlet Letter. This novel is a story about a women named Hester and her sin of adultery. In the preface to the novel ‚ Kurt Neilson writes that‚ "Hawthorne sees a very thin line‚ if any‚ between the "real" world and the spiritual and/or imaginary one." Hawthorne’s writing throughout The Scarlet Letter fulfills this claim made by Neilson in
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