Books

The Last Lecture

A deeply human book about mortality, generosity, and the practical habits that make a life feel well used.

memoirmortalitypurposeresiliencerandy-pauschcarnegie-mellon

Randy Pausch turned his 2007 Carnegie Mellon lecture into a book that somehow manages to be terminal, funny, and useful in the same breath. The whole thing has the energy of someone trying to leave behind principles instead of panic.

What stayed with me

What stayed with me was how practical the book is. It talks about dreams, but it also talks about preparation, repetition, and character. Even its warmth has structure behind it.

What it changed

It changed the way I think about urgency. Not the panicked kind, but the honest kind. The book pushes you to stop pretending that unlimited time is waiting somewhere in reserve.

Why I still keep it on the shelf

I still think of it as a book about dignity in motion. It says that even under terrible constraints, a person can still teach, encourage, and show people how to live a little better.