<p>I will admit that there is appeal to reading lightweight books in summer- I recently finished re-reading some books that I had read along side my girls when they were much younger-* Spindle’s End, Tam Lin & Witch Week!* ;)</p>
<p>But now I feel ready to read something that can shake up the way I think & maybe inspire me.
I am thinking about ordering this book
[Kwame</a> Anthony Appiah’s The Honor Code shows how honor drives moral progress.](<a href=“http://www.slate.com/id/2267847/]Kwame”>Kwame Anthony Appiah's The Honor Code shows how honor drives moral progress.)
Has anyone read it?
I used to read quite a bit of philosophy, but frankly since I have gotten older, it is harder to get through.
What books have really made you think?</p>
<p>I loved Reading Lolita in Tehran , but I still enjoy SUSPENSE ! I love Jeffrey Deaver . I read alot . I read about an hour before bed . Sometimes I read historical fiction ,like Phillipa Gregory .</p>
<p>I am fluffy - so I would say the “opposite of fluffy” is skinny. lol.</p>
<p>hypofluffy
afluffous
fluffless</p>
<p>I read this [Amazon.com:</a> Gandhi’s Truth: On the Origins of Militant Nonviolence (9780393310344): Erik H. Erikson: Books](<a href=“http://www.amazon.com/Gandhis-Truth-Origins-Militant-Nonviolence/dp/0393310345]Amazon.com:”>http://www.amazon.com/Gandhis-Truth-Origins-Militant-Nonviolence/dp/0393310345) --while lying by the pool, the summer after my freshman year in college. Might be a good companion book to the one you’re thinking of.</p>
<p>The Honor Code is, surprisingly, a fast read. I think you’d find it both interesting and stimulating.</p>