New Yorker writer Adam Gopnik investigates a foundational human question: How do we learnâand masterâa new skill?
What The Reviewers Say
Oliver Burkeman,
The Atlantic
Gopnik...isn’t the first author to emerge victorious from the American tournament of achievement only to discern its spiritual emptiness. But his contribution to an antidote feels original, and mercifully within reach.
Adam Thirlwell,
The New York Times Book Review
The book I was expecting was something closer to a confessional memoir: a critic at the height of an illustrious career finally admitting which of his assumptions and judgments had been wrong.
Tom Vanderbilt,
The Washington Post
That phrase, 'the real work,' comes from Gopnik’s fascinating glimpse into the world of magic, a trade in which the normal obscurities of skill acquisition are rendered even more opaque.
Matthew Cantor,
The Guardian (UK)
Via memoir, analysis and criticism he assembles a celebration of the flaws that make us human.