Macbeth Summary of Key Points
Macbeth is Shakespeare’s dark and powerful tragedy about the corrosive effects of unchecked ambition and power.
Macbeth is Shakespeare’s dark and powerful tragedy about the corrosive effects of unchecked ambition and power.
Deborah Gruenfeld combines research and storytelling to explore how we can use power effectively and ethically in various roles in life.
The 48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene is a guide to gaining and maintaining power through a set of rules based on historical examples.
The Winner Effect explores how power affects the brain, leading to changes in behavior, increased risk-taking, and even addiction to power itself.
Shakespeare’s tragedy ‘King Lear’ concerns an aging king who decides to divide his kingdom among his daughters, leading to betrayal, madness, and eventual redemption.
The Will to Power is a posthumously published collection of notes and fragments by Friedrich Nietzsche. It explores notions of power, life, and nihilism.
Corrupt is a dark romance that revolves around Michael Crist, a man with power and dangerous secrets, and Erika Fane, a girl entangled in his world.
A continuation of ‘From Blood and Ash’, Poppy’s journey unfolds amidst secrets and an evolving relationship with her dark captor, Hawke.
The Daily Laws is a year-long course by Robert Greene, who draws from his five previous works to offer a page for each day of the year. Each page features a powerful principle, instruction, or strategy from one of his previous books, serving as a kind of daily devotion for ambition, a digestible piece of advice for those aiming to improve their lives and careers.