Author
David Goggins: No Motivation Required
David Goggins didn’t become a symbol of discipline by accident. His story begins in chaos—poverty, abuse, obesity, and a life that seemed stuck on repeat. What makes Goggins compelling isn’t that he “found motivation.” It’s that he learned to function without it. In a culture obsessed with hype and shortcuts, Goggins represents the unglamorous truth: real change is built on uncomfortable repetition, brutal honesty with yourself, and the willingness to suffer on purpose.
By Fred Bradford28 days ago in BookClub
Quotes From Pride & Prejudice
Valentine's Day has come and gone, but that doesn't mean we can't still relish in some romantic notions, no? Here are some of my favourite quotes that I pulled after rereading Pride & Prejudice at the end of last year/the beginning of this year - most of which will not be romantic in any sense. The pages come from The Annotated Pride & Prejudice, edited and annotated by David M. Shapard (the book is very long due to all the notes, and therefore pages may not line up with a more regular edition of the book). I've broken up some of the quotes into little sections for ease of reading.
By The Austen Shelf28 days ago in BookClub
The Way Out Of Trauma
The Way Out of Trauma First, acknowledge the trauma. Healing cannot begin with denial. What happened mattered. It left a mark, and pretending otherwise only deepens the wound. Acknowledging trauma is not about reliving it—it’s about honoring your experience and telling the truth to yourself without shame, excuses, or minimization. This is the moment you stop gaslighting your own pain.
By Marie Ange Diaz-Cervo29 days ago in BookClub
Mark Manson: The Cure for Hustle Culture
Mark Manson didn’t become famous by telling people they could have everything they want. He became famous by telling people the opposite—and somehow, that honesty landed like a relief. In a self-help world crowded with hustle slogans and toxic positivity, Manson’s voice cut through with a blunt message: you don’t need to feel amazing all the time to live well. You need to choose what actually matters, accept discomfort, and take responsibility for the things you can control. It sounds simple. It’s not. That’s why it works.
By Fred Bradford29 days ago in BookClub
Cormac McCarthy: When the Rules Are Gone
Cormac McCarthy wrote like the world had been stripped down to bone and ash—and then asked what kind of people would survive in what was left. His novels don’t comfort. They confront. They place you in landscapes where the sky feels too wide, the roads too empty, and every choice carries the weight of life or death. In a culture that loves neat heroes and clean morals, McCarthy’s work is a cold wind across the face: bracing, unforgiving, and impossible to forget.
By Fred Bradford30 days ago in BookClub
Fyodor Dostoevsky: A Writer Too Honest for Comfort
Fyodor Dostoevsky didn’t just write stories—you could say he wrote autopsies of the human soul. His novels don’t entertain you from a safe distance; they pull you into moral chaos, force you to sit with uncomfortable questions, and then quietly ask, “So—who are you, really?” More than a century later, his work still feels uncomfortably modern because the conflicts he explored never went away: guilt, freedom, faith, resentment, pride, and the terrifying power of ideas.
By Fred Bradfordabout a month ago in BookClub
A Story of Norbert Rillieux
In the humid, swaying cane fields of nineteenth‑century Louisiana, a quiet revolution was forming—one that would not be fought with swords or marching armies, but with science, precision, and the relentless determination of a man named Norbert Rillieux. Born in 1806 to a wealthy plantation owner and a mother of mixed descent, Rillieux grew up witnessing both privilege and the harsh realities of life on sugar estates. He learned early that the production of sugar, though profitable, was a brutal and dangerous trade. Workers spent long hours stirring boiling kettles of cane juice, risking burns, illness, and even death as they attempted to refine the precious crystals that fueled the region’s economy.
By TREYTON SCOTTabout a month ago in BookClub
Ray Bradbury: The Man Who Set the Future on Fire
There are writers who predict the future. And then there are writers who feel it coming. Ray Bradbury was not a scientist. He wasn’t a technologist. He didn’t write hard equations into his stories or obsess over mechanical accuracy. Instead, he wrote about something far more dangerous and far more human: what happens to the soul when the world changes too fast.
By Fred Bradfordabout a month ago in BookClub
Jan Ernst Matzeliger
By Staff Writer Leavie sacott| February 2026 In the late 19th century, when most Americans still relied on expensive hand‑crafted footwear, one inventor quietly changed the future of manufacturing—Jan Ernst Matzeliger, a Surinamese‑American mechanical genius whose shoe‑lasting machine revolutionized the global shoe industry.
By TREYTON SCOTTabout a month ago in BookClub
Lewis Latimer
By Staff Writer Leavie Scott| February 2026 In an age when electric light is taken for granted, few Americans know the name Lewis Howard Latimer—yet his innovations helped make the light bulb reliable, affordable, and accessible to the world. Born in 1848 to formerly enslaved parents in Chelsea, Massachusetts, Latimer’s journey from poverty to technological pioneer is one of the most remarkable stories in American innovation.
By TREYTON SCOTTabout a month ago in BookClub
Margaret Atwood: Warnings Written in Ink
Margaret Atwood does not write fantasy. She writes possibility. For decades, readers have described her work as dystopian, speculative, even prophetic. But Atwood has always insisted on one important rule: she does not invent technologies or political systems that have no precedent in human history. Everything she writes about has happened somewhere, in some form, at some time. That grounding in reality is what makes her fiction so unsettling—and so powerful.
By Fred Bradfordabout a month ago in BookClub









