Essays of Michel de Montaigne — Volume 09 by Michel de Montaigne
Forget everything you think an 'essay' should be. Michel de Montaigne basically invented the form, and he did it by writing about himself to understand everyone else. There's no plot in the traditional sense. This volume, like the others, is a collection of his musings. He picks a topic—maybe 'Vanity' or 'Prayers' or something as simple as 'Smells'—and just starts thinking on the page. He jumps from a personal story about his kidney stones to a quote from ancient Romans, then to an observation about the customs of cannibals in the New World. The 'story' is the journey of his mind. It's meandering, deeply personal, and surprisingly modern.
Why You Should Read It
You should read Montaigne because he removes the pretense. He's not trying to build a perfect, logical system. He's showing you how a real person thinks, with all the doubts, contradictions, and weird tangents. His big theme is self-knowledge. He believed the most valuable study wasn't of stars or politics, but of oneself. When he writes about fear, laziness, or friendship, it feels immediate. His famous question, 'What do I know?', is a humble admission of ignorance that's incredibly freeing. It invites you to question your own certainties. Plus, he's genuinely funny. His asides about his habits, his body, and the silly things people do are laugh-out-loud moments that bridge 450 years like nothing.
Final Verdict
This book is perfect for curious thinkers who are tired of rigid answers. It's for anyone who enjoys a good, rambling conversation with a sharp mind. If you like podcasts or blogs where hosts explore ideas through personal experience, you'll love Montaigne—he was the original. It's also great for readers who dip in and out of a book, as each essay stands alone. A word of advice: don't try to binge it. Read an essay or two, let his ideas bounce around in your head, and then come back for more. He's not a writer you finish; he's a companion you return to.
Betty Wright
1 year agoWow.