Checking in for end of May ...
I've been actively reading from 10 books (^^) during May (no judgements :P) and I completed the following:
The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin - He rose from humble beginnings to accomplish so much and serve so many; I'm impressed with the diligence he applied to improving his life and serving society in general. I wish he had the time to relate the events of the last 20 years of his life. (4/5)
The Journal of John Woolman - John Woolman was a 1700s itinerant Quaker preacher and abolitionist. Though his main occupation was as a tailor, he went around preaching and encouraging his fellow Quakers to cease from owning slaves. He was also concerned with the plight of the native Indians. History, spirituality, and gentle activism, all wrapped in one. (4.5/5)
Some Fruits of Solitude (William Penn) - This one is from another Quaker and is simply a collection of pithy reflections on moral issues; good but can be a slog if read in one go. I really liked his use of metaphors. (3/5)
Drucker & Me (Bob Buford) - I got a few Drucker insights but this is mostly a book about hero worship and how the author implemented some of what he learned from Peter Drucker; in other words, not much about the main man himself, which was the whole reason I initially got this book. (3/5)
The first three books are from volume 1 of the Harvard Classics 51-volume set. I'm committing to reading this collection, which at 15 minutes a day, may take me up to 4 years; most likely less, because I've read some of the books in there already and may not care to reread them.
I'm in varying degrees of progress with the other books and I'll continue with them for June. Drucker and Me is a print book and was my just-before-sleep book; I'm replacing it with books from the Penguin Little Black Classics set; there are 80 books in the set and I'm on the second volume. They're really tiny books so the project is not as daunting as it may sound.
Happy reading for June! :-)