"So convenient a thing it is to be a reasonable creature, since it enables one to find or make a reason for everything one has a mind to do
In this remarkable book, one of history's most practical minds tells the story of his own making. From a runaway apprentice to a statesman, inventor, and public thinker, Benjamin Franklin's life unfolds not as a tale of destiny. but of choices made carefully, often experimentally, and sometimes in error.
Franklin writes with wit and restraint about work, money, ambition, reputation, and the pursuit of self-improvement. He reflects on his failures as openly as his successes, and on character as seriously as on achievement. Along the way, we meet printers and politicians, experiments and rivalries, setbacks and second chances.
More than a record of events, this is a manual for living with intention. Franklin does not offer inspiration through grandeur, but through honesty-showing how a life may be shaped by discipline, curiosity, and good sense.