Good list. I'd add The Republic by Plato (there's a good summary in one of the lecture series from The Great Courses available as an audiobook from Audible) and perhaps De nuptiis Philologiae et Mercurii ("On the Marriage of Philology and Mercury") by Martianus Capella.
> I can't stress The Richest Man in Babylon enough. Extremely short read, but it can be life-changing
I read it in a 3 hour car trip the first time and was early to mid 20's and thought "why the hell didn't they teach me this in school?!" instead I learned how to make a lizard keychain and a tennis racquet cover headdesk
I can't stress The Richest Man in Babylon enough. Extremely short read, but it can be life-changing. The concepts are ridiculously simple, but it's amazing how I'd overlooked them for so long.
I'm actually due for a re-read here soon...
The English Masonic Union of 1813, now available in the US as a paperback.
Well written (not too much jargon), short (138 pages), and goes into detail into the background of UGLE for those interested in masonic history.
A good masonic read to aim to finish in a busy month.
The publishers, Wooden Books, are purposely covering the Trivium.
Anyone try it yet? It currently has no reviews, being released Feb 23 2016. They also just released Poetic Meter and Form
His stuff is near impossible to find copies of. I've been trying to track down a copy of "The Arch and the Rainbow" for a while now. "The Royal Arch Journey is going for close to $400 USD on Amazon http://www.amazon.com/Royal-Journey-Revd-Neville-Barker/dp/0853183317
Would love another source to pick these up.