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| The Last Lecture | 
enlarge | Authors: Randy Pausch, Jeffrey Zaslow Publisher: Hyperion Category: Book
List Price: $21.95 Buy New: $11.00 You Save: $10.95 (50%)
New (90) Used (27) Collectible (9) from $9.90
Avg. Customer Rating: 814 reviews Sales Rank: 22
Format: Roughcut Media: Hardcover Edition: 1st Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 224 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.5 x 0.9
ISBN: 1401323251 Dewey Decimal Number: 004.092 EAN: 9781401323257 ASIN: 1401323251
Publication Date: April 8, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
Courtesy of Teens Read Too October 25, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
There's nothing more bittersweet than reading a story where you know the ending before you start the first page. Everyone knows that on July 25, 2008, Randy Pausch lost his battle with cancer. But fortunately for those of us who never knew the man, he's left behind his legacy in THE LAST LECTURE. The well-known lecture can be viewed on YouTube, but with the help of a Wall Street Journal writer, Jeffrey Zaslow, he's taken his famous "last lecture" and written a book on how to live.
If you've watched the actual last lecture (I took the time after reading the book to sit and watch the entire talk), then the book is a perfect companion. If you've not seen the video, you will still be touched by the book. Though the book doesn't quote the lecture verbatim, Mr. Pausch has taken his lecture and expounded with more details and memories.
Having gone to university in Pittsburgh, I am very familiar with Carnegie Mellon University. When I first heard about the book and famous talk upon the death of Mr. Pausch, it was the mention of CMU that first caught my attention. I proceeded to get my hands on the book and read it in one quiet evening.
Mr. Pausch doesn't preach about his cancer, nor philosophize on death. Instead, he tells of his childhood dreams and how others can achieve their dreams. He speaks often of hitting a brick wall. He tells all that if you want something badly enough, then you will find a way around that brick wall. He shares with the reader his rejections by Brown University, Carnegie Mellon University, and even the Disney Imagineers. But he fought for what he wanted, and found a way to achieve his dreams.
He fondly thanks his parents for his wonderful childhood. He thanks his tough college mentor Andy van Dam. He tells about one of his students, whose dream was to work on the next Star Wars films. This coming in the early 1990s when no one anticipated there would be an additional three.
I believe all who pick up this book will be touched in some small way. It might not make you a better person for reading it, but I believe it will make you think. He offers simple suggestions for getting more out of life. It may be the simple truth of how to offer a sincere apology. It may be that you should put others first. Whatever it is, read the book with an open mind and be thankful that you are still alive and have the chance to live each day.
Reviewed by: Jaglvr
Very inspiring October 22, 2008 This book is a true treasure. It is inspirational and heartfelt. I highly recommend anyone to pick up this book. It is an easy read. It had me laughing and crying. I am seriously thinking about giving this book out as gifts this year for Christmas.
A Lasting Lecture October 22, 2008 This wonderful, emotional, thought-provoking, and inspiring book was a very honest look inside the mind and life of a very extraordinary ordinary man, and how he lived with a terminal illness.
In sixty-one short chapters, which seemed more like mini-lectures or brief discussions of Pausch's dreams, life lessons, philosophies, and experiences, I found many useful ideas about parenting, being a husband, and living as a man of value, action, and character. Knowing that I was reading the words of a dying man, I felt compelled to reflect on my own mortality in ways I had not done before. I honestly do not know how I would be, but I truly hope that should I ever be faced with the same terminal illness situation as Randy Pausch, I will respond to it with the same degree of love, grace, courage, and dignity as he did. My main 'take-away' from the book is to focus more earnestly on what I can share with my son every day, because, as Pausch said, "Time is all you have. And you may find one day that you have less than you think."
Randy Pausch wrote this book, gave a one-of-a-kind lecture, and made a moving video to leave wisdom, memories, and experiences behind for his wife and his very young kids. He has also left behind inspiration for me: If he can do all that he did, knowing he had only months to live, imagine all that I can do throughout my life (however long or short it may be) if I remain conscious every day to the fact that I have small and large opportunities, if I choose to see them, to build a loving, lasting legacy for my son.
Item "The Last Lecture" October 22, 2008 This product was shipped promptly and arrived in great condition. Thank you so much. I would recommend this seller to anyone.
good book October 21, 2008 I myself lost my father at a very young age he was 47 when he died of heart attack.I thought the book was beautifully written esp the part when he is talking about him feeling sorry for his kids loss,to imagine them growing up without a dad.I believe that God does test his special people.I pray for his family may God give them strength.People say time is a healer but I personally think when you loose a parent or a child ones life is changed forever you miss them everypart of the day.
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