Code: 52857986
The most powerful man in the world kept a secret journal. In it, he did not brag or give orders. He scolded himself, doubted himself, and tried to talk himself into being a little better the next day.Marcus Aurelius wrote it throu ... more
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Book synopsis
The most powerful man in the world kept a secret journal. In it, he did not brag or give orders. He scolded himself, doubted himself, and tried to talk himself into being a little better the next day.
Marcus Aurelius wrote it through the Antonine Plague, which killed thousands of people a day. He wrote it from army camps on a frozen frontier, in the middle of a war that dragged on for ten years. He wrote it while watching his own son grow into everything he had tried not to be. And he never meant a single word of it to be read. This book hands a six- to ten-year-old the practice behind it.
Your child learns to feel anger start to pull and choose not to follow it. To step back from a problem that swallowed the whole day until it shrinks to a dot. To stop fighting the things they cannot change, the way you cannot argue a fig tree out of dropping figs. And to end the day with the one question Marcus asked himself every night: was I good enough today, and can I try again tomorrow?
This is the actual Meditations, not a quote on a poster. Most people meet Marcus Aurelius as a name on a coin or a line on a mug. Here a child meets the man behind it: the boy who would rather read than rule, the gentle scholar handed a war he never wanted, the father who could not reach his own son, and the private habit that has kept his book alive for almost two thousand years.
What this version does: this is not a wise-emperor highlight reel. It is the practice he actually did, on his worst nights, named plainly enough for a child to do it too.
Ages 6 to 10 · 80 pages · about 7,100 words · Flesch-Kincaid grade 3.4 · 22 black-and-white illustrations · independent and guided reading.
A note for parents. This is real history with its hard edges named, not dramatized. A plague kills people by the thousands. A long war grinds on and soldiers die. Marcus's son Commodus grows cruel and throws away everything his father built. Marcus himself dies, of the plague, far from home. Nothing is graphic, and the honesty is the point.
Part of the nüNERD Learning System. At 6–8, they're reading with growing independence; you're still there for the hard words. At 8–10, they're fully solo, and the topics you introduced years ago click into place. nüNERD topics come in three age-appropriate versions, each built for how children actually think at that stage.
Also available for Ages 0–4 (The Little Book) and Ages 3–7 (The Emperor's Journal).
Book details
9.78 €
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