Reviews

İktidar: Güç Sahibi Olmanın 48 Yasası by Robert Greene, Joost Elffers

duke_'s review against another edition

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inspiring medium-paced

3.5

azaelrn19's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful inspiring reflective fast-paced

5.0

agamakota's review against another edition

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4.0

już teraz mogę rządzić światem.
mam do tego potrzebne skille.

queenofflowers's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective slow-paced

4.25

I would like this book updated now that society acknowledges systemic oppression. But it is an informative book

drjay's review against another edition

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challenging informative inspiring reflective slow-paced

4.75

anaffpereira's review against another edition

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4.0

A very insightful reading!
I’ve heard some people say that this book “teaches how to be evil”, but I quite disagree. Even if one does not enforce the teachings present in this book, they can at least be on guard against those laws of power.
Some examples/cases were a bit repetitive, but other than that, this is a very interesting book.

red_carrot_panda's review against another edition

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1.0

Awful, awful book for people with no morale.

thechanelmuse's review against another edition

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5.0

If you’ve ever heard of The 48 Laws of Power, how would you describe this book? Evil? A manipulator/narcissist’s bible? A book you should stay far away from simply after reading the table of contents?

What if I told you that we all take part in a few or more of these laws within our lives? Whether a royal, president, politician, celebrity, YouTuber, social media influencer, stan/follower, religious leader, CEO, entrepreneur, manager, supervisor, worker, doctor, judge, lawyer, athlete, gamer, magician, artist, motivational speaker, therapist, teacher, sorority/fraternity member, negotiator, soldier, cop, spy, genius, engineer, drug dealer, extremist, or “regular ol’ person”…We all partake in the offense/defense of someone else’s power or our own.

The 48 Laws of Power is a well-researched “handbook on the art of indirection” that’s filled with stories of strategies on how societies, groups and individuals throughout history to the present-day have navigated to obtain and/or maintain power (notoriety, money, and a legacy). Layer by layer, with each law, there’s interesting (and sometimes eyebrow-raising) anecdotes, quotes, bible verses, folktales and deep analysis to further break down their meanings, as well as the inverse of those laws.

This book is so detailed that it’ll take me a whole dissertation to fully summarize it in its entirety

izzylashley's review against another edition

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1.0

I would give this 0 stars if I could, it was like reading Machiavelli on steroids. It’s as if the peak insufferable man wrote a book on how to be an insufferable man.

gijshuppertz's review against another edition

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2.0

It is one of the most informative books that i have read in my life. It is not for no reason that the book is banned from most prisons. I would not like to live the he discribes the way to live. But you can not deny that there are bad people in this world and people who will use some of these tactics against you. And it is allways better to be prepared for the worst, so there are no reasons not to read this book! (Except for maybe getting paranoid)