A review by able28
Being Wrong: Adventures in the Margin of Error by Kathryn Schulz

4.0

This book was an interesting way of approaching a topic that I haven't explored much. I appreciated that Schulz considered being wrong from historical, anthropological, sociological, and psychological angles and that the book never veered into the self-help genre. In the areas where things started to get too dry for casual reading she brought it back with interesting examples and a slightly cheeky writing style. There was a little too much reliance on Shakespeare for my taste, but that's largely a matter of personal taste. I found the case studies she relied on sufficiently interesting to keep it moving. I'm glad that I read it.