Selections from Erasmus: Principally from his Epistles by Desiderius Erasmus
This book collects some of the best letters by Desiderius Erasmus, a 16th-century scholar who loved learning, hated hypocrisy, and had a sarcastic streak you'll adore. These letters are raw, chatty, and surprisingly modern.
The Story
Erasmus’s pen pals range from friends writing about mundane jokes to important leaders asking for advice. Through these letters, you get a front-row seat to the big debates of his time—reforming a broken church, the fight over education, and piling insults on people who didn't have good taste. The letters move from personal gripes to political arguments, often feeling like an intelligent group chat from the past. It’s not a plot-driven story, so much as a character study through correspondence. Who was Erasmus? You'll find him in the way he responds to a cranky monk or gives soft tips to a dear friend.
Why You Should Read It
The best part? Erasmus sounds human. He worries about working too hard, wonders if fame will hurt his soul, and cracks cheeky jokes about nonsense. For example, when he hears some priests are angry he talks too much Greek, he shrugs in his note and calls them out charmingly. It shows old arguments about knowledge, power, and faith. And all that anger over “new” ideas in education in 1520—sound familiar with today’s culture wars? Read this if you want to feel connected to someone from history who wasn’t a boring statue by a religion, but a living hot mess like the best of us.
Final Verdict
Pick up this book if: you spend time arguing about life online with smart jerks and want new material; you read other modern history and stay interested! Also good for anyone studying the Renaissance without getting snoozy from other heavy history tomes. “Selections from Erasmus: Principally from his Epistles” would be LIT on social media—Erasmus boasted excellent shade-throwing. I wish classes taught from these pages. Perfect for philosophical people who want grounded voices across time. Buzzy, smart, gentle when it must be, never will you sleep while reading old European letters again.
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Mary Taylor
5 months agoThe citations provided are a goldmine for further academic study.