When it comes to self-help / philosophy in general, I've found that application is very different from knowing. I believe, selling yourself completely an idea/routine/process (however obvious or well-known to oneself) & build that natural instinct / capability in applying it (when the situation warrants), as if it was second nature, is the point of these books.
> Lots of examples or stories
Some books could be blog posts (btw, LLMs are great for questions like "summarize <widely reviewed book name> chapter by chapter" and follow up questions like "highlight key arguments, counter-intuitive points, novel ideas outlined in <chapter>") and some have just the worst kind of filibustering to bloat the page count; but the many stories / narratives are so one can identify self in at least one among it & consequently build a strong recall to its morals / conclusions.
> ... simple metaphor/slogan into a complete philosophy for life ...
When it comes to self-help / philosophy in general, I've found that application is very different from knowing. I believe, selling yourself completely an idea/routine/process (however obvious or well-known to oneself) & build that natural instinct / capability in applying it (when the situation warrants), as if it was second nature, is the point of these books.
> Lots of examples or stories
Some books could be blog posts (btw, LLMs are great for questions like "summarize <widely reviewed book name> chapter by chapter" and follow up questions like "highlight key arguments, counter-intuitive points, novel ideas outlined in <chapter>") and some have just the worst kind of filibustering to bloat the page count; but the many stories / narratives are so one can identify self in at least one among it & consequently build a strong recall to its morals / conclusions.
> ... simple metaphor/slogan into a complete philosophy for life ...
We mustn't fault books for having apt titles? (: