I loved his book "Bullshit jobs", it really opened my eyes about the shitty corporate world some of us live in. Anyways, I just started reading his last book today, and it got me totally hooked!! The first two chapters describe a totally new way of seeing the history of some of the "great thinkers" of the "age of enlightenment". *spoilers alert!* E. g. he says that some of the European thinkers who supposedly "came up" with the ideas of enlightenment "freedom", "equalitarianism", etc. which were the basis in some way for the French and US revolutions, had actually been presented to these European intellectuals originally from some North-Eastern Native American intellectuals. Whose ideals regarding all these topics could be found in the literature of that time in countless Jesuit travel journals through the North American French territories and so on... While reading some of the thoughts being quoted in the book from an Iroquois intellectual, I must admit that I found great affinity to his world view and have gotten only more curious about more literature on the Iroquois way of life.