Kirkus Reviews QR Code
HOW TO BE PERFECT by Michael Schur Kirkus Star

HOW TO BE PERFECT

The Correct Answer to Every Moral Question

by Michael Schur with Todd May

Pub Date: Jan. 25th, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-982159-31-3
Publisher: Simon & Schuster

The acclaimed showrunner and TV writer considers philosophy and ethics.

Like Schur’s work on The Office, Parks and Recreation, and The Good Place, this book is both heartfelt and funny. With the assistance of "philosophical nitpicking" by professor May, Schur takes us through 13 chapters, beginning with the question “Should I Punch My Friend in the Face for No Reason?” He then moves on to increasingly trickier philosophical concepts and how best to approach them in our daily lives. Fully admitting his own limitations, Schur stresses the importance of personal connection. “The works discussed in this book are simply the ones I liked and connected with,” he writes. “They’re the ones that made sense to me, in a cartoon-lightbulb-turning-on-above-my-head kind of a way. This simple sense of connection matters with something like philosophy, which is a massive and diverse rain forest of ideas.” In addition to delightful explorations of the history of philosophy, the author shows behind-the-scenes moments from The Good Place and touches on the strangeness that exists in the discipline—e.g., Jeremy Bentham’s decision to house his remains in a hideous “skeleton-wax-head contraption” he called an “auto-icon,” now on display at University College London. Moving both carefully and conversationally through progressively more difficult questions, Schur makes good on his promise to “wade into some deeply confusing and painful applications of moral philosophy, stretching and straining and chewing on really tough questions that plague us in our daily lives, that cause us anxiety and anguish and often lead to loud arguments with our closest friends and family. But in a fun way!” Whether discussing how to enjoy something that is morally problematic or debating whether we need to make moral decisions at all, the text is a relatable and consistently amusing introduction to practical philosophy.

Like The Good Place, this is a humorous and thought-provoking journey into some of life’s hardest questions.