
Sophie's World
A Novel About the History of Philosophy
by Jostein Gaarder
Editorial review
An unusually successful experiment: a tour through the entire history of Western philosophy disguised as a novel for older teenagers. Many adult readers credit it with starting them on a lifetime of philosophical reading.
AI-generated summary
Fourteen-year-old Sophie Amundsen begins receiving anonymous letters posing simple but unsettling questions: 'Who are you?' 'Where does the world come from?' Her education in philosophy from the Pre-Socratics to Sartre becomes entangled with a much stranger metafictional plot.
Key takeaways
- 1
Philosophy begins as wonder, not as a vocabulary.
- 2
Each major thinker is best read as an answer to a previous problem.
- 3
Western philosophy is a long conversation, not a list of conclusions.
- 4
Fiction is a legitimate mode of philosophical instruction.
The right reader
Older teenagers, adult beginners, and anyone wanting a one-volume narrative tour of Western philosophy. Pair with a more rigorous textbook later.
What it touches
How it reads
Playful, didactic, surprising.
Reading difficulty: Accessible

