Randy Pausch (1960–2008)
Author of The Last Lecture
About the Author
Computer science professor, Randy Pausch, was born on October 23, 1960. He received his bachelor's degree in computer science from Brown University in 1982 and his Ph.D. in computer science from Carnegie Mellon University in 1988. He was a member of the computer science faculty at the University of show more Virginia from 1988 to 1997 and spent a 1995 sabbatical working at Walt Disney Imagineering's Virtual Reality Studio before joining the faculty of Carnegie Mellon University. He was the co-founder of the Entertainment Technology Center and created the innovative educational software tool known as Alice that enables novices to create 3-D computer animations using a drag-and-drop interface. In September 2007, he gave a lecture entitled Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams, which was videotaped, found success on the Internet, and lead to a best-selling book entitled The Last Lecture. He died due to complications from pancreatic cancer on July 25, 2008. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Randy Pausch
Works by Randy Pausch
Associated Works
Reader's Digest Select Editions 2009 v03 #303: The Lucky One / A Foreign Affair / Envy the Night / The Last Lecture (2009) — Contributor — 7 copies
Livros Condensados: O Miradouro | O Jardineiro Francês | A Última Aula | A Orquestra de La Salva o Mundo (2010) — Author — 5 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Pausch, Randolph Frederick "Randy"
- Birthdate
- 1960-10-23
- Date of death
- 2008-07-25
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Brown University (BS | 1982 | Computer Science)
Carnegie Mellon University (PhD | 1988 | Computer Science) - Occupations
- professor
computer scientist - Organizations
- Carnegie Mellon University
ACM (Fellow, 2007)
University of Virginia - Awards and honors
- Karl V. Karlstrom Educator Award (2007)
- Relationships
- Pausch, Jai (wife)
- Cause of death
- pancreatic cancer
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Baltimore, Maryland, USA
- Places of residence
- Chesapeake, Virginia, USA
- Place of death
- Chesapeake, Virginia, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Virginia, USA
Members
Reviews
Simply put, if you have not seen the video of Mr. Pausch's last lecture or read this book, you need to make every effort to do so. Mr. Pausch's legacy on how to approach life and death is well worth the effort. His message spans generations, providing food for thought for young and old.
Based on his last lecture given at Carnegie Mellon, the book references his thought process while developing this famous lecture, his feelings and thoughts while giving it and some of what occurred in his life show more in the months afterwards. His life lessons are simple but true but force the reader or listener to rethink one's own approach to life.
One of the most enjoyable aspects of the novel is Mr. Pausch's self-awareness. He lived an extraordinary life, and he knows it. Yet, he does not take a single moment of that life for granted. Yes, he experienced situations most people will only dream of facing, both good and bad, yet he worked hard to achieve his dreams. His "unusual" approach to life - work hard, don't whine - is what made him successful, and it is a lesson a majority still need to learn.
Make no mistake, The Last Lecture will tear at your heartstrings. One cannot help but place oneself into Mr. Pausch's shoes, wondering how one would react if faced with terminal cancer at a young age and with very young children. Yet, as painful as it was to read at times, it forced me to question my own attitudes and behaviors. As with other self-help books I've read this past year, it was exactly what I needed to read to help me see my own faults and where I was going wrong in my life at work and at home.
The Last Lecture is a novel that will stay with me for a very long time. Mr. Pausch's love of life, his acceptance of the inevitable, his will to fight, and yet his ability to prepare for the future in which he will not be a part is unlike anything I've experienced to date. However, I cannot help but feel lucky that I was able to get a glimpse into this incredibly unselfish person's mindset and grateful that he felt comfortable enough to share with the world his very private thoughts. Mr. Pausch moved me to my very core.
As an audio, The Last Lecture excels. Mr. Pausch has a natural story-telling ability that shines via audio. Mr. Singer was an excellent narrator, evoking a charm and sympathy that goes above and beyond the words on the page. He balances the more depressing aspects of the novel without becoming overly sentimental or emotional. As powerful as the novel is in print, I personally feel it was heightened by the audio performance.
I cannot express how much I enjoyed this novel, even as I was exercising with tears running down my face. It is a novel unlike any other. I already have designs to purchase the novel for my son and will be downloading this to my husband's iPod for his listening enjoyment. If you have not had the pleasure, you truly need to add The Last Lecture to your TBR pile! show less
Based on his last lecture given at Carnegie Mellon, the book references his thought process while developing this famous lecture, his feelings and thoughts while giving it and some of what occurred in his life show more in the months afterwards. His life lessons are simple but true but force the reader or listener to rethink one's own approach to life.
One of the most enjoyable aspects of the novel is Mr. Pausch's self-awareness. He lived an extraordinary life, and he knows it. Yet, he does not take a single moment of that life for granted. Yes, he experienced situations most people will only dream of facing, both good and bad, yet he worked hard to achieve his dreams. His "unusual" approach to life - work hard, don't whine - is what made him successful, and it is a lesson a majority still need to learn.
Make no mistake, The Last Lecture will tear at your heartstrings. One cannot help but place oneself into Mr. Pausch's shoes, wondering how one would react if faced with terminal cancer at a young age and with very young children. Yet, as painful as it was to read at times, it forced me to question my own attitudes and behaviors. As with other self-help books I've read this past year, it was exactly what I needed to read to help me see my own faults and where I was going wrong in my life at work and at home.
The Last Lecture is a novel that will stay with me for a very long time. Mr. Pausch's love of life, his acceptance of the inevitable, his will to fight, and yet his ability to prepare for the future in which he will not be a part is unlike anything I've experienced to date. However, I cannot help but feel lucky that I was able to get a glimpse into this incredibly unselfish person's mindset and grateful that he felt comfortable enough to share with the world his very private thoughts. Mr. Pausch moved me to my very core.
As an audio, The Last Lecture excels. Mr. Pausch has a natural story-telling ability that shines via audio. Mr. Singer was an excellent narrator, evoking a charm and sympathy that goes above and beyond the words on the page. He balances the more depressing aspects of the novel without becoming overly sentimental or emotional. As powerful as the novel is in print, I personally feel it was heightened by the audio performance.
I cannot express how much I enjoyed this novel, even as I was exercising with tears running down my face. It is a novel unlike any other. I already have designs to purchase the novel for my son and will be downloading this to my husband's iPod for his listening enjoyment. If you have not had the pleasure, you truly need to add The Last Lecture to your TBR pile! show less
My MIL died of pancreatic cancer so I read this book with special interest. Like Randy, she was (outwardly) in excellent health one day and then suddenly she was gone. It all happened very quickly (right at the three month mark) and came as a complete shock. I learned a lot about time being shorter than you think from her death. I learned even more from Randy's attitude about life and about death. Thankfully, I'm not facing a terminal illness (that I know of) and still have time to treat show more every day as if it could be my last. That's a gift. show less
There are some books you read because the writing is beautiful and there's a great story tucked between the lines. There are other books that you read because you're in a bad place and you need advice. This is the latter, but it's also very lovely in its simplicity and message: go after your childhood dreams.
Inspiring and touching thoughts from a man being killed by cancer are bound to be rated highly, but that's not exactly what grabbed me here.
What got me about this book was hearing all this from someone who is my sort of person. Randy Pausch was a computer scientist. He described himself as analytical, data driven, confident -- and often perceived as arrogant. This could be many of the people I know -- this could be me.
Randy Pausch's last lecture is rightfully inspiring to many people from show more all walks of life, but for those of us for whom these sorts of things often smack too much of sentimentally, this book strikes a cord that those others cannot. show less
What got me about this book was hearing all this from someone who is my sort of person. Randy Pausch was a computer scientist. He described himself as analytical, data driven, confident -- and often perceived as arrogant. This could be many of the people I know -- this could be me.
Randy Pausch's last lecture is rightfully inspiring to many people from show more all walks of life, but for those of us for whom these sorts of things often smack too much of sentimentally, this book strikes a cord that those others cannot. show less
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