Chris Kresser: Well, thank you for the compliment. That goes back a ways. I had an English teacher in high school who was just one of those teachers that, hopefully everyone’s had at least one of that, really changed the course of my—at least my academic trajectory and inspired me to learn and write in a way that hadn’t happened before that. She was an incredible writing teacher and really ignited a passion for writing and communicating for me. And then, when I was at UC Berkeley for at least the first two years I was there, I was a rhetoric major. There are only I think two or three rhetoric programs in the entire country, it’s a bit of a dying art, but I’m sure most of you know that rhetoric is the art of written and oral persuasion. Most of my classes as an undergrad in the first two years were in that department, and I ended up making up my own major at Berkeley, which is, of course, a very Berkeley thing to do, but rhetoric was one of the three departments that I took classes for in that major that I constructed. Since then I’ve always been passionate about writing and communication, and I’ve read a ton of books on how to write effectively everything from Strunk and White’s famous Elements of Style to a whole bunch of newer books that are in that same ilk: books on grammar, books on punctuation, books on sentence structure, books on style. I’m a bit of a geek about it, and I’m pretty relentless in my pursuit of clear and succinct communication. I’m really glad that comes off, and I appreciate that feedback. It’s something that I continue to learn about, so maybe I can put together a reading list or something if that would be helpful for you guys.