Taps’ Notes: Talking to Strangers

Taps’ Notes: Talking to Strangers

I read Talking to Strangers by Malcolm Gladwell and reviewed it as part of my ongoing series.

Quick review: I’ll happily admit to enjoying Malcolm Gladwell’s work. For all the criticism about how his work isn’t peer-reviewed, how he misuses other people’s data and often misinterprets complex concepts, the man is definitely entertaining. Unlike his previous books, however, in Talking to Strangers Gladwell doesn’t really have a broad thesis he tries to prove with examples. Instead, he talks about one overarching theme: why aren’t we good at understanding people?

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Taps’ Notes: Becoming

Taps’ Notes: Becoming

I read Becoming by Michelle Obama and reviewed it as part of my ongoing series.

Quick review: I read this book on the recommendation of a close friend. Autobiographies have a tendency to be hit or miss. Going into this one I was skeptical. Michelle Obama, for all the amazing things she has accomplished in her career and as First Lady, has largely remained private about her history and family, especially as compared to her husband. After this read it’s clear: Becoming is her coming out party.

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Taps’ Notes: The Untethered Soul

Taps’ Notes: The Untethered Soul

I read The Untethered Soul: Journey Beyond Yourself by Michael Singer and reviewed it as part of my ongoing series.

Quick review: If I had to summarize what The Untethered Soul offered me in a short phrase, it would be an alternative approach. In it, Michael Singer (who also wrote The Surrender Experiment) outlines the importance of coming to terms with the self, what understanding “You are not the thinking mind; you are aware of the thinking mind” unlocks for the individual, and his approach to looking inward.

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Taps’ Notes: Tuesdays With Morrie

Taps’ Notes: Tuesdays With Morrie

I read Tuesdays with Morrie: An Old Man, a Young Man, and Life’s Greatest Lesson by Mitch Albom and reviewed it as part of my ongoing series.

Quick review: I read this book on the recommendation of a close friend and it has joined my ranks of must reads. A moving story of love, life and gratitude, it features sociology professor, Morrie Schwartz, his one time student at Brandeis University, Mitch Albom, and Morrie’s life post being diagnosed with ALS.

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Taps’ Notes: The War of Art

Taps’ Notes: The War of Art

I read The War of Art by Steven Pressfield and reviewed it as part of my ongoing series.

Quick review: Steven Pressfield is a prolific author (The Legend of Baggar Vance was his debut novel) and speaker, but his true passion is fighting the Resistance. Or at least that’s what he calls the force in life that prevents each person from following and finding their creative genius. The War of Art is Pressfield’s call to arms, his way of helping people overcome their fear of the empty page, the false weight of the blank whiteboard, and simply create.

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Taps’ Notes: Powerful

Taps’ Notes: Powerful

I read Powerful: Building a Culture of Freedom and Responsibility by Patty McCord and reviewed it as part of my ongoing series.

Quick review: Patty McCord is the former Chief Talent Officer at Netflix and co-creator of the famous Netflix culture deck. If the deck is the ‘what’ of Netflix’s high performing culture, this book serves as the ‘how’ and ‘why’. It’s a relatively quick read and offers some unique suggestions on developing and maintaining strong corporate cultures at fast growing companies. I was struck by how counter some of the suggestions were to the norms that exist in companies today.

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Taps’ Notes: Never Split the Difference

Taps’ Notes: Never Split the Difference

I read by Never Split the Difference: Negotiating As If Your Life Depended On It by Chris Voss and reviewed it as part of my ongoing series.

Quick review: This is one of the better ‘business’ books I have read thanks to fascinating stories, a counterintuitive message and immediately useful and actionable suggestions. The author, Chris Voss, was an FBI negotiator dealing with negotiations most of us are unlikely to ever encounter: hostage situations. In a very easy and surprisingly captivating read (it is a book on negotiation after all) he instructs on a negotiation strategy that most people don’t usually consider: getting everything you want.

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Taps’ Notes: 21 Lessons for the 21st Century

Taps’ Notes: 21 Lessons for the 21st Century

I read 21 Lessons for the 21st Century by Yuval Noah Harari and reviewed it as part of my ongoing series.

Quick review: I thoroughly enjoyed 21 Lessons, more a collection of meditations than a single tome. The book follows Harari’s two bestsellers, Sapiens and Homo Deus, in which he as a historian and philosopher explores how mankind came to be and where humanity is going. Both great reads in their own right, neither of the previous two books explore the challenges we face in the present age. 21 Lessons is focused squarely on the major themes and current affairs of today and, unlike previous works, Harari intends this book to me more of a conversation with the aim to “stimulate further thinking, and help readers participate in some of the major conversations of [the] time.”

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Taps’ Notes: AI Superpowers

Taps’ Notes: AI Superpowers

I read AI Superpowers: China, Silicon Valley and the New World Order by Kai-Fu Lee and reviewed it as part of my ongoing review series.

Quick review: This book by Dr. Kai Fu Lee touched on a lot of themes I have been reading about for some time: artificial intelligence, China’s economic and technological rise and the similarities and differences between the US and China’s startup environment. Dr. Lee is certainly well versed in these subjects considering his background, having developed the world’s first speaker-independent, continuous speech recognition system as his Ph.D. thesis at Carnegie Mellon, where he then went on to become an executive at Apple, SGI, Microsoft and then led Google’s efforts in China. He now, among other things, runs Sinovation Ventures, a venture firm that invests in both the US and Chinese market. Overall I thought the book was quite an informative read (albeit at times came a tad self-serving and effusive in his praise for the Chinese market).

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