58 Books That Will Make You Better, No
Matter Who You Are
What books do you
recommend that college students read? originally appeared
on Quora - the
knowledge sharing network where compelling questions are answered by people
with unique insights.
Answer by Ryan Holiday,
best-selling author of Ego Is the Enemy, on Quora
I'm going to go crazy on
this one. I hope that's alright. But before I do, I don't think there is much
benefit in making a distinction between what a college student should read and
what any decent human being who is trying to understand life on this crazy
planet should read. The only distinction I can think of is that student have
more time--and their parents might be picking the tab for said books--and
so they should be reading more avidly and aggressively than, say, a mom with
two kids under five.
In fact, as a college
student, I used to go around and ask every smart person I met--even emailing
important people I didn't know-- "What books do
you recommend to a kid like me?" That's how I was introduced to the
Stoics. That's how I found many of the books on the list below. The
quake books--as Tyler Cowen put it--that
shake you to your core. Having been introduced to them by those kind, patient
individuals, I try now to recommend many of those same books which shook up my
life and helped make me the person that I am. It's a list that has changed over
time--and will continue to change--but it's a good enough place to start.
Pick one of them up and let it lead you to another. And then
when you come to a dead end, come back to the list.
The Meditations by
Marcus Aurelius. To me, this is not only one of greatest books ever
written but perhaps the only book of its kind. Just imagine: the private
thoughts of the most powerful man in the world, admonishing himself on how to
be better, more just, more immune to temptation, wiser. It is the definitive
text on self-discipline, personal ethics, humility, self-actualization and
strength. If you read it and aren't profoundly changed by it, it's probably
because as Aurelius says "what doesn't transmit light creates its own
darkness." You HAVE to read the Hays's translation. If
you end up loving Marcus, go get The Inner Citadel and Philosophy as a Way of
Life by Pierre Hadot that studies the man (and men) behind the
work. And if you want more on the topic, Marcus inspired my book The Obstacle is the Way.
Letters from a Stoic by
Seneca. After Marcus Aurelius, this is one of my favorite books. While
Marcus wrote mainly for himself, Seneca had no trouble advising and aiding
others. In fact, that was his job--he was Nero's tutor, tasked with reducing
the terrible impulses of a terrible man. His advice on grief, on wealth, on
power, on religion, and on life are always there when you need them. Seneca's
letters are the best place to start, but the essays in On the Shortness of
Life are excellent as well. You can draw a pretty straight line
from Seneca to the essays of Montaigne (also
read: How To Live, a
biography of Montaigne) to the modern day writings of Nassim Nicholas Taleb
(read: The Black Swan, Fooled By Randomness, and The Bed of Procrustes).
Man's Search for
Meaning by Viktor Frankl. Frankl is one of the most profound
modern thinkers on meaning and purpose. His contribution was to change the
question from the vague philosophy of "What is the meaning of life?"
to man being asked and forced to answer with his actions. He looks at how we find
purpose by dedicating ourselves to a cause, learning to love, and finding a
meaning to our suffering. His other two books on the topic, Will To Meaning and Man's Search for
Ultimate Meaning, have gems in them as well.
48 Laws of Power and Mastery by
Robert Greene. There is no living writer (or person) who has been more
influential to me than Robert Greene. I met
him when I was 19 years old and he's shaped me as a person, as a writer, as a
thinker. You MUST read his books. His work on power and strategy are critical
for anyone trying to accomplish anything. In life, power is force we are
constantly bumping up against. People have power of over us, we seek power
ourselves that we might be free enough and influential enough to accomplish our
goals--so we must understand where power comes from, how it works and how to
get it. But pure power is meaningless. It must be joined to mastery and
purpose. So read his book Mastery so
that you can figure your life's task and how to dedicate yourself to it.
Letters from a
Self-Made Merchant to His Son by George Horace
Lorimer andLetters to His Son by
Lord Chesterfield. These two books of letters are great--I wish my father
had written me stuff this good. The first book is the (supposedly) preserved
correspondence between Old Gorgon Graham, a self-made millionaire in Chicago,
and his son who is coming of age and entering the family business.
The letters date back to
the 1890s but feel like they could have been written in any era.
Honest. Genuine. Packed with good advice.
Chesterfield wrote his letters to his illegitimate son, tutoring him on how to
learn, how to think, how to act, how to deal with important people. I don't
agree with all his advice but most of it is great.
Average Is Over:
Powering America Beyond the Age of the Great Stagnation by
Tyler Cowen. In terms of business/economics, this is one of the more
important books I've read in a long time. I even keep a framed passage from
it on my wall (it also inspired a piece of writing I
am proud of). Cowen's books have always been thought provoking, but this one
changes how you see the future and help explain real pain points in our new
economy-both good and bad. Although much of what Cowen proposes will be
uncomfortable, he has a tone that borders on cheerful. I think that's what
makes this so convincing and so eye-opening. A hollowing out is coming and
you've got to prepare yourself (and our institutions) as best you can.
Tiny Beautiful Things:
Advice on Life and Love from Dear Sugar by Cheryl Strayed
and Bird By Bird: Some
Instructions on Writing and Life by Anne Lamott. It
was wonderful to read these two provocative books of essays by two incredibly
wise and compassionate women. Cheryl Strayed, also the author of Wild, was
the anonymous columnist behind the online column Dear Sugar, and boy, are
we better off for it. This is not a random smattering of advice. This book
contains some of the most cogent insights on
life, pain, loss, love, success, and youth that I
have ever seen. I won't belabor the point: read this book. Thank me later. Anne
Lamott's book is ostensibly about the art of writing, but really it too is
about life and how to tackle the problems, temptations and opportunities life
throws at us. Both will make you think and both made me a better person.
The Score Takes Care of
Itself by Bill Walsh. A few years ago, I read The Education of a
Coach, a book about Bill Belichick which influenced me immensely
(coincidentally, the Patriots have also read my book
and were influenced by it). Anyway, I have been chasing that high ever
since. Bill Walsh's book certainly met that high standard. Even if you've never
watched a down of football, you'll get something out of this book. Walsh took
the 49ers from the worst team in football to the Super Bowl in less than 3
years. How? Not with a grand vision or pure ambition, but with what he called
the Standard of Performance. That is: How to practice. How to dress. How to
hold the ball. Where to be on a play down to the very inch. Which skills
mattered for each position. How much effort to give. By upholding these
standards--whatever they happen to be for your chosen craft--success will take
care of itself.
Fiction
I don't read fiction for
fun--I try to read novels that express some fundamental part of the human
condition or some hard-won truth. I hope you'll enjoy these (though for a
fuller list, read my article on the 24 Fiction Books
That Can Change Your Life).
Fight Club by
Chuck Palahniuk. I'm amazed how many young people haven't read this book.
Truly life-changing. This is the classic of my generation; it is the book that
defines our age and ultimately, how to find meaning in it. It's a cautionary
tale too--about being too caught up in revolutionary ideas.
The Moviegoer by
Walker Percy. The Moviegoer is exactly the novel that every young kid
stuck in their own head needs to read. The main character--who lives in New
Orleans just a few blocks from
where I lived--is so in love with the artificiality of movies that he has
trouble living his actual life. The Moviegoer--it is like a goodCatcher in the Rye but
for adults. Just a perfect book. An equal cautionary tale: The Sorrows of Young
Werther by Goethe.
What Makes Sammy Run? and The Harder They Fall by
Budd Schulberg. Budd Schulberg's (who wrote the screenplay for On the Waterfront) whole
trilogy is amazing and each captures a different historical era. His
first, What Makes Sammy Run? is
Ari Gold before Ari Gold existed--purportedly based on Samuel Goldwyn (of MGM)
and Darryl Zanuck. His next book, The Harder They Fall, is
about boxing and loosely based on the Primo Carnera scandal. All
you need to know about Schulberg's writing is captured in this quote from his
obituary: "It's the writer's responsibility to stand up against that
power. The writers are really almost the only ones, except for very honest
politicians, who can make any dent on that system. I tried to do that. And
that's affected me my whole life." Fiction can do that, and sometimes it
does it even better than non-fiction.
The Apprenticeship of
Duddy Kravitz by Mordecai Richler. What a book. It's not as good
as What Makes Sammy Run but
it's so damn good. "A boy can be two, three, four potential people,"
Duddy's uncle tells him, "but a man is only one. He murders the
others." Which potential person will you be? Which part of you will you
allow to rule? The part that betrays your friends, family, principles to
achieve success? Or are there other priorities?
Some other novels I
like: Civil War Stories by
Ambrose Bierce, Company K by
William March, and Invisible Man by
Ralph Ellison.
Biographies
One of my favorite
categories of books: moral biographies. That
is, the stories of great men and women in history, written with an eye towards
practical application and advice.
Plutarch's Lives by
Plutarch. Clearly the master of this genre, Plutarch wrote biographies of
famous Greeks and Romans around the year 100 AD. As always, I tend to default
to the Penguin collections. I strongly recommend Plutarch's Lives Vol. I &II, Essays,
and The Makers of Rome:
Nine Lives. His book On Sparta is
also a collection of biographies (and aphorisms) from the famous Spartans.
There is a reason that Shakespeare based many of his plays on Plutarch--not
only are they well-written and exciting but they exhibit everything that is
good and bad about the human condition. Greed, love, pain, hate, success,
selflessness, leadership, stupidity--it's all there.
The Lives of the Most
Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects by Giorgio
Vasari. A friend and peer of Michelangelo, Da Vinci, Raphael Titian, and
all the other great minds of the Renaissance sat down in 1550 and wrote
biographical sketches of the people he knew or had influenced him. What I like
about this book is that the profiles are not about statesmen or generals but
artists. There are so many great lessons about craft and psychology within this
book. The best part? It was written by someone who actually knew what he was
talking about, not some art snob or critic, but an actual artist and architect
of equal stature to the people he was documenting.
Totto-Chan: The Little
Girl at the Window by Tetsuko Kuroyanagi. The book has sold something
like 5 million copies in Japan alone (an insane number). Totto-Chan is a
special figure in modern Japanese culture--she is a celebrity on par with Oprah
or Ellen, with a magazine, news show, and exalted position to boot. The book
describes a childhood in pre-WWII Japan as a poorly misunderstood girl who
obviously suffered from attention disorders and excess energy. It wasn't until
she met a special school principal--unlike any I have ever heard of--who
finally GOT her. And I mean understood and cared about and unconditionally
supported her in a way that both inspires me and makes me deeply jealous. If
only all of us could be so lucky...
Titan by
Ron Chernow. I found Rockefeller to be strangely stoic, incredibly
resilient, and, despite his reputation as a robber baron, humble and
compassionate. Most people get worse as they get successful, many more get
worse as they age. In fact, Rockefeller began tithing his money with his first
job and gave more of it away as he became successful. He grew more open-minded
the older he became, more generous, more pious, more dedicated to making a
difference.
The Power Broker by
Robert Caro. It took me 15 days to read
all 1,165 pages of this monstrosity that chronicles the rise of Robert
Moses. I was 20 years old. It was one of the most magnificent books I've ever
read. Moses built just about every other major modern construction project in
New York City. The public couldn't stop him, the mayor couldn't stop him, the
governor couldn't stop him, and only once could the President of the United
States stop him. But ultimately, you know where the cliché must take us. Robert
Moses was an asshole. He may have had more brain, more drive, more strategy
than other men, but he did not have more compassion. And ultimately power
turned him into something monstrous.
Sherman: Soldier,
Realist, American by B.H Liddell Hart. This was someone I knew little
about before I read the book, and by the end of it found myself referencing and
thinking of him constantly. It is equal parts due to the greatness of the man
himself and to Hart's vivid and engrossing portrait. I almost feel like I have
lost something not having known this of him my whole life. There is a
stunningly profound quote from Hart in the book that I'll paraphrase here that
defines his genius: Sherman's success was rooted in his grasp that the way to
success is strategically along the line of least expectation and tactically
along the line of least resistance. It is that kind of thinking that
immediately displaces any preceding notions about Sherman's reputation as a
general or a legend. All these myths belies his strategic acumen, his mastery
of terrain and his deep understanding of statesmanship and politics. There is
much to learn from the man and this biographer--who himself was a great
strategist and mind.
Some others:
·
My Bondage and My
Freedom by Frederick Douglass and The Autobiography of
Malcolm X, two of the most inspiring men of the last 150 years. (Also in
this vein,My Life and Battles by Jack Johnson and Up from Slavery by
Booker T. Washington.)
·
The Rise of Theodore
Roosevelt by Edmund Morris. Dr. Drew recommended this book to
me; it is spectacular. He's my favorite president.
·
The Fish That Ate the
Whale: The Life and Times of America's Banana King by
Rich Cohen. The book sucked me in completely. Everyone I've recommended it
to loves it.
·
Asylum: An Alcoholic
Takes the Cure and No Hiding Place by
William Seabrook.(I actually ended up helping get Asylum back
in print if you want to hear that story.)
Practical Philosophy
I don't believe that
philosophy is something for the classroom--it's something that helps you with
life. As Epicurus put it: "Vain is the word of the philosopher which does
not heal the suffering of man." I've already recommended a couple of practical philosophy
books in different sections but a couple more worth reading:
The Moral Sayings of
Publius Syrus. A Syrian slave in the first century BC, Publius Syrus is
a fountain of quick, helpful wisdom that you cannot help but recall and apply
to your life. "Rivers are easiest to cross at their source."
"Want a great empire? Rule over yourself." "Divide the fire and
you will sooner put it out."
Essays and Aphorisms by
Arthur Schopenhauer. Schopenhauer is a brilliant composer of quick
thoughts that will help us with our problems. His work was often concerned with
the "will"--our inner drives and power. "For that which is
otherwise quite indigestible, all affliction, vexation, loss, grief, time alone
digests." But he also talks about surprisingly current issues:
"Newspapers are the second hand of history"--and that the hand is
often broken or malfunctioning. And of course, the timeless as well: "Hope
is the confusion of the desire for a thing for its probability."
Fragments by
Heraclitus. While most of the other practical philosophy recommendations
I'm making are bent towards hard, practical advice, Heraclitus might seem a bit
poetic. But those beautiful lines are really the same direct advice and
timeless, perspective-changing observations as the others. "Try in vain
with empty talk / to separate the essences of things / and say how each thing
truly is." "Applicants for wisdom / do what I have done: / inquire
within." "Character is fate." "What eyes witness / ears
believe on hearsay." "The crops are sold / for money spent on
food."
War/Strategy Books
Rules for Radicals and Reveille for Radicals by
Saul D. Alinsky. This is the 48 Laws of Power written
in more of an idealist, activist tone. Alinsky was the liaison for many civil
rights, union and student causes in the late 50's and 60's. He teaches how to
implement your radical agenda without using radical tactics, how to disarm with
words and media as opposed to arms and Utopian rhetoric.
Boyd: The Fighter Pilot
who Changed the Art of War by Robert Coram. Boyd was probably
the greatest post-WWII military strategist; he developed the F-15 and F-16,
revolutionized ground tactics in war, and covertly designed the U.S. battle
plans for the Gulf War. He shunned wealth, fame, and power all to accomplish
what he felt needed to be accomplished. Coram captures his essence in a way
that no other author has touched.
Of course you also need
to read 33 Strategies of War by
Robert Greene, The Book of Five
Rings by Musashi, The Strategy Paradox by
Raynor, Machiavelli's The Prince, and
Von Clausewitz' On War. In
terms of classics, The History of the
Peloponnesian War is an obligation for every student of history.
For a whole list of books
on the U.S. Civil War, start here. For a
more complete list of recommendations see my list of 43 Books About War and 24 Books To Hone Your
Strategic Mind.
Evolutionary Psychology
As important as
philosophy and moral fiction are, they're just ideas if
they're not counterbalanced with an understanding of our biology and
psychology.
The Moral Animal by
Robert Wright. This is probably the definitive beginner text on
evolutionary psychology and one of the easiest to get into. It's a little
depressing at first, realizing how ruthless many of our so called
"good" feelings are. But then you realize that truth is better than
ignorance, and you emerge seeing the world as it truly is for the first time.
Also, a similar read is Why Beautiful People
Have More Daughters, which is more of a Q&A approach to the subject and has
contemporary edge.
Sex on the Brain by
Deborah Blum. One of the better books on evolutionary biology that focuses
almost entirely on the biological and psychological differences between men and
women. It's written by a journalist (who cites scientists) so it's easy to read
if you're not studied in the field. If you want to get into evolutionary
psychology-which you totally should-this is a good starting point because it
covers all the basics. Essentially, it discusses how men and women have
benefited evolutionarily through different behaviors and strengths so it would
only make sense that they would have developed into two very different
entities.
I would also
recommend: The Game by
Neil Strauss (as well as The Truth), The God Delusion by
Richard Dawkins, The Evolution of Desire by
David Buss, and The Origins of Virtue by
Matt Ridley, which asserts that we had morality before religion, trade before
capitalism, and cooperation before government.
The Internet
Instead of giving
descriptions for these, I'm just going to list titles. You need to read ALL of
them. Especially the ones marked with an *, as they are the ones that
illustrate the darker side of the web.
The Pirate's Dilemma by
Matt Mason
You Are Not a Gadget: A
Manifesto* by Jaron Lanier
The New New Thing by
Michael Lewis
Founders at Work by
Jessica Livingston (interviews with technology founders from one of the
best investors of all time)
The Net Delusion: The
Dark Side of Internet Freedom* by Evgeny Morozov
Hackers and Painters: Big Ideas from the Computer Age by Paul Graham (or you can read his essays here)
Hackers and Painters: Big Ideas from the Computer Age by Paul Graham (or you can read his essays here)
Wikinomics: How Mass
Collaboration Changes Everything by Don Tapscott
The Cathedral and the Bazaar: Musings on Linux and Open Source by Eric S Raymond
The Cathedral and the Bazaar: Musings on Linux and Open Source by Eric S Raymond
Narrative Non-Fiction
Some of the most pleasurable books I've read in my life belong
in the genre of narrative non-fiction--epic true stories and sagas that are
almost too good to believe.
The Tiger: A True Story
of Vengeance and Survival by John Vaillant. Holy shit, this
book is good. Just holy shit. Even if it was just the main narrative--the chase
to kill a man-eating tiger in Siberia in post-communist Russia--it would be
worth reading, but it is so much more than that. The author explains the
Russian psyche, the psyche of man vs predator, the psyches of primitive peoples
and animals, in such a masterful way that you're shocked to find 1) that he
knows this, and 2) that he fit it all into this readable and relatively short
book. The story is nuts: a tiger starts killing people in Russia and a team is
sent to kill it (Russia is so fucked up, they already have a team for this). At
one point, the tiger is cornered and leaps to attack the team leader ... and in
mid-air the soldier's rifle goes into the tiger's open jaws and down his throat
all the way to the stock, killing the tiger at the last possible second. Wow.
(His other book TheGolden Spruce is
also great).
The River of Doubt:
Theodore Roosevelt's Darkest Journey by Candice
Millard. Ithought I knew about
Theodore Roosevelt. This book opens with him stranded in the Amazon jungle
begging his son to let him kill himself so he wouldn't be a burden on their
exploring party any longer. And then it gets better from there. I mean, did you
know he is credited with being the first to chart and navigate a totally
unknown river as long as the Nile? And that he did that after he was President,
just for fun? I'm not sure I need to explain much else, but if you needed more
convincing, I will say that Candice Millard, who wrote Destiny of the Republic (which
I highly recommend), wrote this too and it's better than her last book. Not
only is there a bunch of great history and drama here, it shows a human side of
Roosevelt I had not understood before.
Endurance: Shackleton's
Incredible Voyage by Alfred Lansing. 50 plus years old, this is a story
that more than stands the test of time. Sir Ernest Shackleton makes his daring
attempt to cross Antarctic continent but his crew and boat are trapped in the
ice flows. What follows are 600 days of harrowing survival, first from the
elements, then from hunger, then from the sea as he makes a daring attempt in a
small lifeboat to reach land 650 miles away, then again as he struggles over
land and mountains to bring relief to his men. And when he finally arrives with
it, Shackleton simply boards them on the boat and returns home as if nothing
had happened. He was an immensely brave man in the midst of terrible adversity
and we see this so clearly in a book based on the remarkable diaries of his
men. He never quit, never seemed to despair. This book (and his life)
were living proof of his
family motto: "Fortitudine vincimus" (By endurance we conquer).
Shadow Divers by
Robert Kurson. This book is a work of art. It is like The Tiger-good.
A diver (whose life principles
we can all learn from) and a ship captain find the wreck of an unknown German U-Boat
in 1991 ... on the coast of New Jersey. That's a thing? Apparently. And they
spend the next five years diving the wreck 230+ feet underwater until they
identify it. This book is narrative nonfiction writing at its finest. Please
read.
Classics:
As you have probably
gathered, I'm a bit of a nerd. I didn't graduate from
college but I still love to read the classics and I'm slowly
making my way through them. I thought I'd put together a quick list that
everyone should check out:
The Aeneid by
Virgil (translated by Robert Fagles). I made an effort to read some
classical poets and playwrights few years ago. The Aeneid was far and away the
most quotable, readable and memorable of all of them. There's no other way to
put: the story is AMAZING. Better than The Odyssey, better than
Juvenal's Satires. Inspiring, beautiful, exciting, and eminently
readable, I loved this. I took more notes on it that I have on anything I've
read in a long time. The story, for those of you who don't know, is about the
founding of Rome. Aeneas, a prince of Troy, escapes the city after the Trojan
War and spends nearly a decade wandering, fighting, and trying to fulfill his
destiny by making it to Italy. I definitely recommend that anyone trying to
read this follow my tricks for reading
books above your level (that is, spoil the ending, read the
intro, study Wikipedia and Amazon reviews, etc).
Candide by
Voltaire. I read this book as I waited for my wedding to start. It
might seem like a strange choice, given that it's a 200 year old book mostly
about unimaginable hardship, torture, death, and misfortune. Somehow, despite
this, the book is a light hearted satire that pokes fun at optimism,
philosophy, politics, and power. In the end, Voltaire concludes, all we can do
is tend to our own garden. Il faut cultiver nos jardins.
The Epic of Gilgamesh by
Unknown. I read this on my honeymoon (probably the only person on the
beach reading it, if I had to guess). Especially when I learned after that a
new introduction paragraph had been discovered only
recently. His tomb may have been found recently too. Imagine if Homer's
works had only been discovered in the mid 1800's after being lost to history
for thousands of years. How crazy would that be? Reading the classic epics can
feel like work but there is value in it. These works are timeless and universal.
Such a great line:
"He will face a
battle he knows not,
he will ride a road he knows not."
Epigrams by
Martial. These are hilarious. I have one hanging on the gate in front of my
house. Martial also served as a partial inspiration for my writing on the
Canvas Strategy.
Hamlet by
Shakespeare. Philosophy runs through this play--all sorts of great lines.
There are gems like "...for there is nothing either good or bad, but
thinking makes it so" which I used in my last book and
"Beware of entrance to a quarrel; but, being in, bear it, that the opposed
may beware of thee." was a favorite of Sherman.
Satires by
Juvenal. These are bitter, sarcastic attacks on Rome. They partially
inspired my book Trust Me, I'm Lying.
http://www.inc.com/quora/58-books-that-will-make-you-better-no-matter-who-you-are.html?cid=em01016week33a
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