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The Leader's Bookshelf

25 Great Books and Their Readers

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks

Which books inspired some of the world's most successful people – and why? Come on a journey of literary exploration and find out how books can impact your life.
It turns out that the life stories of many famous people start out with a particular book that inspired them when young. Here, Martin Cohen explores the lives of some remarkable people – inventors, scientists, business gurus and political leaders – and the books that have challenged, inspired, and influenced them. And so exploring the ideas, dreams and inspirations that this diverse group shared is at the heart of this book too. Inspiration, in particular, is the thread that ties together individuals with characters and backgrounds as diverse as Jane Goodall and Barack Obama, Malcolm X and Judge Clarence Thomas, Oprah Winfrey and Malala Yousafzai, Rachel Carson and Frans Lanting.
Often, behind many tales of achievement lies much more than a collection of smart tactics. There are beliefs and values that guide many a grand strategy, too. And the strategies are often very different, which if you think about it, shouldn't come as a surprise. If there really were just one recipe for success, well, everyone would be using it already. No, the thing that unifies these disparate approaches is that they all provided for their owners a kind of conceptual grid onto which a wide range of day-to-day creative, scientific, or business practices are able to develop and grow. For Sergey Brin and Larry Page, the founders of Google, for example, the grid was Charles Darwin's notions of natural mutation and iteration. With Henry Ford, the man who pioneered the method of the assembly line, the grid was an obscure, ethereal theory of life as a sequence of reincarnations. And for both Oprah Winfrey and Steve Jobs, the grid was existentialist ideas about the pursuit of authenticity. In all these cases, a grand, indeed often philosophical, theory meshed perfectly with a practical business strategy. All of these remarkable people, and the books that most inspired them, are explored in this book.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 19, 2020
      Philosopher Cohen (101 Philosophy Problems) ruminates on the books that have inspired successful people in this fun yet haphazard survey. In each chapter, Cohen pairs two leaders or innovators—such as Barack Obama and Jane Goodall, or Oprah Winfrey and Malala Yousafzai—who share similar interests, provides short biographies of each, and delves into books that have made a mark on their thinking. On the business mogul front, Steve Jobs’s interest in the “hippie philosophy” of Ram Dass is paired with computer pioneer Evelyn Berezin’s love of science fiction; and Warren Buffett’s interest in philanthropic giving is set against John D. Rockefeller’s early obsession with the diaries of cotton baron Amos Lawrence, published in 1856. In some cases the connection between those profiled and Cohen’s chosen books is plain—for example, Richard Branson mentions the Dice Man books in many interviews as influencing his risk-taking business philosophy. However, other connections are more tenuous, such as Cohen’s belief that Jacob Riis “seems” to have gotten the travel bug from reading James Fenimore Cooper. While Cohen’s explanations of influential books are enjoyable and upbeat, these meandering profiles provides little beyond factoids and stimulating yet often unsupported conjecture.

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  • English

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