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Ask HN: What book should I read next?

17 pointsby will0over 5 years ago
Just finished re-reading The Martian, now I fancy some nonfiction. Any recommendations?

10 comments

mindcrimeover 5 years ago
<i>The Soul of a New Machine</i> - Tracy Kidder. A classic that inspired many people (myself included) to become interested in the computing field.<p><i>Cyberpunk: Outlaws and Hackers on the Computer Frontier</i> - Katie Haffner &amp; John Markoff - there is some dispute about the factual accuracy of some of the book, but it&#x27;s wildly entertaining nonetheless.<p><i>The Cuckoo&#x27;s Egg: Tracking a Spy Through the Maze of Computer Espionage</i> - Cliff Stoll<p><i>Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution</i> - Steven Levy<p><i>Charles Proteus Steinmetz: The Electrical Wizard of Schenectady</i> - Robert W. Bly<p><i>Time Reborn: From the Crisis in Physics to the Future of the Universe</i> - Lee Smolin<p><i>The Trouble with Physics: The Rise of String Theory, the Fall of a Science, and What Comes Next</i> - Lee Smolin<p><i>The Matrix and Philosophy: Welcome to the Desert of the Real</i> - William Irwin
kkaranthover 5 years ago
* Winter World: The Ingenuity of Animal Survival by Bernd Heinrich: A great pop-sci book about how animals adapt to extreme winter biomes<p>* Deep by James Nestor: A look at the extreme sport of freediving, where contestants train to submerge to depths much greater than 400ft without any oxygen and pressure equalizing equipment<p>* The Idea Factory: Bell Labs and the Great Age of American Innovation by John Gertner: A great book about the history of Bell Labs, the scientists and engineers that brought great innovations to society including phones<p>* Wizard: The Life and Times of Nikola Tesla by Marc Seifer: A biography of Nikola Tesla. Its quite astounding how much one person can achieve in their lifetime
eitlandover 5 years ago
I very much enjoyed reading &quot;The Mythical Man-Month&quot; (as well as listening to the Phoenix project, but that doesn&#x27;t strictly qualify as non-fiction I guess.)<p>The Mythical Man-Month was interesting to me becauset the situationsiit describes are totally different and yet eerily similar.
neuroticfishover 5 years ago
I don&#x27;t have a specific suggestion, but maybe find a good book about Mars? Seems like a logical follow-up to reading The Martian.
13415over 5 years ago
<i>The Knowledge</i> - Lewis Dartnell<p>It changed my perspective on modern civilization and the necessity of global shipping &amp; trading.
RaceWonover 5 years ago
If you&#x27;re in the space of being an Entrepreneur, you should understand sales, and ultimately negotiation.<p>Sales comes down to building desire, different people can desire the same product for different reasons. Understand this fact and you will be head and shoulders above 80% of all Entrepreneurs.<p>Negotiating come down to two things, the first one is Sales related: you do NOT negotiate with someone who does NOT desire what you have. The second is being willing to walk away. Loathe or Love--Trump he owns this. If you are not willing to walk even when it hurts--you are Not negotiating you are capitulating.<p>Zig Ziglar explains sales well. And &quot;Never Split The Difference&quot; by Voss is the best negotiating book I&#x27;ve ever read, and not to brag; but my name is on plaques in more than one company as the Top Performer where they hold sales meetings. Side note; Voss does advocate for splitting the difference--at times. And so do I, because it is one tool of many that works.
MattLeBlanc001over 5 years ago
Bad Blood by John Carreyrou
thorinover 5 years ago
7 years in Tibet
idoescompootersover 5 years ago
<i>Permanent Record</i> - Edward Snoden
sharma_pradeepover 5 years ago
Farming