Ask HN: What is the best book you read in 2020?
What's the best book you read in the current year, and why? For me it was Range, by David Epstein. The combination of surveys, research data, anecdotes, and the ease of reading was fantastic! It helped me see many things in a more positive light than I had before. What about everyone else?
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[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 130 ms ] threadMy pick would be Intrapreneurs by Gib Bullock, a first person perspective of building a new venture in a large business while challenging whether large businesses are good for the world, and ending up in a mental ward from the stressful introspection https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/39730555-the-intrapreneu...
See my blog post [1] for other books I enjoyed this year.
[0] https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/52135463-wintersteel
[1] https://learnbyexample.github.io/2020-favorite-fiction/
From last year (but even more relevant this year), Fear by Thich Nhat Hanh. I must have read it over 20 times when I was going through hard times.
For what it is, it was great. Did not read a lot of books this year due to children and covid!
"Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat" - Samin Nosrat
"Walking: One step at a time" : Erling Kagge
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/LispBook/
Entire e-book available free online. The recursion part is especially fun. If you haven't tried Lisp, this is a great book to start with, and it will open your mind to new approaches to computing without the tough academic grinding of SICP.
2) Fiction: The First Law trilogy by Joe Abercrombie.
It's dark fantasy. Emphasis on dark. Feels like real life, except less victimology. I find the darkness a palate cleanser, excellent for when I have to deal with the realities of people and their burning desire to avoid responsibility for their own actions.
You can read some short bits by Joe free at the publishers site
https://www.tor.com/2016/01/12/twos-company-joe-abercrombie/
20 short stories about money, how to think about saving vs investing, risk and leverage, time in the market vs absolute returns.
I found the postscript absolutely fascinating: 'A brief history of why the U.S. consumer thinks the way they do'. http://reader.epubee.com/books/mobile/ac/acc521dcbf15f206f9b...
* The Man Who Was Thursday, by GK Chesterton
* The Oresteia, by Aeschylus
* Cyrano de Bergerac, by Edmond Rostand
* The Eye of the World, by Robert Jordan
I read it after seeing it recommended here on HN. It paid off :)
Mom Test - Best business book.
Fiction: Saturn Run, by John Sandford. Very exciting, great characters, science fiction with great science. I would call it a modern science fiction novel. Very Refreshing.
Science/history/cool: Sunburst and Luminary, by Don Eyles. An Apollo Memoir; very exciting, great explanations about programming and designing the navigation and landing computer of the lunar module, with a neat view into the characters and history of the time. Thanks to other HN posts for these suggestions. Happy New Year!
Not only is it a fantastic locked room mystery thriller, but a hilarious satire of entitled tech bros and startup culture. :-)
Fiction: Name of the wind - Patrick Rothfuss
Welcome to the long wait for Doors of Stone.
Thanks for your comment. :)
Non-fiction: My Life in Christ - St John of Kronstadt
Honorable mention to The Elements of Eloquence - Mark Forsyth, which is a delightfully light read about the patterns in English phrases, but I finished it 2 days before the start of 2020.
Rhythm of War by Brandon Sanderson (Book 4 in the Stormlight Archives series)
Love him, or hate him, BS is prolific. He somehow maintains a superhuman level of efficiency in writing. This is the 4th of a planned 10 book epic fantasy series. I can't possibly summarize the 3.5 books I've read in the series so far, since each is approximately 1200 pages. Really they're about 3-4 of an average sized trade paperback each. That's not to say they are too long either, with the exception of the first book (a common/unavoidable problem the with epic fantasy genre, there's just a lot you need to say to get people fully invested), they pick up from the first word on interesting storylines and just keep churning.
and
Children of Dune by Frank Herbert (Book 3 of the Dune series)
Dune is one of my favorite books of all time. SOmehow, I've never read the rest of them. I re-read Dune this year, and decided to continue the story. I really wasn't a huge fan of Dune Messiah. I don't want to spoil anything for you, but let's just say it's probably because flaws of the main character are too humanly frustrating to watch unfold. Children of Dune is, so far, as good or better than Dune in my opinion.
I also read Dune this year and loved it and gave up on Dune Messiah. Will power through if things get better.
I really enjoyed Asimov's Foundation Series and Le Guin's Hainish books (specifically Dispossessed and Left Hand of Darkness) this year, check them out of if you haven't yet.
I really wasn’t crazy about Dune Messiah. It was just okay. The whole prescient man that can’t accept the future is changeable is so frustrating. The thought it got much better toward the end though. Children of Dune is great so far. His kids are the manifestation of the answer to all my grievances with Paul in DM. I think DM will be one of those books that’s good in retrospect when contextualized within the entire story. On it’s own, it’s pretty meh. It’s short though.
And Foundation is great!
- The Brothers Karamazov
- The Catcher in the Rye
- Ender's Game
- Dune
First of these is "Street of Eternal Happiness: Big City Dreams Along a Shanghai Road". What it's like to grow up while having family in a labor camp. What it's like to have your entire business or house confiscated. How hard it is to be a student. Also just plenty of interesting little tidbits on day-to-day life.
Second one is "The Empty Mirror: Experiences in a Japanese Zen Monastery". It's about a foreigner who leaves his life behind and joins a zen monastery in Japan. It covers in detail the day-to-day experience of it, such as collapsing on temple grounds from lack of sleep during particularly demanding meditation sessions. But monks are human too, and on some occasions sneak over the temple walls for some fun outside.
Both of these transfer to you the "feel" of these places.
It made me realize we probably can stop aging and age related deceases, which changed my view on life.
0. https://www.amazon.com/Lifespan-Why-Age_and-Dont-Have/dp/150...