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Paperback
208 pages
ISBN 9781578516445 Published Sept. 2001
Harvard Business School Press
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Posted Sept. 14, 2009 9:17 a.m. by todd-sattersten
In Lists - 800 CEO Read Blog
A few weeks ago, Fred Wilson from avc.com kicked up interest in books that entreprenuers should read. Fred, in particular, made the point that "there is way more insight to be gained from stories than from business books." He suggested Kavalier and Clay, Atlas Shrugged, The Prince, and anything by Shakespeare.
At the end of his post, he asked for more suggestions. The post generated 191 comments and prompted the creation of a wiki.
I pulled all the books from the wiki over into this post and linked to the books. The [FW] tag denotes that it was endorsed by Mr. Wilson himself directly or in the comments of the original post.
- Atlas Shrugged [FW]
- The Prince [FW]
- All of Shakespeare's Histories & Tragedies [FW]
- Founders at Work
- Autobiography of Malcolm X
- Catch-22 [FW]
- The Gold Coast
- State of Fear
- Confessions of a Street Addict
- Selling the Wheel
- Plato's Republic
- The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius
- Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
- Moby Dick [FW]
- The Art of War [FW]
- Exodus
- Taking on the World
- A Short History of Nearly Everything
- Garp [FW]
- Jonathan Livingston Seagull [FW]
- Rossi: MotoGenius
- The Puritan Gift
- The Fountainhead [FW]
- Pillars of the Earth
- The White Tiger
- The Monk and the Riddle
- Outrageous Optimism: Wisdom for the Entrepreneurial Journey
- The E-Myth Revisited
- Setting The Table [FW]
- Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
- Siddartha [FW]
- Confederacy of Dunces
- Dark Star Safari
- Project X - Nissin Cup Noodle
- The Red Horse
- St. Augustine's Confessions
- Mastery
- The Four Agreements (Miguel Ruiz)
- Tao Te Ching (Lau Tzu)
- The Sharper your knife, the less you cry (Kathleen Flinn)
- What Would Google Do? (Jeff Jarvis)
- Burn Rate (Michael Wolff)
- Startup (Jerry Kaplan)
- The Hero with a Thousand Faces (Campbell)
- The Alchemist (Coelho)
- The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Twain)
- Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (Carroll)
- The Wealth of Nations (Smith)
- Absalom, Absalom (Faulkner)
- The 33 Strategies of War
- The 48 Laws of Power
- Hide a dagger behind a smile
- Cold Calling For Chickens
- Disclosing New Worlds: Entrepreneurship, Democratic Action, and the Cultivation of Solidarity (Flores)
- The Art Of Profitability
- The Innovator's Dilemma
- Crossing The Chasm
- Blue Ocean Strategy
- What I Wish I Knew When I Was 20
- The Compassionate Samurai
- The Art of Learning
- The Selfish Gene
- Capital (Karl Marx)
- Mein Kampf
- The Singularity is Near
- How to Win Friends & Influence People
- Hope is not a Strategy
- The Four steps to the Epiphany
- The Principles of Product Development Flow - Second Generation Lean Product Development
- One Hen
- Blueprint To A Billion
- Moneyball
- The Places In Between
- Mavericks at work
- Blink
- The Tipping Point
- Outliers
- Freakonomics
- Behind Closed Doors (Secrets of great management)
The Largest Gathering of 100 Best Authors West of the Mississippi
Posted Feb. 11, 2009 8:37 a.m. by curt-rosengren
In 100 Best - 800 CEO Read Blog
Last week Todd and I hosted a 100 Best event at Stanford. This was the largest gathering to date of 100 Best authors west of the Mississippi River! Joining us were Jeffrey Pfeffer and Bob Sutton, authors of The Knowing-Doing Gap; Chip Heath, with Made to Stick; and Randy Komisar, with The Monk and Riddle.
The gathering was held at the Stanford d. school, in a room which I liken to a kindergarten classroom for grown-ups. 10 minutes after the event started, people were crammed into the room, all eager to hear what the authors had to share. Some were standing, some were squatting near the floor and others were seated in the various chairs lined up, all surrounded by whiteboards and art supplies.Todd, Jeffrey, Bob, Randy and Chip sat in front, perched on stools. Todd moderating in his best Charlie Rose impression as the authors shared incredible stories of business experiences, the beginnings of their books, and how their ideas relate to everyday life. Like Randy Komisar who was approached by Harvard Business School Press to write a book. They came knocking and selling him on the idea that he had a book to write. Randy said he had no clue what to write about nor how to write it. So HBP hired Kent Lineback to help Randy write (Randy, who still didn't have a story in mind and Kent, who had never written a book before). Eventually, an editor from HBP, Kent and Randy all met for one long, three-day weekend to determine a direction and crank out the book. From that point on, the book was written from start to finish SEVENTEEN times.
Jeffrey: Drive fear out of the organization.Randy: Be passionate about what you do.
Chip: Know when to say no. Too often people say yes to everything.
Bob: Fight as if you are right, listen as if you are wrong.
It was one of those moments where everything comes together. The authors were dynamic and engaging and everyone walked out chattering about what had taken place. Thank you to those who came and to Jeffrey, Bob, Chip and Randy for sharing your stories.
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As an aside, if you happen to find yourself in the Stanford area, grab a slice of pizza from Palo Alto's Pizza My Heart.
