Books Are Back, Baby
While there were always plenty of books in the house growing up, I was never a voracious reader. Then, somewhere after college, I got the reading bug. I devoured books — fiction, non-fiction, classics, contemporary — I read them all. I had so much lost ground to make up for. There was one year in my late twenties in which I read fifty books! While I have yet to exceed that high water mark of almost a book a week I continued to read extensively for years.
That is, until Internet came along. My pace of reading dropped to a trickle in the last few years. Between 2004 and 2008 I read less than three books per year, and one year I read only one book. Ouch!
I am proud to report that in 2009 I got my reading mojo back. I read a dozen books this year. I don’t think it is a coincidence that 2009 was also the year that I got a Kindle (even though only half of the books I read were available in Kindle format). In the age of gadgets and electronics, the Kindle has made reading fun again. After almost a decade of wandering aimlessly in the Internet wasteland of too many RSS subscriptions I have rediscovered the depth and quality of well-written books.
Here are the books I read in 2009:
- The White Tiger, Aravind Adiga
- Flawless Consulting, Peter Block
- Outliers, Malcolm Gladwell
- Confederates in the Attic, Tony Horwitz
- Million Dollar Consulting, Alan Weiss
- Co-Active Coaching, Laura Whitworth, et. al.
- The Bigger Game, Rick Tamlyn, et. al.
- Paranoia, Joseph Finder
- Escape from Cubicle Nation, Pamela Slim
- The Lost Symbol, Dan Brown
- Back Sense, Siegel, Urgang, Johnson
- Leadership and Self-Deception, The Arbinger Institute
With the exception of The Lost Symbol, I would highly recommend each book on the list. If I had to pick a favorite, it would be Outliers. Wow! The the ideas in that book turned my head inside out. An excellent read.
I am already three-fourths of the way into two books and it is only January 04. If all goes well, 2010 promises to be a rich year for reading as well.
