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What is the best non software development related book that you think each software developer should read?

Note, there is a similar, poll-style question here: What non-programming books should programmers read?

Update: Peopleware is a great book, must read, no doubt. But it is about software development so does not count.


Update: We ended up suggesting more than one book and that's great! Below is summary (with links to Amazon) of the books you should consider for your reading list.

...to be continued.

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closed as off topic by Jeremy Banks, Jeff Atwood Sep 15 '11 at 7:17

Questions on Stack Overflow are expected to generally relate to programming or software development in some way, within the scope defined in the faq.

36 Answers

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Don't Make Me Think by Steve Krug

Don't Make Me Think by Steve Krug

It's a book for web designers on usability, but the lessons learned here are crucial in understanding how to make great UI for both web and standalone applications.

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Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zen_and_the_Art_of_Motorcycle_Maintenance

For an exploration into the meaning of quality.

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I enjoyed Hackers and Painters by Paul Graham. It's entertaining, informative, and thought provoking. alt text

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As a programmer, I often have to organize visual content. That's what this small book's about.

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Off the top of my head...

  1. Here Comes Everybody. A Total eye opener about the power of collaboration. As a taster read Clay's amazing article "Gin, Television and Social Surplus" that Jeff put me on to. Thanks Jeff! Or Clay's fantastic TED talk on "Institutions vs. collaboration"
  2. The Long Tail. A more detailed specific analysis of the new "large choice aspects" that will affect us all.
  3. The Inmates Are Running the Asylum. Another great book about what's wrong with high-tech design. And how to approach fixing it.
  4. Don't Make Me Think. Another great book on usability. Specifically, web usability.
  5. Web 2.0: A Strategy Guide. Forget the web 2.0 hype. This is a great book well worth the price of entry.
  6. The Myths of Innovation. Another eye opener that really makes you think about how innovation happens.
  7. Waltzing with Bears. The "Peopleware people" talking about risk management.
  8. The World is Flat An amazing book about globalisation. And so much more.
  9. How to Talk Dirty and Influence People. By Lenny Bruce. Because sometimes it's not just about The Machine. And Johnny needs to come out and play! (-:

And to finish. An amazing video, also from the TED talks, that shows how much we don't know about this beautiful, amazing, wonderful planet!

Reap these righteous riffs and enjoy!

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Peopleware. (Ok, didn't read the question fully...How about "Good to Great", that is a good read about how business should work)

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The "Business of Software" by Erick Sink is very good. Erick himself recommends "Crossing the Chasm", and though I have not read it myself, Erick's synopsis of the book was very thought-provoking.

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Slack by Tom DeMarco is more recent than Peopleware. I would recommend:

  • The Goal by Eli Goldratt. The theory of constraints can be used to solve many problems in software engineering.

  • Here Comes Everybody by Clay Shirky. How to organise without organisations.

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I quite enjoyed In search of stupidity which I've read a couple of times...

Synopsis from Amazon:

In Search of Stupidity: Over Twenty Years of High-Tech Marketing Disasters, Second Edition is National Lampoon meets Peter Drucker. It's a funny and well-written business book that takes a look at some of the most influential marketing and business philosophies of the last twenty years. Through the dark glass of hindsight, it provides an educational and entertaining look at why these philosophies didn't work for many of the country's largest and best-known high-tech companies. Marketing wizard Richard Chapman takes you on a hilarious ride in this book, which is richly illustrated with cartoons and reproductions of many of the actual campaigns used at the time. Filled with personal anecdotes spanning Chapman's remarkable career (he was present at many now-famous meetings and events), In Search of Stupidity, Second Edition examines the best of the worst marketing ideas and business decisions in the last twenty years of the technology industry. The second edition includes new chapters on Google and on how to avoid stupidity, plus the extensive analyses of all chapters from the first edition.You'll want to get a copy because it Features an interesting preface and interview with Joel Spolsky of "Joel on Software" Offers practical advice on avoiding PR disaster Features actual pictures of some of the worst PR and marketing material ever created Is highly readable and funny Includes theme-based cartoons for every chapter

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Now, Discover Your Strengths

Now, Discover Your Strengths

I'm a big fan of this and several other books by the Gallup Management Journal. Many companies take the approach to career development and training that you must figure out your weaknesses and somehow compensate for them. If you are someone who's not good at communicating, they'll send you to a communication class. If you're a manager who can't manage, they send you to a management class. By studying thousands of successful professionals and organizations, the Gallup folks observed success comes when you focus on strengths instead of covering up weaknesses.

Along with the book, you take something like a personality test that will help you find in what areas you best perform. The book then describes how you can be much more successful by focusing on those strengths and incorporating them more into your daily routine.

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Currently, I'd be leaning towards Concrete Mathematics.

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Introduction to General Systems Thinking or at least one other book by G. M. Weinberg that induces you to think about how you think about problems.

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Notes on the Synthesis of Form by Christopher Alexander - Alexander's insights are wonderful, the Pattern Language and other books are also very good and eventually the much later Nature of Order series is more mature and the theory has progress to become more holistic - I think his work is fundamentally more meaningful to read to understand patterns than books written about patterns in software - which tend to bypass the practitioner internalizing the fundamental motivations of patterns.

Are Your Lights On?: How to Figure Out What the Problem Really Is by Donald C. Gause and Gerald M. Weinberg - great thinking about problem-solving and the nature of people's perceptions about problems.

I emphatically second the earlier recommendation of Normal Accidents - that is a tremendous book for understanding the (unexpected) behavior of complex systems.

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I've suggested this before on a similar post, but How to win friends and influence people is a must for all people in technical roles that have to deal with non-technical people every day. It's very old (1930s), but all the lessons inside are still highly relevant.

For fiction I would suggest anything by Charlie Stross is a must, in particular The Atrocity Archives, The Jennifer Morgue (both about a Lovecraftian spy IT guy) and Halting State (starts with a bank robbery inside an MMO).

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Anything by Drucker

Maybe it's considered out of date, but he actually predicted the shift to "knowledge" workers (many, many years ago), which is really the core of development. His clear definition of what a business really is still resonates with me:

There is only one valid definition of business purpose: to create a customer

His writing tends to be more philosophical, but there are some real gems in there.

Information is data endowed with relevance and purpose. Converting data into information thus requires knowledge. And knowledge, by definition, is specialized.

Edit:

Well, let me be a bit more specific. Many people think The Effective Executive is the quintessential Drucker, but I enjoyed Management more.

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I see that all the obvious answers are already here. I'm taking a slightly different slant on the question in that I am listing books that make you think about things (not all computer/development relate) in the belief that just thinking about the world around you at a slightly different level will make you a better developer.

Godel, Escher, Bach by Douglas R. Hofstadter to make your head hurt and expand.

Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance by Robert Pirsig to experience thinking philosophically about 'quality'.

Accelerando by Charles Stross to see where we're going, although I could just about finish it.

The Soul of a New Machine by Tracy Kidder, computers, excitement and history.

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I strongly recommed Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand. I saw The Fountainhead mentioned also, but I really see Atlas Shrugged as the most accurate telling of our society today and how we as the thinkers and creators fit into it.

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The Fountainhead. A story about an architect, but everything to be learned from it readily applies to software development.

alt text

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On Writing by Stephen King is pretty awesome.

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The Road to Reality by Roger Penrose Because physics and mathematics are inspiring, if you're that way inclined.

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The Paradox of Choice

So much effort is spent adding features to various sites and apps. Sometimes one good way to do something is better than several different ways.

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The Four Hour Work Week by Tim Ferris. Turn off the email!

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