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This is a poll asking the Stackoverflow community what non-programming books they would recommend to fellow programmers.

Please read the following before posting:

  • Please post only ONE BOOK PER ANSWER.

  • Please search for your recommendation on this page before posting (there are over NINE PAGES so it is advisable to check them all). Many books have already been suggested and we want to avoid duplicates. If you find your recommendation is already present, vote it up or add some commentary.

  • Please elaborate on why you think a given book is worth reading from a programmer's perspective.

This poll is now community editable, so you can edit this question or any of the answers.

Note: this article is similar and contains other useful suggestions.

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can somebody with account on meta. put in a request for in-answers search? – zvolkov Jul 20 at 16:37
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@zvolkov: The request is already there, Jeff says it's a low priority. I upvoted the question. (meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/1274/…) – Peter Di Cecco Aug 19 at 14:00
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280 Answers

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Robot (No, not "I Robot") by Hans Moravec.

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Not only is it an imaginative view of where robots and humans may be heading, but he also throws in some stuff about orbital elevators and time circuits with probability fuses. Cool.

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Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

Every scientist/programmer should read this book. It tells you to know your limits and be bold at the same time.

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The Joy of Sex, by Alex Comfort.

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Because all programmers need some distractions.

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I looked for this book in Barnes and Noble, but couldn't find it, so I asked Customer Service. They asked me what I did for a living. I said I was a computer programmer. They said to look under fiction. Bah-dum-cha! – Beska Apr 9 at 20:48
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For a lot of programmers this is a very theoretical book rather than anything more hands on though. – Jon Hopkins Jul 28 at 8:42
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There wasn't a chapter on the 'hands on approach' It was more oriented to couples. – pavium Oct 1 at 7:56
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vote up 73 vote down

The Art of War - Sun Tzu

The Art of War

Wikipedia: Much of the text is about how to fight wars without actually having to do battle: it gives tips on how to outsmart one's opponent so that physical battle is not necessary. As such, it has found application as a training guide for many competitive endeavors that do not involve actual combat.

This knowledge would surely be useful in the everyday "battles" we have to fight in and out of the office. It's also filled with quotes you can impress your fellow programmers with... :)

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Why Alice in wonderland got more votes than this, I will never know. – amischiefr Aug 19 at 15:04
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Alice in wonderland was quoted (far too heavily, in my opinion) in the Matrix. Hence, geeks will tend to identify with it. I'm betting most of them have never read the Art of War. – A. Levy Aug 25 at 4:01
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I recommend Steven Pinker's "How the Mind Works" - he outlines how our brains have evolved to work the way they do. It's a fascinating insight into our own personal "thinking machines" - the root of every computer program.

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Design for the Real World by Victor Papaneck is a little outdated in some of the views and opinions but anyone involved in the design process should read it. Some of the lessons and skills taught are essential and timeless, but most computer programmers are involved in the design process in one way and a book that gives such a good grounding in the skill of design is an essential read.

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I've grouped a few books by one author there - they're pure fiction books and won't help your career. I just think most software developers will like them.

All programmers should read the fiction by Charlie Stross - he writes about all the stuff most programmers are in to.

Just a few examples:

  • Halting State - Tells the tale of a bank robbery inside a World of Warcraft style game.
  • Atrocity Archives - IT expert/spy is up against Lovecraftian horrors.
  • Accelerando - (free download) High tech future where your PDA and internet presence is part of your personality and online kudos/rep is as important as money.
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My indication:

The World Is Flat by Thomas L. Friedman

Great book for understand how information changed the world.

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Eli Goldratt's The Goal - Sounds like a cliche, but it changed my life.

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vote up 105 vote down

The Elements of Style

by William Strunk & E.B. White

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We got a copy in our R&D library after coming across Joshua Bloch's (of Effective Java fame) recommendation for it:

This slim volume preaches the gospel of simplicity and clarity as it applies to English prose. If you take it to heart, it will improve your coding as well as your prose.

In another interview Bloch elaborates on why this is good for programmers:

I believe that reading Strunk and White will make you a better developer because good programming and good writing are both about clarity and economy of expression. You can't write good code or good prose unless you understand what it is you're trying to say. Many of Strunk and White's admonitions have direct analogues for software. For example, Strunk and White say, "Omit needless words!" where Andy Hunt and Dave Thomas ("The Pragmatic Programmers") say, "Don't repeat yourself." Strunk and White say, "Revise and Rewrite," where Martin Fowler says, "refactor." And the list goes on.

Now, personally I think some of the advice in The Elements of Style is a bit aged, as usage of English has evolved (e.g., nowadays it's quite ok to start a sentence with "However," or to use "hopefully" instead of "I hope"). But for the most part I agree with Mr Bloch, and enjoyed reading this.

Edit: Oh, here's what Jeff Atwood more recently had to say about The Elements of Style. Perhaps he's an even better known figure around here than Josh Bloch ;)

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+1. Best line in the book. "Omit needless words." – Genericrich Jan 31 at 23:23
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LanguageLog calls it "[an] odious booklet" : itre.cis.upenn.edu/~myl/languagelog/… – OtherMichael Apr 10 at 12:55
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Linguists pretty much universally agree that this book has some terrible advice that has led many writers astray. Particularly the completely made up and arbitrary rules like "don't split infinitives", "'that' and 'which' are never interchangeable", and "don't end a sentence with a preposition". – Kip Jul 2 at 2:33
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Outliers: The Story of Success by Malcolm Gladwell

I just bought it on Audible last week and I can't stop listening to it. It goes through the factors of successful people (ex: Bill Gates, Bill Joy, The Beatles). Fascinating!

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The Cuckoo's Egg by Clifford Stoll.

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Great book. It's important because it puts programming-related issues in context with the real world. You don't get more Real World(tm) than the FBI knocking your door as consequence of you having a custom resource accounting system. :-) Would someone edit this to provide more information? – Daniel Jan 31 at 2:43
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Joel Spolsky's "Best Software Writing I"

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How is that a non-programming book? – Keith Jan 28 at 12:12
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One hundred years of solitude

by Gabriel Garcia Marquez

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vote up 14 vote down

Anybody Can Be Cool — But Awesome Takes Practice

Just because of the title.

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MAN.. and the hilarious posing on the cover :) – bobobobo Jul 2 at 1:56
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They must have practiced that pose a long time to make it that perfect! – Gumbo Jul 2 at 6:46
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Up vote for cover. – PeterAllenWebb Aug 14 at 20:27
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vote up 71 vote down

Flatland, by Abbott alt text

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The book is old enough it is public domain now. You can read the FULL thing here: geom.uiuc.edu/~banchoff/Flatland – Simucal Feb 1 at 0:06
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There was a sequel, too, written by a different author who was also a mathematician. He uses it to further explore the concepts involved, as well as several new ones. – staticsan Feb 1 at 22:10
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Spaceland, by Rudy Rucker, is a great modern version of Flatland. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaceland_(novel) – Nate Kohl Jul 2 at 0:55
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Another modern version is Flatterland (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flatterland) – Chris Simmons Aug 14 at 21:32
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Made to Stick written by Chip Heath and Dan Heath.

It can help improving your presentations and ideas, helping you pitching your story behind your ideas.
But not any story.
One which is a:

  • Simple
  • Unexpected
  • Concrete
  • Credible
  • Emotional
  • Story

And you will have a success ;)

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The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress

Amazon - Wikipedia

The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress

Written in 1966 this classic science fiction novel takes place on the penal colony Luna (the moon). The story is told by the only programmer/computer repairman on Luna, Manuel. Manuel has a secret. The master computer (Mike) that controls all of Luna has become a sentient AI and happens to have Manuel as its only friend. Mike is rough around the edges at first, its speech is fuzzy and it plays childish but dangerous jokes with its god-like abilities. As time wears on Mikes abilities fully develop into a mature being. With Manuel's guidance they will go on an adventure together that spurs the revolution of freeing Luna from Earth!

This novel is the first Robert A. Heinlein novels I have read but will certainly not be the last. The fact that this book was written in 1966 still astonishes me! It has barely any dated parts and could easily pass for a contemporary novel. It wont he Hugo award for best novel.

Truly one of the better "programmer" style novels I have read. Great adventure the whole way through. If anyone has a suggestion as to which Heinlein novel I read next, please leave a comment!

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SUCH a good book. Heinlein is one of my favorite authors, and this is definitely one of this best. – Alex O'Konski Jan 31 at 23:30
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Firday is a great book and was one of his later books. Where did you read that he had a brain problem? – Carra Apr 10 at 10:06
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Oh, I can also advise to read his starship troopers. Completely different from the movie but still a great book :) – Carra Apr 10 at 10:07
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Heinlein novels that won the Hugo for best novel: The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress, Starship Troopers, Double Star, and Stranger In A Strange Land. Don't miss the compilations of his short stories, "Future Histories". One of my favorites is "If This Goes On...". – Kelly French Jul 20 at 14:44
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Awakening of Intelligence

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One Minute Manager whether you're a manager or you have one.

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Masters of Doom !!

God programmer meet God marketing guy, and no it's not Steve Woz and Steve Jobs, but it's the Johns, Carmack and Romero.

Business, gaming and programming all rolled into one. a definitely page turner all the way until the end.

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The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. Atlas Shrugged is already on this list, but the Fountainhead deals more with craftsmanship and integrity, rather than supply-side economic theory. Definitely worth a read for anyone in a creative field.

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Written in 1950, Dianetics: The Evolution of a Science describes the optimum computer as an introduction to a science of the mind.

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Yeah, right. I'll think of that the next time I view "Battlefield Earth" (as he said himself, Travolta's best movie ever... or was it Phenomenon? Can't remember. Note to myself: Less Dianetics tomorrow). -1 – Boldewyn Jul 28 at 9:53
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The Thermodynamics of Pizza by Harold Morowitz.

This could have all kinds of morals, depending on how you take it. 1. You can use science to improve EVERYTHING! :-) 2. Make sure you choose the right level of abstraction when designing and coding. 3. You can really improve your life if you just take a few minutes to think about it.

etc.

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The Humane Interface by Jef Raskin.

You can see some of the effects of these ideas in Aza Raskin's (Jef's son) Enso project and the Ubiquity Firefox add-on.

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I think everyone should read 'Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close' by Jonathan Safran Foer. It's awesome and I really love the way how he plays with the lay-out. It really is both literature and visual art.
Apart from that, the kid who has the lead role is super awesome.

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Language, Truth, and Logic by AJ Ayer.

Why? Because it will help you avoid saying things that don't mean anything in a literal sense, and get you thinking about the meaningfulness of claims.

Don't take it too strongly - the author has an extensive introduction qualifying his claims.

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Anger Management - 6 Critical Steps to a Calmer Life

For your first day on the job and right after you see what the previous programmer left behind.

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The Bible.

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Sure, most of us could do with a laugh – annakata Dec 8 '08 at 16:26
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@annakata - That's hardly a way to talk about one of the greatest writings of history. Approach it as an intellect and I think you'll appreciate its beauty and historical relevance. – Jonathan Sampson Jan 31 at 2:58
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Blah, I'm not big on this kind of fiction. – Simucal Feb 1 at 1:22
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What exactly are we supposed to learn from this Bronze age mythology? – Andy Brice Feb 1 at 21:28
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@Dunlavey: "alien" is a foreigner; Moses smashed the first set of tablets in anger; and a "kid" is a baby goat, which in old pagan rituals was cooked in its mother's milk. If you want some interesting bits look at Judges 3:22 where this guy was so fat that when he was stabbed with a sword, the sword disappeared into his stomach :) – Jeffrey Kemp Jul 28 at 5:18
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My personal opinion is, apart from programming, in life we need to find a balance, about everything (or keep striving for it). Many times, I have found myself getting too immersed in one aspect of life (frequently programming/work) at the cost of others. Over the years I have learnt to recognize this and act accordingly.

In work, sometimes I have come across pretty difficult people, making it hard to work with them (not just my opinion, but also of other team members). Previously I used to try hard to convince them, make them more helpful, etc. and get frustrated when I don't succeed.

But this book Tigana, by Guy Gavriel Kay helped me understand that sometimes a person can be inherently complex, hard to work with, without he/she helping it. It is a science fiction novel, and it may not be completely appropriate here, but it helped me work better with my team, so I am linking to it here. It helped me become more objective in dealing with people I work with.

-Omer

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