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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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Does anyone see the difference between this list and "What books should geeks read?" lists? – HuBeZa Aug 20 at 9:26
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zvolkov, you already have an account on meta! Meta uses the same openID protocol just as SO does. So you don't need to register an account if you already use an openID provider. – T Pops Aug 22 at 1:30
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It is really lame that people closed this. – ChaosPandion Dec 17 at 21:01
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295 Answers

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The Economic Naturalist: Why Economics Explains Almost Everything - by Robert H. Frank

A great insight into why economics affect a lot of our everyday lives, including why the black Apple Macbook is more expensive than the white one.

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Actually, a recommendation from Bill Buxton who I chatted to at Remix08 UK.

Designing For People, Henry Dreyfus, 1st Edition (1955)

... I decided to pass on his new book, and took his advice and now have a 1st Edition copy from a US bookseller and it looks wonderful; beautifully typeset and laid out (apparently later editions aren't faithful to the original).

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This is similar to another question. Here is a link to my answer over there.

Now, Discover Your Strengths is my favorite personal/career development book. It teaches the most successful people become successful by focusing on building on their strengths, rather than covering up weaknesses. This book helps you find out where your strengths lie.

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Enders Game by Orson Scott card

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This was an impressive, enjoyable book. Just fun fiction. Before there was Jack Bauer, there was Ender Wiggin. That's obviously not a perfect metaphor, but you'll excuse it. – __ Oct 20 '08 at 3:22
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Terrible friggin cover. – Gopherkhan Jan 31 '09 at 3:18
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This is a duplicate. There is a post for this that has many more votes. – lillq Feb 3 '09 at 15:48
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Kicking the Sacred Cow

Questioning the Unquestionable and Thinking the Impermissible

by James P. Hogan

alt Kicking the Sacred Cow

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Walter Murch's "In the Blink of an Eye"

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

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

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"A Thousand Acres" by Jane Smiley.

A modern retelling of King Lear, set on an Iowa farm. There isn't a word wasted. I read it five times, and I think there's still more I could get out of it.

The world she paints is a vista of color and emotional depth. It makes techy stuff look shallow and monochrome. We coders could learn there's a bigger world than bits & bytes.

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Secret Rendezvous by Kobo Abe. Abe's the frickin' man, man.

http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/images/n4/n24878.jpg

But seriously, if you like Murakami, you owe it to yourself to check out Abe.

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"My System" by Aron Nimzowitsch.

It is the best chess manual ever.

Most world chess champions were geniuses. Nimzowitsch was a Guru.

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JR by William Gaddis

The story is almost entirely dialog. No narration or explanation. It's like code without comments, but written so well that after a few pages, you don't even notice. Each person's way of speaking is unique and you can tell who is speaking by what they are saying. There is no need for 'JR said ...'

Forcing everything to come through dialog is very similar to writing code within the constraints of the compiler/interpreter and still produce the desired result.

And its a good story.

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Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things

by George Lakoff

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It's a book about how people categorize things, and about reasoning in general. It's long and extremely boring for some people, but it is still great.

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Winning

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The Back of the Napkin:

Solving Problems and Selling Ideas with Pictures
by Dan Roam

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Claude Steiner - Scripts People Live

If you are interested in the social factor and how people are ticking this book provides a good background. It is very entertaining if you start observing some of these patterns in real life, and more important if you start working on your own shortcomings.

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Rebel Code: Linux and the Open Source Revolution

A good read about the genesis of Linux and the Open Source movement.

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Awaken the Giant Within by Anthony Robbins.

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First Things First - another equal great book from Stephen R. Covey.

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JPod:) It's funny and it's about programmers.

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Better not. This book is but a pale imitation of the infinitely better "Microserfs". I really had to struggle to finish it. – mghie Jul 1 at 22:43
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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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Blink:

This is an amazing book that details some very counter-intuitive conclusions about the LACK of THINKING actually predominates our decision process.

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Maybe any kind of motivation books, articles will do the job for me :)

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Happiness

by Will Ferguson

This is a really great read, although you might not learn anything, however I like to put it next to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy on my bookshelf, and I think that says it all ;)

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37 signal's Getting Real is an absolute must read. Its common sense stuff that many people ignore.

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I would heartily recommend Jennifer Government to any software developer. Amazon Wikipedia

It's a very fast paced action story that's excellent to clear your head with. It's a fun book to read (will make you laugh), and the characters are rather tragic (will make you feel more satisfied at work). This is one of those books that is hard to explain the content without fear that people will think you different and odd, but all the same you must tell everyone about (I.e. makes you talk to people).

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