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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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24  
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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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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closed as not programming related by raven, David Hedlund, recursive, Jonathan Sampson, dmckee yesterday

289 Answers

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vote up 7 vote down

The Catcher in the Rye

The Catcher in the Rye

Just a great novel.

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vote up 7 vote down

The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster

by Bobby Henderson

(Wiki link)

An elaborate spoof on Intelligent Design, The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster is neither too elaborate nor too spoofy to succeed in nailing the fallacies of ID. It’s even wackier than Jonathan Swift’s suggestion that the Irish eat their children as a way to keep them from being a burden, and it may offend just as many people, but Henderson, described elsewhere as a 25-year-old “out-of-work physics major,” puts satire to the same serious use that Swift did. Oh, yes, it is very funny.

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vote up 6 vote down

Jeffrey K. Liker - The Toyota Way (Amazon link). A good if at times semi-boring read, but loads of information from the company which invented Lean.

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If you live on the Unix side of the world, The Art of UNIX Programming by Eric Raymond (see also here). Despite its title, it is not a programming book, and it contains very few lines of code indeed. It's the best book I know about the Unix philosophy.

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5  
The art of UNIX programming is not about programming? I think that's a hard sell. – Svend Jul 1 at 23:04
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Rick Cook - The Wiz Biz

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This is a compilation of the first two novels in a series, called 'Wizard's Bane' and 'Wizardry Compiled', respectively.

It all began when the wizards of the White League were under attack by their opponents of the Black League and one of their most powerful members cast a spell to bring forth a mighty wizard to aid their cause. What the spell delivers master hacker Walter "Wiz" Zumwalt. With the wizard who cast the spell dead, nobody can figure out what the shanghaied computer nerd is good for--because spells are not like computer programs.

Lots of in jokes for the Unix/Linux crowd to enjoy. Pretty much anybody in the software industry will enjoy it, I think.

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vote up 6 vote down

Crossing the Chasm

by Geoffrey A Moore

If you ever think you will be working for a high-tech company, you should at least skim this book. It describes the lifecycle of a high-tech product (or company) and just knowing the terminology (and implications) from this book help immensely in figuring out if management has a clue or is drinking kool-aid. It's a fun read, too.

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Just in case...

The Zombie Survival Guide

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4  
His book World War Z is a far superior novel. – Hooked Jul 28 at 23:26
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If you like post-apocalyptic science fiction books then these are probably a must-read:

  • Cormac McCarthy - The Road

The Road

The other one I recommend is here

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+1 to both The Road and Roadside Picnic. They have a similar setting and almost flow together. – A. Scagnelli Aug 21 at 19:43
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vote up 5 vote down

Musashi by Eiji Yoshikawa gives some pretty good life lessons. The story is about a young Samurai in the 1600 that is at principle very angry and stubborn, but after commiting many crimes he gets imprisioned for 3 years, while locked away he regret his past and decide to go on a self improving journey to learn the way of the sword in order improve as a person. You can apply it to become a better professional yourself, through his journeys Musashi learned many thing, specially how people behave and how to lead by example.

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One hundred years of solitude

by Gabriel Garcia Marquez

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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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If you give a mouse a cookie or any other kids books.
Really, spend more time with your children, whenever you can. It's shockingly enjoyable, and you'll be pleasantly surprised at their viewpoints - and how much sense they usually make, even for your own job.
And that specific book? Funny, and explains a LOT about why programmers are the way they are :-) .

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vote up 5 vote down

The Deadline by Tom DeMarco

The Deadline

If you normally fall asleep while reading books about project management, give this one a try - I found the story simply fun to read yet learned a lot of solid basics while reading it, and if you ever had to do a project on an impossible timeline you'll feel right at home with this book.

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vote up 5 vote down

Daniel Dennett's Consciousness Explained:

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vote up 5 vote down

Waltzing With Bears

by Tom DeMarco and Timothy Lister

Waltzing With Bears

Great background on what managing risk means and lots of good tools for quantifying risks. They discuss a risk estimation tool which uses statistics to produce a pragmatic and reality-based understanding of the effects that risks will have on a given projects completion date and confidence level.

The prologue on "The Ethics of Belief" is not to be missed.

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vote up 5 vote down

Turing

by Andrew Hodges

Turing (The Great Philosophers Series) (Paperback)

Life of the first programmer.

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3  
Just to be clear, he wasn't the first programmer. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ada_Lovelace – Singletoned Oct 5 at 14:57
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Women

Women

Just because people like Bukowski always were able to get me away from my PC : tx!

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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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vote up 5 vote down

Chaos: Making a New Science

by James Gleick

Anybody unfamiliar with chaos theory would definitely enjoy this book.

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vote up 5 vote down

Enigma: The Battle for the Code

by Hugh Sebag-Montefiore

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Having a bad week at work? Well at least when you can't figure out some algorithm people aren't dying in their hundreds in the freezing North Atlantic waiting on you to work it out.

As well as being a great read about the dawn of the modern computing age, this book can help with perspective.

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vote up 5 vote down

The Cuckoo's Egg

by Cliff Stoll

Shows how important the traits like : perseverance, keeping log of things, innovative ways to try out various options are useful while tackling a problem

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Extracted from this answer.

  • Arkady and Boris Strugatsky - Roadside Picnic

Roadside Picnic

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The Goal: A Process of Ongoing Improvement

by Eliyahu M. Goldratt and Jeff Cox

To elaborate: It is a book on how to approach problems. To identify bottlenecks in your system and work on them. So in short, it isn't a programming book, but shows (in novel format) how to problem solve -- and is thus very valuable to a programmer.

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vote up 4 vote down

Orbiting the Giant Hairball

Orbiting the Giant Hairball: A Corporate Fool's Guide to Surviving with Grace
by Gordon Mackenzie

A short well written book with some great illustrations - explains how most large organisations don't really understand how to deal with creative people, and how such places are usually run so that the creatives/engineers are powerless. Mackenzie recounts his (mostly positive) experiences at Hallmark.

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vote up 4 vote down

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest by Ken Kesey

Totally unrelated to software development, but highly entertaining. Teaches a lot about human behaviour and interaction. Might help you out if your manager's a Nurse Ratched...

The movie was good too.

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Rich Dad, Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids About Money--That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not! by Robert T. Kiyosak

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1  
Here's the secret: the rich systematically f**k over the poor through education, policing, regressive taxing (think bank overdraft penalties and sin taxes), etc so that they don't have a chance in hell to succeed! – temp2290 Sep 22 at 16:09
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Life of Pi: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_of_Pi

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Please elaborate on why you think a given book is worth reading from a programmer's perspective – JuanZe Nov 13 at 19:30
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Just about anything by Michael Crichton. He researched his subject matter so thoroughly reading one of his novels was also a crash course in whatever he was writing about, whether it was nanotechnology, reconstituting DNA from fossils or airline crash investigations.

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How To Read A Book

Cover of How To Read A Book

I'm amazed no one has mentioned this book. It gives guidelines on how to critically read classical books of any genre and tradition. To quote the first sentence of the book itself:

This is a book for readers and for those who wish to become readers.

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