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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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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 2 days ago
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289 Answers

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vote up 22 vote down

The Non-Designer's Design Book by Robin Williams

The Non-Designer's Design Book

An excellent introduction to visual design and typography. It's a nice short concise book, but if you read it and follow its principle of CRAP (Contrast, Repetition, Alignment and Proximity) then you will vastly improve your ability to produce well-designed documentation, reports, resumes, business cards and letterheads.

Jeff Atwood is a fan too and he has far more to say about it than I want to post here.

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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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vote up 53 vote down

Can't believe no-one has mentioned any of William Gibson's books, in particular Neuromancer! He coined the term cyberspace and the sprawl triology is the reason I wanted to be a code cowboy :)

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Ahh, was looking for this one. Read it probably 100 times while in high school. I have autographed first edition of it now. Dated, but still a classic. Definitely made me want to be a network coder! – Jason Short Apr 21 at 3:38
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The irony is that he wrote these books to discourage the technophilia that so permeates society of today (and then). =) – J. Steen Apr 27 at 8:38
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Also ironic that Gibson is (or at least he was at the time he wrote those books) completely ignorant of current day technology. He wrote the books using an old school typewriter. And when he finally later got a computer, he thought that the humming from the hard drive was an indication that it was broken somehow. – Pete Sep 11 at 6:16
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Personally, I have to say that I found the book boring and hugely uninspiring and don’t understand the fuss at all. So hey coined the term “cyberspace”, and well done. But that doesn’t make the book any more interesting. The story is horribly convoluted and contrived, the characters are clichés and the would-be Chandleresque writing style isn’t exactly high literature either. Didn’t enjoy, wouldn’t recommend. – Konrad Rudolph Nov 8 at 8:52
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vote up 3 vote down

Universal Principles of Design, by William Lidwell, Kritina Holden, and Jill Butler

Universal Principles of Design

One of this biggest issues I have with many programs I have used is the lack of design put into the interface and into the product. This book goes in-depth describing how to enhance the usablilty within a interface. It also tells you all of the basic principals and rules of design, and they give many examples for many different applications whether its techinical or non-technical. The book reads a little like a college classroom book (and it probably is for many design schools), so it the not the most exciting thing to read, but I find the most informative when it comes to interface design.

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vote up 5 vote down

Women

Women

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

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vote up 2 vote down

Mimsy Were the Borogroves It's actually a short story, not a book, by Lewis Padgett. Challenges the way you think about thinking, and how the way we learn can actually pre-dispose us to a certain way of thinking and interpreting the world around us.

EDIT: And no, seeing the movie is not a substitute.

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vote up 79 vote down

Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series is brilliant!

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4  
Great stuff. I found the theory in this book to be a lot like an introduction to sociology through chaos theory. An amazing take on societal development. Easy and fun, but with some weight. – Beska Apr 9 at 20:57
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vote up 18 vote down

This is probably not going to be popular, but "If liberty means anything at all it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear."

In the Beginning was the Command Line

by Neal Stephenson

It's very dated, but I have yet to find a single book (or essay for that matter) that gives a quasi-outsider's view of an industry that the public is apathetic to understand. The insights and descriptions are spot-on, even though the conditions have dramaticly changed over time.

In the Beginning was the Command Line

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3  
+1 excellent article. I read it and bought it. It's available online at cryptonomicon.com/beginning.html. My favorite part is when OSes are being compared to cars, and Linux is compared to a Tank that is being given away for free. The customer says: "I don't know how to maintain a tank!" [But you don't know how to maintain Windows either!] "But they have staff to fix it!" [We'll come to your house and fix it for you!] "Stay away from my house, you freak!" – scraimer Aug 20 at 9:19
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vote up 6 vote down

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 4 vote down

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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vote up 26 vote down

Freakonomics

by Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner

cover

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2  
I read this book and though I remember it being mildly interesting a the time, I honestly cannot recite one thing I learned from this book. I think that is most telling. – Nemi Jul 20 at 16:51
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I thought it was just OK, but it made me aware of the book Gang Leader for a Day, which was utterly fascinating. – Kyralessa Aug 14 at 21:36
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An interesting read, but nothing major. It was about some economic research in odd areas. Unlike the books I really like, it didn't change my underlying thinking in the slightest. – David Thornley Aug 19 at 15:59
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It's certainly entertaining, but I don't know how worthwhile it is. It's well-known for things like the assertion that legalized abortion is the real cause of the reduction in crime around the time Guliani's broken-window policies were implemented in New York City. It's an interesting idea, but lacks any real basis (and I say this as a pro-choicer). – Imagist Aug 21 at 19:04
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Very,very overrated. Not bad, but could be lower on the list. – JDelage Oct 1 at 16:18
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vote up 14 vote down

Simon Singh's The Code Book is a great book about how cryptography was born and how people is always trying to challenge it.

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vote up 10 vote down

Simon Singh's Fermat's Last Enigma is one of the greatest books I have ever read.

This non-programming book has taught me a lot about running after the solution of a problem, no matter how old and complex it is.

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vote up 4 vote down

If you're into science fiction then anything by Ian M. Banks and Peter F. Hamilton. Genius...it's like they've been there.

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vote up 8 vote down

A Deepness in the Sky

by Vernor Vinge

book cover of A Deepness in the Sky

Pham Nuwen is my ultimate Programmer Hero. The way it describes him searching through the ship's systems to find old programs and turn them to new uses.

I also like the description of "archaeologist programmers" at the start of A Fire Upon the Deep.

book cover of A Fire Upon the Deep.

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vote up 0 vote down

"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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vote up 0 vote down

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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vote up 2 vote down

Hard Boiled Wonderland and The End of the World by Haruki Murakami

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As the question says, why do you think it's worth reading from a programmer's perspective? – Jonik Feb 11 at 21:19
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vote up 1 vote down

Short stories by Alice Munro.

Each one is an intricate puzzle, just as the most satisfying short programs are intricate puzzles.

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vote up 0 vote down

"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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vote up -7 vote down

The Holy Bible

Because you can't program forever and you shouldn't program just for yourself. Glorify God with your work. He can see your code.

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Thanks, johnny, I was going to add this one, but voting you up is even better – FarmBoy Apr 9 at 16:36
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Would not recommend. – T Pops Aug 21 at 20:09
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I think there's a conflict between religion and critical thinking, and for a programmer critical thought is an important skill to have. (The next time you have a difficult/mysterious bug to fix, try praying for the bug to go away, and then try investigating it rationally until you understand why it occurs, and the steps necessary to fix it... see which technique gets the problem solved and which one doesn't) – Jeremy Friesner Aug 22 at 22:18
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@jeremy The point was that no one can live a fulfilled life without God and those of us who believe know our talents and work are more than random. We take great enjoyment from that fact, can have more passion than you because of that, and can receive genuine fulfillment on more levels that you are able to. Why? Because we're just dumb ol' religious folk cain't think and have lots of blind faith emotion. Remember, you will not be clutchin' K&R on the death bed or your first computer (maybe if it were an Apple, but I digress.) Fulfilled people make better programmers. – johnny Aug 24 at 13:31
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In your worldview code means nothing because it's just some randomness that happens to make you feel good or help some other random soul. The answer to your question is easy - grace. That same literary work also speaks about forgiveness. In fact, it says you must be perfect, that you cannot, then provides you with the remedy for your pitiful situation. You cannot have genuine fulfillment unless you can transcend yourself. Any text on the philosophy of religion will show you that is basic to mankind (not just Christians). How will you fulfill your innate desire to transcend yourself? – johnny Aug 24 at 21:35
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vote up 43 vote down

The Selfish Gene

by Richard Dawkins

A great book about evolution and strategies. In this book he also coins the concept about memes

Richard Dawkins was a friend to Douglas Adams and is appointed Simonyi Professor of the Public Understanding of Science in the University of Oxford.

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6  
Reading this book was like having a curtain drawn open in my mind. – Terry Donaghe Apr 27 at 19:46
vote up 1 vote down

Charles Perrow's "Normal Accidents" investigates what can happen when complex technology goes horribly wrong, and formulates his theory of the "normal accident": complex, tightly coupled systems will have accidents, because minor faults interact with catastrophic consequences. We see this all the time in programming and systems administration, and yet, as far as I know, few of these concepts are understood outside safety engineering.

(He also writes very well, and brings life to what could have been a rather dry book).

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vote up 3 vote down

Herodotus - The Histories - because a bloke at the other end of time still tells a good'n. Seriously.

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vote up 35 vote down

Catch22

"Catch 22" by Joseph Heller. Not only is it a fantastically enjoyable read, it might also help to keep you sane if you work for a large corporation.

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4  
This is seriously one of my favourite books of all time. Cannot describe how good it actually is! – Richard Jul 24 at 8:34
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vote up 8 vote down

The 4-Hour Workweek: Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich

by Timothy Ferriss

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The author gives many tips how to more productive, how to change attitude to work, earning money and life. I really recommend it for everyone.

Comments from duplicate answer by David Robbins:

The message: ratchet down email, use Occam's razor on everything you do by sticking with the 80/20 rule. Your quest is to focus on the necessary and realize that much of what is "required" of us is a smokescreen.

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1  
On Amazon this has a high 4.5/5 average rating, but almost all of the highest rated reviews are very critical, with titles like "21st Century Snake-Oil Salesman" or "Get-rich-quick guide for the shallow": amazon.com/review/product/0307353133 – Jonik Feb 2 at 19:57
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It was a revelation to me when a professor said in a class, "The difference between an efficient program and an inefficient program is that an efficient program does less." This book applies that idea to humans: an efficient human does less. – Imagist Aug 21 at 19:10
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This book simply talks about economic arbitrage (get cheap people in developing countries to do work) and that's pretty much it. Apart from going over how to sell junk online cheaply it didn't really have much to say. – Kurt Sep 11 at 6:13
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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 3 vote down

21st Century Jet: The Making of the Boeing 777, by Karl Sabbagh

From coffee cup holder to three-hundred-foot wing, this book is the story of how a group of people came to build a brand new aeroplane.

The book describes the development of the Boeing 777, from initial concept, through requirements gathering, design, development, testing, production, and delivery. The engineers and management implemented a new development system, overcame changing requirements, met strict safety requirements, and continually optimized the solution. It describes how the designers and engineers worked to make the aircraft easier, safer, and more intuitive for everyone who would come in contact with it (air crew, maintenence crews, and passengers).

Software developers can learn a lot from this book. It's very well written, it reads like a novel. I've read it twice and highly recommend it.

Boeing Computer Services president John Warner said, the Boeing 777 is "three million parts flying in close formation." Sounds like software to me.

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