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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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21  
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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279 Answers

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The Four Hour Work Week by Tim Ferris. [Content removed - was merged with another entry.]

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This is now an unnecessary entry and Garth's review has been merged into the main entry on Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.

Just to provide some more depth on Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance

[snip]

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Enders Game by Orson Scott card

alt text

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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 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 at 15:48
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joel on software - you can read some of the articles in here.

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Hmm. This I would class as a programming book. Or have I got that wrong? – Charles Roper Sep 20 '08 at 16:23
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You shouldn't read any non-programming books!

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Digital Fortress by Dan Brown, very interesting.

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makes it very not programming related though :-) – jilles de wit Nov 10 at 17:01
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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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This post has been removed as it contained multiple answers. However, the books cited were good recommendations so the have been given individual answers.

Vote this answer down to get it removed.

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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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