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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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283 Answers

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vote up 40 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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5  
Reading this book was like having a curtain drawn open in my mind. – Terry Donaghe Apr 27 at 19:46
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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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 32 vote down

Microserfs

by Douglas Coupland.

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Moral of this book: Working with technology is only gratifying when it is used to solve fundamental human problems. Anything outside of that is insanity to a comical extent. – Matias Nino Oct 16 '08 at 16:13
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vote up 31 vote down

Here's a strange one for you all to think about.

On The Road by Jack Kerouac.

It's a modern classic that everybody should read, and I'd be very surprised if English or Media Studies students weren't recommended to read it at some time. Reading should not only be informative and educational, but enjoyable as well. If you're not going to read a book for pure fun now and again then you'll only end up frustrated with the books you need to read as a programmer/developer.

This book is a real eye-opener; a book that'll really make you think about your own life, and for a programmer whom spends their day dealing with pure thought-stuff it's a great way to get you thinking on a different track.

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The Dharma Bums is better if you're into Kerouac. As for the Capote quote, he was responding to the accepted (yet erroneous) myth that Kerouac wrote On the Road in one sitting with no editing. In fact, it took him close to a decade to complete: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_the_Road – TrickyNixon Oct 6 '08 at 13:41
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vote up 31 vote down

Atlas Shrugged

by Ayn Rand

Helped me to understand the world and think outside the box.

alt text

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Worst. Book. Ever. Beloved by obnoxious blowhards everywhere. Check out a review. nationalreview.com/flashback/… – rtperson Feb 2 at 20:20
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It's got to have some value, but all the college sophomores I knew who read it turned (for a while at least) into smirking Young Republicans fond of saying "Ergo". – Mike Dunlavey Feb 2 at 21:00
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Rand? this self absorbed nihilist philosophy doesn't work for me. When you read her books, you think that the main problem that the characters are having is taking themselves too f..ing seriously, and thinking that they are gods gift to society. They should all get over themselves. – gnomixa Feb 19 at 23:26
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-1 because: a.) Rand's writing style is horrific b.) the philosophy is one of the worst I have ever heard – temp2290 Mar 9 at 20:04
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obligatory link: angryflower.com/atlass.gif – simon Apr 9 at 22:20
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vote up 30 vote down

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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vote up 28 vote down

The Art of Deception

Kevin Mitnick explains social engineering attacks

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vote up 26 vote down

Dreaming in Code

by Scott Rosenberg (Amazon Wikipedia)

Cover image

A great book about the development process. It also highlights how developers are doomed to keep repeating the same mistakes over and over again

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27  
As with Mythical Man-Month, is this really a non-programming book? It seems to be very much about software development. – Jonik Apr 5 at 9:43
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vote up 25 vote down

Pragmatic Thinking and Learning: Refactor Your Wetware

by Andy Hunt

It covers what's going on in your head while programming and learning, and states that this process is more important than what goes on in your IDE. Andy Hunt is also the writer of "The Pragmatic Programmer"

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vote up 24 vote down

Freakonomics

by Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner

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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 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 21 vote down

The Joy of Sex, by Alex Comfort.

alt text

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 20 vote down

The Timeless Way of Building by Christopher Alexander. This architecture book inspired the software design patterns movement.

Every individual act of building is a process in which space gets differentiated. It is not a process of addition, in which pre-formed parts are combined to create a whole: but a process of unfolding, like the evolution of an embryo, in which the whole predcedes in parts, and actually gives birth to them, by splitting.

Start by rembering the fundamental truth about the parts of any system which is alive.

Each part is slightly different, according to its position in the whole. Each brance of a tree has a slightly different shape, according to its position in the tree. Each leaf on the branch is given its detailed form by its position on the branch.

The patterns in a language have a certain order, so you have to understand which features are dominant, and which are secondary, and so the sequence of the patterns will become clear. It is not a sequence of putting parts together, but a whole, which expands, crinkles, differentiates itself. When the order of the patterns in the language is correct, the differentiating process allows the design to unfold as smootly as an opening flower.

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vote up 20 vote down

Don't laugh... I'd recommend Dostoyevsky's books. The ones he wrote after the exile in Siberia. They'll make you change the way you see life -- really. You'll see things from a different perspective.

So... "Crime and Punishment", "The Brothers Karamazov", "House of the Dead", or maybe "The Idiot".

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Incredible works of art. – temp2290 Mar 9 at 20:09
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Why on earth would anyone laugh at Dostoyevsky? – Beska Apr 10 at 13:31
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I have already upvoted Beska's comment, still: Why on earth would anyone laugh at Dostoyevsky? – trappedIntoCode Apr 27 at 22:39
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Hyperion

Dan Simons

The Hyperion saga (4 books). Everybody who thinks that SF is all about little green creatures fighting with robots in deep space of another galaxy should read this :)

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3  
The first book in this series was excellent, but I thought the later ones faded quickly. Other excellent AI fiction: "The Golden Age" by John C. Wright, and Ian M. Banks' "Excession". – Peter J Jun 8 at 19:55
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The space opera book ever. I think it is one of the best scifi series. – Francis B. Jul 28 at 23:37
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vote up 19 vote down

The Psychology of Computer Programming: Silver Anniversary Edition by Gerald M. Weinberg.

The Psychology of Computer Programming: Silver Anniversary Edition

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wasn't the question about non-programming books? I can hardly believe it with that title xD – fortran Oct 20 at 15:19
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vote up 19 vote down

The Tipping Point is one of the best books that I have ever read.

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You should read more books. – PeterAllenWebb Aug 14 at 20:22
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The danger of this book is that while you read it his arguments sound so rational and correct. I got sucked in. It's only when you start really thinking about what he says that you see the gigantic holes. This is the danger of books that are written by gifted writers and not-so-gifted scientists. – reccles Nov 10 at 17:41
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vote up 18 vote down

Going Postal by Terry Pratchett. Actually anything by Terry Pratchett but I have suggested this one because of his unique take on telecommunications.

Going Postal

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Terry Pratchett just rocks! – Kevin D. Jul 2 at 0:59
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vote up 18 vote down

I liked this one

A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction

by Christopher Alexander.

This book is part 2 of a series, which includes "The Timeless Way of Building" (as part 1, also mentioned elsewhere in this thread), with a third part being a case study of Oregon University, where these patterns were applied.

Cover of "A Pattern Language"

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2  
Is there a question titled "Non-programming books I keep hearing about, but still haven't got around to reading" ? ;-) – BasicallyMoney.com May 12 at 11:33
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This book is very readable in "bits", since it simply is a long list of patterns you can apply. And the patterns are from the macro scale, to the micro. Right up from what size countries (or regions) ought to be, down to what you should hang on your walls. The lessons you can gain from reading this book, are endless. The patterns are meant for how to build homes, but can easily be applied to anything else we humans surround ourselves with. A truly remarkable work. – Svend Jul 1 at 23:03
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vote up 15 vote down

Understanding Comics

by Scott McCloud.

cover

This book spends its first twoish chapters discussing comics and the rest is about Art, Communication and the Mind. I've found that after reading this book (which goes pretty quick, as it's in Graphic Novel form), my vocabulary for describing almost everything that lives in context of human interaction has grown enormously.

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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 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.

alt text

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vote up 14 vote down

Niccolo Machiavelli's The Prince. After wondering why people acted so strangely at work, this book was the first of many, that taught me why.

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3  
Machiavelli describes how people in power actually behave. It was banned by heads of Europe for being too revealing. He doesn't advocate the qualities he writes about; he lays out clearly what people who crave power have consistently done to obtain and keep it. The subtitle might have been "The Requirements of Power". If you want to understand politics, of governments or corporations, read this book. – Kelly French Jul 20 at 15:13
vote up 13 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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+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
vote up 13 vote down

Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience

by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi

alt text

The best and most productive coding is done in a flow state. This is a psychological study of the phenomemon. Although the book is scientifically rigorous it remains accessible to the lay-person.

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vote up 12 vote down

Joel Spolsky's list is quite good http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/FogCreekMBACurriculum.html. My favourites are Peopleware & Mythical Man Month

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vote up 12 vote down

Who Moved My Cheese?

by Spencer Johnson

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All about accepting change will happen. Can easily be read in an hour on a plane.

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6  
Ugh. Everyone at an old job of mine was given this tripe to read (right before a heavy round of downsizing). I used to infuriate my boss when a bug got into production by shrugging and saying, "I guess someone moved your cheese!" – Dana Oct 6 '08 at 12:46
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Yuk (-1) the classic "you're about to be fired/pay cut - just accept it" book. The overall idea of accepting change is fine, but this book is both trite and patronising. – Keith Jan 28 at 12:04
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I worked at a place where this was included in the "welcome" kit. This book is intended to make management feel good about the fact that crap rolls downhill. – joseph.ferris Feb 2 at 20:03
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To be honest, I haven't read the book; but I watched the video, which seemed to be geared toward five-year-olds. Patronizing in the extreme. – Kyralessa Apr 10 at 1:15
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When I was laid off, the company recommended that we all read it. The only value I could find in it was that, in an organization, it would provide a vocabulary to mock people whose resistance to change was impeding things. It was not at all inspirational for a newly unemployed developer. – David Thornley Aug 19 at 15:56
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vote up 12 vote down

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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