Creativity, Inc.
Good to Great
The Lean Startup
Blue Ocean Strategy
Leaders Eat Last
The Innovator's Dilemma
Thinking, Fast and Slow
Lean In
The Power of Habit
Four Thousand Weeks
Creativity, Inc. Good to Great The Lean Startup Blue Ocean Strategy Leaders Eat Last The Innovator's Dilemma Thinking, Fast and Slow Lean In The Power of Habit Four Thousand Weeks
Keep your mind fresh with summaries of the best business books
Elon Musk
In Elon Musk, biographer Walter Isaacson follows the SpaceX and Tesla CEO with extensive access over two years, including through his acquisition of Twitter. The book presents an unvarnished portrait of a leader whose drive produces extraordinary engineering achievements alongside significant personal and organizational damage. Worth reading for anyone trying to understand modern technology leadership in its most polarized form.
Underdog Nation
What can a U.S. Marine teach you about business? In Underdog Nation, former combat pilot Quang X. Pham reveals how the military's underdog ethos is the ultimate advantage in entrepreneurship. Through powerful principles like the "30-Second Complain-and-Fix Rule" and "Commander's Intent," he provides a battle-tested playbook for building resilient teams, leading with integrity, and thriving in the chaos of the modern marketplace.
Outliers
In Outliers, Malcolm Gladwell dismantles the myth of the self-made success. Through fascinating case studies—from Canadian hockey players to Bill Gates—he demonstrates that success is rarely just about raw talent. Instead, it is the product of hidden advantages, cultural legacies, and extraordinary opportunities to practice (the 10,000-Hour Rule). By understanding these systemic factors, we can better engineer environments where success is not an accident of birth, but a cultivated outcome.
The Man Who Solved the Market
In The Man Who Solved the Market, Wall Street Journal reporter Gregory Zuckerman tells the story of Jim Simons and Renaissance Technologies, the hedge fund whose Medallion Fund produced what may be the greatest investment record in history. The book details how a team of mathematicians and physicists built a quantitative system that beat the market for three decades. Eye-opening reading for anyone curious about how systematic investing actually works.
Shoe Dog
In Shoe Dog, Nike founder Phil Knight tells the raw, honest story of building the company from a car-trunk sneaker operation into a global brand. It is less a how-to than a memoir of doubt, debt, and stubborn persistence. Knight shows that entrepreneurship is messy, lonely, and rarely tidy, and that surviving long enough to win often comes down to a simple refusal to quit.
Barbarians at the Gate
In Barbarians at the Gate, journalists Bryan Burrough and John Helyar tell the definitive story of the 1988 battle for RJR Nabisco, the largest leveraged buyout of its era. What began as CEO Ross Johnson's management buyout exploded into a bidding war won by private equity firm KKR. It is an unforgettable portrait of Wall Street ego, greed, and the dealmaking that drove a 25 billion dollar takeover.
Famous Nathan
Famous Nathan traces the rags-to-riches tale of Nathan Handwerker, the penniless Polish immigrant who parlayed a five-cent frankfurter stand on Coney Island into Nathan’s Famous—an enduring icon of American fast food. Written by his grandson Lloyd Handwerker, the book blends family memoir, oral history, and cultural reportage to show how grit, marketing flair, and an unwavering quest for the “perfect” hot dog embodied—and complicated—the American Dream.
The Ride of a Lifetime
In The Ride of a Lifetime, former Walt Disney Company CEO Bob Iger reflects on fifteen years leading the world’s most powerful entertainment brand. Blending personal memoir with a practical masterclass in leadership, he details the high-stakes negotiations behind acquiring Pixar, Marvel, and Lucasfilm. Iger proves that sustaining a creative empire requires radical focus, enduring optimism, and a willingness to embrace disruption rather than fight it.