International bestselling author and The New Yorker staff writer Malcolm Gladwell highlights many outlier individuals and gives interesting statistics to prove his hypotheses in this 2011 non-fiction selection. The information is set forth in a very readable, lively fashion, almost like the author is having a conversation with the reader. He discusses many famous and some not so famous outliers such as Bill Gates, J. Robert Oppenheimer, Asian math whizzes, New York Jewish lawyers and others and gives reasons as to why and how they became outliers.
A wise man once said "opportunity is luck meeting preparedness". Are people successful because of just plain luck or is there something else at work? You will learn some fascinating ideas about why some people are phenomenally successful. Did you know that the Beatles spent 10,000 hours honing their craft before they became famous? Or that a young, curious Bill Gates had the opportunity to work on a super computer at a time when computers weren't a part of everyday life? Does the date you were born increase your chance of success?
Gladwell is also well known for his other books. The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference is about change. Why did the crime rate in New York City dip dramatically in the mid 1990s? Why is word of mouth so powerful? Why do teens continue to smoke even though everyone knows that cigarettes kill?
Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking is about the kind of thinking that happens in the blink of an eye. It's about what goes on in the first few seconds of an event. Gladwell says he doesn't like the word "intuition" and never uses it. He says that what we may call intuition is actually powerful and rational thinking.
Some have criticized Malcolm Gladwell as using "pop" sociology and have questioned his methodology but our book club found Outliers engaging, readable and even inspiring. Why not see for yourself and check it out?
Malcolm Gladwell |
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