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  • What books do you plan to read in 2023?

    Laurie Hérault
    14 replies

    Replies

    Swapnil D Puranik
    I picked the following 12 (one/mo) out of 120+ unread books - these may not be new or trending, but transcend topicality in my view. 1. Antifragile - Nassim Nicolas Taleb 2. Open - Andre Agassi 3. Hard Thing About Hard Things - Ben Horowitz 4. Dark Horse - Todd Rose 5. Shoe Dog - Phil Knight 6. India that is Bharat - J Sai Deepak 7. India, Bharat and Pakistan - J Sai Deepak 8. Thinking Fast and Slow (re-read) - Daniel Kahneman 9. Algorithms To Live By - Brian Christian, Tom Griffiths 10. Essentialism - Greg McKeown 11. Meditations by Marcus Aurelius 12. Discipline is Destiny - Ryan Holiday
    Laurie Hérault
    @swapdp_01 I read Shoe Dog recently and it's a very good book! Thanks for this good list i will add some books on my 2023 reading list.
    vados
    Webhooked.email
    Webhooked.email
    Randomly selected from a seemingly ever-growing list I have: - Founding Sales - Peter Kazanjy - The First 100 Customers - Ben Lee - Founders at work - Jessica Livingston - Skin in the game - Nassim Taleb
    Debajit Sarkar
    These three books: 1. Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: An Inquiry into Values 2. When Breath Becomes Air 3. Finite and Infinite Games
    KoreChain
    Digital Securities 2023 Edition
    Lydia Cohen
    Jean Christophe by Romain Rolland first.
    Cecilia Payne
    - Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup - Can't Hurt Me: Master Your Mind and Defy the Odds - Chip War: The Fight for the World's Most Critical Technology - Influence Empire: The Story of Tencent and China's Tech Ambition
    Cecilia Payne
    @laurieherault yeah hope you like it. A bit long but worth the time. I think these good book for anyone interested in finding out how the semiconductor companies of the past were founded and built
    Anoir Houmou
    Dare to Lead by Brené Brown
    Laurie Hérault
    @anoirhoumou Thank you! Have you read other books about leadership in recent years? Any advice?
    Anoir Houmou
    @laurieherault Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap and Others Don't by Jim Collins. This is a great read that helps you understand how to improve as a leader, while acknowledging that it's okay to make mistakes along the way.