135 books in my library.
Frameworks for generating high-quality sales leads at scale.
Pricing and offer structures designed to compound revenue.
How to package products so customers feel buying is the obvious choice.
Twelve essays on personal responsibility, meaning, and how to live well.
Jeff Hawkins' theory of intelligence based on cortical columns and reference frames.
Research on what makes high-performing software delivery organizations.
A guided survey of clear thinking and argument analysis.
How small, repeated changes in behavior compound into lasting outcomes.
A bundled collection of classic autobiographies.
Tony Robbins on shaping emotion, decision, and identity.
Walter Isaacson's biography of America's most pragmatic founder.
Practical scripts for moving past pleasantries into real conversation.
Goldratt extends the Theory of Constraints to broader business challenges.
Creating uncontested markets instead of competing in crowded ones.
Tony Fadell's notes on making products and building teams from Apple and Nest.
A seven-part framework for clarifying brand messaging.
David Goggins on mastering the mind through deliberate hardship.
Profile of Munger's mental models and decision-making at Berkshire.
The Jobs-to-be-Done theory of why customers hire products.
Porter's framework for creating and sustaining advantage in an industry.
Ed Catmull on running Pixar and protecting creative work.
Goldratt's project-management novel applying the Theory of Constraints.
Dickens' semi-autobiographical novel of a boy growing into himself.
David Deida on intimate relationships from a feminine perspective.
Survey of contemporary scientific arguments compatible with belief in God.
A Great Courses series on speaking and listening with intent.
Walter Isaacson's biography of Musk, with full access to his work and thinking.
Walter Isaacson's biography of Musk, with full access to his work and thinking.
Daniel Goleman on why EQ matters more than IQ for outcomes.
Pinker's data-driven case that the world is improving across most measures.
Ann Handley's guide to writing well in a world of constant publishing.
Russell Brunson on building an audience and turning expertise into a business.
Navy SEAL leadership principles built around taking full responsibility.
Brian McLaren on stages of belief and what comes after certainty fades.
Dennett on the evolution of minds from chemistry to culture.
Applying flow and the Theory of Constraints to project work.
A Great Courses survey of myth across cultures and eras.
Angela Duckworth on passion and perseverance as predictors of success.
Shakespeare's tragedy of indecision, grief, and revenge.
Bart Ehrman on how Christian afterlife concepts evolved historically.
Andy Grove's playbook for running productive teams at Intel.
Six habits Brendon Burchard ties to sustained high performance.
Why megaprojects fail and what consistently helps them succeed.
Steven Pinker on cognition, emotion, and the evolved architecture of thought.
Cal Newport's study system based on focused, efficient work.
Cal Newport's compact rules for thriving as an undergraduate.
Nir Eyal on the internal triggers behind distraction and how to address them.
Goldratt's sequel to The Goal, applied to broader business problems.
Bart Ehrman on contradictions and historical context in the New Testament.
Walter Isaacson's biography tracing curiosity across art and science.
John Doerr's introduction to OKRs and goal-setting at scale.
Marcus Aurelius' private notes on Stoic practice as a Roman emperor.
Carol Dweck on fixed vs. growth mindsets and how they shape outcomes.
Bart Ehrman on the historical Jesus and the origins of belief.
A survey of contemporary accounts presented as evidence for miracles.
Mark Manson on attracting partners through honesty rather than performance.
Tony Robbins' compilation of investing principles from leading practitioners.
FBI hostage negotiator Chris Voss on practical negotiation tactics.
An introduction to kaizen — using tiny actions to drive change.
Daniel Priestley on creating demand that outstrips supply.
Aubrey Marcus on structuring a single day for sustained energy.
Anders Ericsson on deliberate practice and the science of expertise.
Ray Dalio on the decision rules behind Bridgewater's culture.
Michael Masterson on growing a business through fast iteration.
David Chalmers on virtual worlds, simulation, and the nature of reality.
Basecamp's contrarian, direct take on how to actually run a business.
Claude Hopkins' early-twentieth-century manual on testable advertising.
Cal Newport on doing meaningful work without burning out.
Simon Sinek on leading and selling from a clear sense of purpose.
Walter Isaacson's authorized biography drawn from extensive interviews.
Charles Duhigg on the conversational moves of effective communicators.
Tynan's compact guide to building one habit at a time.
Feynman's stories on curiosity, mischief, and physics.
A practical playbook for building outbound B2B sales pipelines.
Marc Randolph on the founding of Netflix from idea to launch.
Chris Guillebeau on starting a small, profitable business with little capital.
A framework for executing on the few goals that matter most.
Robert Greene's catalog of historical archetypes of attraction and persuasion.
Carnegie on his life and his philosophy of giving.
David Deutsch on explanation, knowledge, and unbounded progress.
Ernest Becker on how humans construct meaning to manage mortality.
Lee Strobel's interviews on common objections to Christian belief.
Steve Peters' model of the mind as competing systems for managing emotion.
Edith Eger on surviving Auschwitz and choosing how to live afterward.
Walter Isaacson's biography of Jennifer Doudna and the CRISPR revolution.
Paul Tillich on faith and meaning in the face of anxiety.
An introduction to Adlerian psychology framed as a dialogue.
Ernest Becker on how the awareness of death shapes human behavior.
Michael Gerber on building a small business that runs without you.
Shawn Wells on practical biochemistry for daily energy.
Brad Stone's history of Amazon and Jeff Bezos' operating principles.
Robert Wright on how concepts of God shifted across history.
David Deutsch's case that physics, computation, and evolution share one structure.
Louann Brizendine on neurological patterns across the female lifespan.
Albert-László Barabási on the network science behind success.
Jimmy Soni's history of the PayPal founding team.
Goldratt's novel introducing the Theory of Constraints in a manufacturing setting.
Ben Horowitz on the parts of running a company nobody teaches.
Five behaviors that distinguish disruptive innovators.
Walter Isaacson on the people and collaboration behind the digital revolution.
Eric Ries on running businesses as continuous experiments.
John Walton on reading Genesis 1 as ancient cosmology rather than science.
Julie Zhuo's guide for new managers, from her years at Facebook.
Louann Brizendine on neurological patterns across the male lifespan.
Rob Fitzpatrick on running customer interviews that produce honest signal.
Robert Wright on what evolutionary psychology says about modern life.
Karl Popper's essays on rationality, science, and open dialogue.
Popper's defense of liberal democracy against totalitarian thinkers.
Michael Breus on aligning daily activities with chronotype.
Chris Bailey's year-long experiment testing productivity techniques.
Bob Iger on leading Disney through fifteen years of acquisitions.
Richard Dawkins on the gene-centered view of evolution.
Beauregard and O'Leary argue mind cannot be reduced to brain alone.
Steve Blank's step-by-step guide to customer development.
Daniel Coyle on how myelin growth underpins skill acquisition.
Steven Pressfield on resistance and the discipline of creative work.
David Deida on masculinity, purpose, and intimate relationships.
Alan Gordon on chronic pain and pain reprocessing therapy.
Napoleon Hill's classic study of mindset and persistence in wealth-building.
Donella Meadows' primer on feedback loops and system behavior.
A Great Courses introduction to economic reasoning.
Daniel Kahneman on the two systems behind judgment and choice.
Terry O'Reilly on the principles that hold across decades of advertising.
Seth Godin on serving the smallest viable audience well.
Gabriel Weinberg's framework for testing nineteen channels for early growth.
Russell Brunson on attracting attention online and turning it into customers.
Lessons from Bill Campbell's coaching of Silicon Valley CEOs.
Steven Pressfield on the shift from amateur to professional habits of mind.
Scott Young on intense, self-directed projects to learn hard skills fast.
A Great Courses tour of why people act the way they do.
Bertrand Russell's philosophical case against religious belief.
Matthew Walker on the science of sleep and its role in health.
A Great Courses tour of personality science.
Lisa Cron on what neuroscience reveals about how stories grip us.
A Great Courses tour of cognitive biases and critical thinking.