Bill Gates's Reading List
Notable reader profiled on radicalreads.com. 5 favorite books recommended in their radicalreads feature.
Open in WellRead Daily app →Favorite books (2020)
Favorite books recommended by Bill Gates, as compiled by radicalreads.com. Source article: https://radicalreads.com/bill-gates-favorite-books/.
Source: radicalreads.com
Michelle Alexander (also rec’d by J. Cole ) · Buy on Amazon
"My daughter Jenn recommended that I read this novel, which tells the story of a black couple in the South whose marriage gets torn apart by a horrible incident of injustice. Jones is such a good writer that she manages to make you empathize with both of her main characters, even after one makes a difficult decision. The subject matter is heavy but thought-provoking, and I got sucked into Roy and Celestial’s tragic love story."
David Epstein (also rec’d by Kobe Bryant ) · Buy on Amazon
"I started following Epstein’s work after watching his fantastic 2014 TED talk on sports performance . In this fascinating book, he argues that although the world seems to demand more and more specialization—in your career, for example—what we actually need is more people “who start broad and embrace diverse experiences and perspectives while they progress.” His examples run from Roger Federer to Charles Darwin to Cold War-era experts on Soviet affairs. I think his ideas even help explain some..."
Erik Larson (also rec’d by Barack Obama ) · Buy on Amazon
"Sometimes history books end up feeling more relevant than their authors could have imagined. That’s the case with this brilliant account of the years 1940 and 1941, when English citizens spent almost every night huddled in basements and Tube stations as Germany tried to bomb them into submission. The fear and anxiety they felt—while much more severe than what we’re experiencing with COVID-19—sounded familiar. Larson gives you a vivid sense of what life was like for average citizens during thi..."
Ben Macintyre · Buy on Amazon
"This nonfiction account focuses on Oleg Gordievsky, a KGB officer who became a double agent for the British, and Aldrich Ames, the American turncoat who likely betrayed him. Macintyre’s retelling of their stories comes not only from Western sources (including Gordievsky himself) but also from the Russian perspective. It’s every bit as exciting as my favorite spy novels."
Bijal P. Trivedi · Buy on Amazon
"This book is truly uplifting. It documents a story of remarkable scientific innovation and how it has improved the lives of almost all cystic fibrosis patients and their families. This story is especially meaningful to me because I know families who’ve benefited from the new medicines described in this book. I suspect we’ll see many more books like this in the coming years, as biomedical miracles emerge from labs at an ever-greater pace."