What I've Been Reading - May 18, 2008

Blue Ocean Strategy: How to Create Uncontested Market Space and Make Competition Irrelevant - W. Chan Kim (GREAT. these themes)
History of My Times - Xenophon (great. tons of great anecdotes. the translator is incredibly harsh on Xenophon for some reason)
More Sex is Safer Sex - Steven Landsburg (sort of cold and impractical)
The Good Life - Jay Mcinerney (horrible. It's like a women's romance novel)
The Female Brain - Louann Brizendine MD (good intro, nothing new)
Made to Stick - Dan and Chip Heath (reread)

This is the Boring Part - Ben Corman
In the Air: Who says big ideas are rare? - Malcolm Gladwell
An Alternative Approach to Marketing Rock Bands - New York Times

Posted by ryanholiday at 10:20 AM

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The team at Language Log have been skeptical about the claims in The Female Brain.

Did you find it contained anything useful or was it just more of the same old stories?

Posted by: Rob at May 18, 2008 02:15 PM

I had seen some other blogs mention Gladwell's piece in The New Yorker, but tonight was the first time I sat down to read it... quite interesting, I thought.

Kevin Kelly made a great comment about the article, in that he was surprised that Gladwell, seemingly so in-tune with the idea of independent inventions happening simultaneously, failed to mention other companies with the same goals of Intellectual Ventures -- if memory serves, even in Palahniuk's 'Survivor' the main character finds his very existence has already been patented by a similar organization.

Do you plan on sharing your thoughts about Gladwell's article?

Posted by: Glenn at May 18, 2008 06:34 PM

Most of The Female Brain relies on other people's findings - like Robin Baker's work in Sperm Wars, for example. But it does have some interesting stuff about the malleability of the brain during development. For example, being an inattentive mother is not genetic but you can pass that behavior down to your child if it happens during their very formative years, when the brain is still deciding how much of any given chemical it might release. (That is, according to the book)

Always good to get the other side's perspective, so this book can only help. Otherwise, pretty basic. She uses WAY too many personal anecdotes and single cases as proof of large issues.

Posted by: Ryan Holiday at May 18, 2008 08:14 PM

No thoughts on Gladwell other than I am very interested in where his next book is going. He's starting to lay the ground work.

Normally when people ask that question, it means they have thoughts. So, what was YOUR reaction?

Posted by: Ryan Holiday at May 18, 2008 08:15 PM

Good list; Blue Ocean is a decent read, but I thought much of it was common sense. Look up Nintendo and Blue Ocean ... Nintendo´s turn around was credited to Blue Ocean, according to the CEO, if I remember correctly. Could be me. One thing is for sure: do not get the audiobook of it. Blue Ocean is one book that you need the actual paper version. On a tangent, Godin´s books, in audio form, are quite good as he is a good narrator. Just listened to the dip for the millionth time today. Made to Stick in audioform is also great.

Posted by: Steve at May 18, 2008 09:33 PM

Your affliate links seem to be a little off. The link for "More..." leads to the amazon page for "A History...". Thanks for the blog, I've been following it for the better part of the year and always find it intriguing.

Posted by: Josh at May 19, 2008 11:06 AM

Posted by: Ryan Holiday at May 19, 2008 08:43 PM

...[Blue Ocean Strategy]...A solid read, based on the recommendation from the always entertaining and sometimes informative Ryan Holiday...

Posted by: smoot at July 27, 2008 04:19 PM

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