Personal Libraries of Executives
"There is a revealing article in today's New York Times (the complete article can be found here) about how some of the most successful people in business today have large personal libraries that contain few of the best-selling business success books that fill the bookstores today. While this makes sense (why would somebody who is already successful read books about how to become successful?), what is most surprising is what they are reading. According to this article, they are reading subjects that include:
- poetry (such as Blake)
- philosophy (such as Aristotle)
- classic literature
- global works on science and weather (climactic change)
Having a personal library has always been important to me as well. I am always buying (and even reading) books. Philosophy, adult education, classical literature, non-fiction, and academic and professional journals line my bookshelves. As they get full, I have to move them to other locations as well as weed-out the ones that just are not needed (which usually means they were never needed in the beginning). With all the increasing emphasis on electronic content delivery and management, I still like having books in my hand, and I think Seth Godin expressed most concisely why this is:
"Holding and owning the book, remembering when and how you got it... that's what you're paying for. Books are great at holding memories."
I think I will do some reading this afternoon. Ahh, the choices!"
6 Comments:
At 4:31 PM,
Jeffrey Keefer said…
Thank you for reading my post.
So, what are you reading now?!
At 6:01 PM,
mick yates said…
"The Grateful Dead and Philosophy" ...
At 9:22 PM,
Wally Bock said…
The Times article is well worth a read, and I love the Seth Godin quote. I recently started sorting my management books by decade published. You get some amazing insights looking at forty years of books arranged that way.
I'll also respond to the what are you reading now question even though you didn't ask. I just finished "Whose Bible is it, Anyway?" and I'm about to start "Better."
At 4:18 PM,
Jeffrey Keefer said…
To answer my own question, I am reading Continental Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction (by Simon Critchley), the latest Harry Potter book (as I recounted in one of my other posts), the book: Harry Potter and Philosophy. I especially like the title of one of the essays in that compiliation--Why Voldemort Won't Just Die Already: What Wizards Can Teach Us about Personal Identity.
Interesting that all three of these are helpful as I finish my preparation for a Developing Leaders class I am teaching tomorrow.
At 6:48 PM,
Yvonne DiVita said…
Executive reading is a little peek into one's personal beliefs, don't you think? I read and review so many books, I sometimes get tired of the drivel. Am hoping to read the latest Harry Potter, but will likely pick something shorter and easier... for my weekend.
Any suggestions on something humorous... but with substance? The last one I read was marketed as humorous but...it really wasn't.
Maybe I'll just be content with the Sunday funnies, and be done with it.
At 6:24 PM,
Linnea said…
Thank you for this blog - I too, believe it is interesting to see what "leaders" are reading and filling their minds with. On occasion, I invite a leader that I have met to lunch and pepper this person with questions. One of my favorites is, "What are you currently reading?" It can be a very revealing question, and often leads to an interesting tangent in the conversation.
Currently, I am reading Crucial Conversations: Tools for Talking When the Stakes are High, The Radical Leap: Personal Lesson in Extreme Leadership and I'm re-reading the Ender Saga (sci-fi).
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