Public Zone 公開區 > Bookwyrm 書蟲天地

Outliers, by Malcolm Gladwell

<< < (5/6) > >>

hangchoi:
Start to read Tipping Point last night. To me, this one is easier to read than Outliers. I finished 1/3 of the book in 3 hours or so.

It is really a page turner.

hangchoi:
Got his new book, David and Goliath. This one talks about how a small business can beat a big giant of its industry. Will queue on my next reading.

That is a epub version, so.......  ;D

hangchoi:
Read one third of the book. still a good read and it keeps its style and standard. It will not disappointed you if you like his previous books.

Book starts by telling the story of David vs Goliath and analyze why David won. The chapters follows start to elaborate how underdog can beat giant.

It is full of sociology studies as example, particularly if you have kids and are scratching your head about your kids' schooling, you may need to read the first few chapters. It talks about the studies of Class size, Money to kids, How to pick school / university, etc.....

I am still working on it and may write more later......

hangchoi:
Finished.

Quite a good read and it just happened that the last part of book talked about the legitimacy of power, which I think the government of Hong Kong should take a look (and I noticed that a newspaper article has the same view too).

hangchoi:
Just finished reading Blink. This one talks about that sometimes our instant decisions are better than our deep thought.

The book has almost the same style, full of stories and examples, it is a good light reading.

I found that this book is almost a book of psychology, which gives a few good account of how our mind work on different things, which makes us come up with different instant decisions. Some decision may be bad but this could be explainable but most good instant decisions are mainly due to our own knowledge, experience and skill.

This book is also good for those who are interested in marketing, especially on the chapter about Pepsi Challenge and New Coca Cola.

Interesting and I found that I had read four of Gladwell's books, but not in his chrono order. I like this one more than tipping point.

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

[*] Previous page

Go to full version