Ask HN: Books you read in 2017?

I'd like to know which books HN read in 2017. Which of these would you recommend? Which of these surprised you, because they are not the usual suspects.

  • This year I read:

    1. The Thrilling Adventures of Lovelace and Babbage: The (Mostly) True Story of the First Computer - A steampunk graphic novel about Ada Lovelace and Charlie Babbage. Fun story with loads of research to back it up. Got even better when I got to go the UK and explore the places they worked at in their livetimes

    2. The Hardware Hacker - A compilation of storis by bunnie focused on the hardware/maker(ish) ecosystem. Also discusses the Chinese manufacturing ecosystem and answers questions that most people have about it.

    3. Technically Wrong - A book about how tech can sometimes leave lots of people behind for one reason or another and how we can fix them. A very quick read.

    4. The Masters of Doom - The story of id Software, the company which spawned an entire genre with games like Doom and Wolfenstwein in its early days.

    5. Blood, Sweat and Pixels - The book looks into how video games are made and the many challenges along the way. Focuses on ten games from solo all the way to AAA titles. Really good if you want to know why video games turn out the way they do. After reading this, you'll double take whenever you hear of a delayed game, cancelled project, E3 demos and buggy releases. It also has some uplifting moments.

    6. My textbooks :).

    Hopefully I can also read The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck, Deep Work and CODE.

  • 1. How to Win Friends and Influence People - I recommend because I apply every day at work and reap the results as well, somebody should have recommended this book to me ten years ago;

    2. Children of Time - a science fiction book that I enjoyed, I notice that fiction, in general, helps me deal with stressful work, as I disconnect easier and put myself in an imaginary world while reading;

    3. Meditations by Marcus Aurelius - this isn't a book you read cover to cover, I catch myself thinking long even after reading a single sentence;

    1) and 3) I've come across on HN, but 2) was the unexpected random hit.

  • Recommendations:

    1) Einsteins Dreams - This book is a quick read, but shows a bunch of different perceptions of time. Fantastic.

    2) Rock warriors way - Even if you aren't a climber, I feel like this book has a lot of great lessons about committing without fear. Much more accessible as a climber though.

    3) Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art - Quick read, I learned a lot about storytelling in general.

    4) Agnotology: The Making and Unmaking of Ignorance - This is a series of essays and the first few were great views into companies creating ignorance in the 50's around smoking and link to cancer. Gets a little dense after a while.

    Full list: https://www.goodreads.com/review/list/18975415-samuel-mosley...

  • My daughter just had her first novels (a young adult trilogy) published a few weeks ago. Even though it is not really my genre I read it and enjoyed it. Of course I am biased....

    Dysfunctional Series: Books 1-3 (Origins, Dark Imagination, A Mighty Long Fall)

    By McKenzie Rae

    https://www.amazon.com/Dysfunctional-Books-Origins-Imaginati...

  • Fiction? I started contributing to https://standardebooks.org/ and discovered Gogol’s Dead Souls and Strindberg’s The Red Room in the process as new favourite classics.

  • Update: added a few lines about the books than just a name listing

    From the ones I read in 2017, I would highly recommend (non-IT):

    1. The hidden life of trees- Peter Wohlleben Why forest trees are different than the ones you plant, how the communicate, how they care for their friends when they are not well, how mother trees protect their young ones by not letting them grow too fast, the fungi network, etc. The book is very easy to read- there is no scientific terminology overload. Things are told very simply. Not restricted to students of the subject. Learned something interesting every couple of pages. Another aspect is that the love shows. It is very clear that the author is in love with the subject. The author manages a wild forest in Germany and talks mainly about trees in terms of beeches, firs, oaks, etc. The author is politely insistent that we should protect the natural wild forests and let them be.

    2. Why the allies won- Richard Overy Probably the best book I read on WW2. So many more factors went into winning the war than actual fight. Probably appealed to my analytical mind.

    3. India After Gandhi- Ramachandra Guha As the author says history ends for many Indians with freedom. Very good chronicles. Started appreciating Nehru more.

    4. Re-read Gone With The Wind, To Kill a Mockingbird, the Godfather and a few P.G Wodehouse- all of which I like.

    Currently, halfway through Stephen Fry's Mythos which seems good enough to recommend. I am pretty new to the Greek Mythology and he is a good story teller. Don't have much to compare it with, though.

    Also, by choice, I read quite a few books in rural Marathi(an Indian regional language) and was surprised how good the story telling was. Also noticed that I had gone quite far from my mother tongue but was happy to see how easy it was to go back.

    Please answer my similar question https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15960188

  • I finally got around to reading Dune. I burned though it pretty quickly and loved it. For some reason I can't get into the other books in the series. For now they mock me from their spot on my bookshelf...

  • These are all hard sci-fi, and much like Dark Mirror, given today's troubles, it's simultaneously entertaining while being intellectually stimulating, but in a way that feels relevant, even if not immediately actionable.

    The first is what got me hooked, and back into reading.

    The Wages of Humanity, is a short story by Liu Cixin. The short story used to be available by itself on Amazon, but now it's been disappeared[1]. It can be found as the last story in The Wandering Earth: Classic Science Fiction Collection.[2]

    An assassin is being offered exorbitant sum to kill the three poorest people for some reason, and the book explores why, to a thrilling conclusion.

    Since I found it as a stand alone story I cannot comment on the rest of the books in that collection. From there I read into The Three Body Problem[3], and Dark Forest by Liu Cixin; first two books of the Remembrance of Earth's Past trilogy. The only reason I don't mention I have not (yet) finished reading the third book.

    [1] This link now returns a 404: https://amazon.com/dp/B00CSW0UZI but it's what the URL my Kindle points to. Search does not find the stand alone edition.

    [2] https://amazon.com/dp/B00CXUKNA2

    [3] https://amazon.com/dp/B00IQO403K

  • When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi, it's a memoir of a neurologist who comes across lung cancer himself and how his life changes from being a doctor to the patient. I recently finished reading it and let me tell you, I had to pause every other page to reflect upon those words as they were surreal.

  • Best book I read this year hands down was The Righteous Mind: Why good people are divided by politics and religion, by Jonathan Haidt.

    It's a really lucid and eye opening introduction to moral psychology, and as a left-leaning person politically has made me understand my right-leaning friends more than anything else. Truly enlightening.

  • This year I've read:

    Maxims - Epictetus

    The road to serfdom - Friedrich Hayek

    De officiis - Cicero

    De divinatione - Cicero

    Lives of eminent philosophers - Diogenes Laertius

    Confessions - Al ghazali

    Illiad - Homer

    Odyssey - Homer

    Influence - Robert Cialdini

    Guns, Germs and steel - Jared Diamond

    Poor Charlie's Almanack - Charlie Munger - 2nd reading

    Andrew Carnegie's Biography - Joseph Frazier

    Fooled by Randomness - Nassim Taleb - 2nd reading

    Bed of Procrustes - Nassim Taleb

    Never Split the Difference - Christopher Voss

    The intelligent investor - Benjamin Graham

    Autobiography - Benjamin Franklin

    I always remember this quote:

    "In my whole life, I have known no wise people who didn't read all the time -- none, zero." Charlie Munger

  • 1. Off to Be the Wizard (Scott Meyer) - Very good.

    2. Ready Player One (Ernest Cline) - I liked it although it's kinda ridiculous and one-sided.

    3. The Bloodline Feud (Charles Stross) - Actually part 1&2 of a series. Really need to continue, very good. I'd say this was not "oh I know what will happen next" which is kinda rare.

    4. The Graveyard Book (Neil Gaiman) - It's ok, but not as good as I had hoped.

    5. Coraline (Neil Gaiman) - It's a children's book, and very short, but I liked it a lot.

    6. Accelerated C++ (Koening/Moo) - Not finished, I was under the impression it's "C++ for programmers well-versed in other languages" and for that it's a bit slow-starting, but not bad I guess

    I really need to read more. :|

  • This year I read 31 books. Only 8 were non-fiction. I'm hoping to finish another 2 before the year ends.

    My top 3 were.

    1. The Mistborn series by Brandon Sanderson. This series did a good job of balancing big and little picture, while givings us a neat form of magic to learn about.

    2. Stock Market Cash Flow from the RDPD series. In 2016 I had read several books on fundamental(or value) investing, and this book helped me bust out of the thinking that, that style is the only way to look at, and earn in the stock market.

    3. Snow Crash. This book was just fun. The characters were enjoyable to watch, and there was some clever stuff in this book.

  • * The Unconsoled (Kazuo Ishiguro)

    * Never Let Me Go (Kazuo Ishiguro)

    * Influx (Daniel Suarex)

    * Sputnik Sweetheart (Haruki Murakami)

    * Apex (Ramez Naam)

    * One Second After (William R. Forstchen)

    * Anna Karanina (Leo Tolstoy)

    * Neuromancer (William Gibson)

    * A Farewell to Arms (Ernest Hemingway)

    * Crux (Ramez Naam)

    * A Moveable Feast (Ernest Hemingway)

    * Hardboiled Wonderland and The End of the World (Haruki Murakami)

  • Into Thin Air - Jon Krakauer

    If you like reading adventurous books, i'd recommend it. This one is about the Mt. Everest expedition of a group of people and the disaster that fell upon them.

    You're Surely Joking Mr. Feynman - Richard Feynman

    This one is collection of events in the life of Feynman. He's mostly known for being a scientist, but he's equally talented in few other areas as well. An interesting and fun book.

    Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking - Malcolm Gladwell

    Recommended if you are into psychology and knowing how our thoughts and actions are affected by our subconscious.

  • 1. Fermat's Enigma: The Epic Quest to Solve the World's Greatest Mathematical Problem - I've been on a giant math books kick. I really enjoyed Simon Singh's other book, The Code Book, so this one is awesome.

    2. The Code Book - If you're really into the history of cryptography, this book is for you.

    3. The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck - Not a really a revelatory book by any sorts. But a fun read.

    4. The Handmaid's Tale - Revisiting this since the TV series came out and I really felt like getting traumatized all over again.

  • Sorry, this got a little longer than I meant it to be

    - Skunk Works: A Personal Memoir of My Years at Lockheed - It's over 20 years old now but still really good, especially if you're into planes like the U-2, F-117, and SR-71

    If you're wanting a deeper understanding of the other side of the war on terror, I'd recommend the following:

    - I Was Told to Come Alone: My Journey Behind the Lines of Jihad

    - Salafi-Jihadism: The History of an Idea

    - The Way of the Strangers: Encounters with the Islamic State

    - After the Prophet: The Epic Story of the Shia-Sunni Split in Islam

    - The Black Banners: The Inside Story of 9/11 and the War Against al-Qaeda

    If you're wanting a dive into Russia:

    - The Invention of Russia: From Gorbachev's Freedom to Putin's War

    - The Red Web: The Struggle Between Russia's Digital Dictators and the New Online Revolutionaries

    - Nothing Is True and Everything Is Possible: The Surreal Heart of the New Russia

    If you're wanting true Spy stuff:

    - The Billion Dollar Spy: A True Story of Cold War Espionage and Betrayal

    - The Spy's Son: The True Story of the Highest-Ranking CIA Officer Ever Convicted of Espionage and the Son He Trained to Spy for Russia

    - Left of Boom: How a Young CIA Case Officer Penetrated the Taliban and Al-Qaeda (the author is a little full of himself, but still, it's interesting)

  • Two of the most interesting books I've read this year are:

    1. Man's search for meaning, by Viktor Frankl. He was an Austrian psychiatrist who founded Logotherapy as a form of analysing one's life with the idea of finding meaning or living a purposeful life. According to Frankl, such a life would mean doing important/meaningful work, enjoying nature in all it's beauty, loving and taking care of another person and being courageous when going through hard times. These are things that I personally consider part of the common sense package I had built-in when I was born, so this book kind of talks to my soul. I would recommend it to anyone who is highly self-reflective.

    2. Stumbling on happiness, by Daniel Gilbert. This was an interesting read and the different studies described in the book made me think how would I react in a similar situation and I realised funny things about how memory works and how does our brain imagine future events.

  • A few of the best were:

    What Technology Wants by Kevin Kelly. A really profound and interesting look into what technology is. Technology evolves through the same sort of Darwinian process that life evolves. Technology is in some sense alive, and Kelly's perspective on it is wonderfully refreshing. I also read his book Out of Control, which is fantastic.

    Sapiens by Yuval Harari. Enough people are talking about this one that I don't have to say much, suffice it to say it's a fascinating look into human history a la Guns, Germs, and Steel.

    The Lucifer Principle by Howard Bloom. If you're a fan of Harari you'll love this one. It's an alternative scientific look at evil, and how evil appears to be encoded into our species.

    Hyperspace by Michio Kaku. Kaku is an amazing popular science writer bar none and this is his exploration of modern physics and string theory. The most concise and understandable explanation of modern physics I've read, which is part for the course with Kaku.

    Red Queen by Matt Ridley. A fascinating look at sex, and why the human sex drive, and therefore human nature, is the way it is.

  • The full list: https://gitlab.com/rlease/Books

    My list lines up with a lot of books that people have recommended here, so I'll try to add a few favorites that haven't been mentioned so far.

    Fiction:

    1. Ubik - I read a bunch of Philip K. Dick this year, but this was my favorite. It's delightfully mind bending and left me thinking about it long after the book was done.

    2. All the Pretty Horses - Beautifully written. McCarthy has an uncanny ability to paint with words.

    3. Cannery Row - Short, witty, and full of interesting characters.

    Nonfiction:

    1. The Idea Factory - A dive into how Bell Labs became such an innovation powerhouse and gives a rounded picture of the figureheads that brought it so much fame.

    2. Moonwalking with Einstein - A fun read about a journalist who took researching a memory competition a bit too seriously.

    3. Countdown to Zero Day - A fascinating look at the development and deployment of Stuxnet -- the virus built to set Iran's nuclear program back.

  • Here's quite a few, but they might be of interest to others.

    1. You Have the Right to Remain Innocent: great advice that I had never seen anywhere else (except his video that started the whole thing).

    2. The Vital Question: good overview of origin of life research.

    3. Fragment: hard science fiction (is that the term?) that delved into evolution and dovetailed with some of the reading I had been doing around that subject.

    4. The Science of Navigation: delved into the wonder of current navigational technology and how we got to here.

    5. The Lost City of the Monkey God: bought on a lark, made me realize that archaeology can still find new things nowadays.

    6. Island of the Lost: historical account of two shipwrecks on the same island at the same time that knew nothing of each other.

    7. Protecting the Gift: another eye-opener about being more aware of the ways people _can_ prey on children.

    8. Wondrous Contrivances: how people reacted to new techologies in the past.

    9. Rig Ship for Ultra Quiet: submariner's account of life during a Cold War operation.

  • The Aeon 14 novels following Tanis Richards[1] have been a consistently good read. The Intrepid Saga and The Orion War series. Haven't ventured into the other offshoots as yet.

    The Dome Trilogy[2] was also pretty good, as are the Rho Agenda series[3][4][5].

    And if you prefer horror to sci-fi, the I Am Not a Serial Killer series[6] was very good overall, although I thought it lost some steam in the last two books.

    And finally, The Rosie Project[7] was so completely charming I ended up reading it straight through in one night.

    [1] https://www.goodreads.com/author/list/6426890.M_D_Cooper

    [2] https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/25501349-unexpected-rain

    [3] https://www.goodreads.com/series/61746-the-rho-agenda

    [4] https://www.goodreads.com/series/142618-the-rho-agenda-incep...

    [5] https://www.goodreads.com/series/175066-rho-agenda-assimilat...

    [6] https://www.goodreads.com/series/49883-john-cleaver

    [7] https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18015965-the-rosie-proje...

  • The archipelago of another life from AndreĂŻ Makine. I don't think it's already translated in English, but since his other books has been translated, I think this one will be too.

    Les chemin noirs by Sylvain Tesson. I don't think it will be translated in English but I enjoyed it a lot (and half of my family too). Sylvain Tesson is a traveller, he has walked across a lot of countries (mostly Russia and Asia). After a bad fall (multiple broken bones, head trauma) he decided to walk across France along the so-called 'empty diagonal' from South-East to North-East, recounting a solitary walk on forgotten/rarely-used trails (the so-called 'chemins noirs' or black trails), talking about places mostly abandoned by the current society. He'll also talk about the people he's meeting along the way and the friends that accompanied him along the way.

  • My target this year was one book every other day, same as last year. Goodreads has my ratings https://www.goodreads.com/review/list/8007012-aditya-y?shelf...

  • 1. Born to Run: A Hidden Tribe, Superathletes, and the Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen

    It's a fun read, and got me inspired to run my first ultra marathon.

    2. Alone on the Wall

    Inspiring stories about this amazing rock climber Alex Honnold, as told by himself and one other experienced climber. You get a little insight into what makes him tick.

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  • Recommend:

    1) The Power Broker - About Robert Moses, the most powerful city planner in New York from the 1930s to the 1960s. Great if you're interested in city planning, how people gain and exercise power, and the real politik of government.

    2) The Jungle - Remembered as an exposé of meatpacking, but really more than that. Phenomenal story about early 20th immigrants to Chicago trying to take part in the American Dream but struggling to survive. Surprisingly relevant today.

    3) The Big Con - Fascinating look at con artists in the first half of the 20th century.

  • At the Existentialist CafĂ©: Freedom, Being, and Apricot Cocktails

    It's an amazing book on philosophy, history, and much more. It felt very relevant to current times. The philosophers in question lived around and through WWII and it examines how their ideas came about before and after as well.

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/25658482-at-the-existent...

  • 1. 10% Happier

    2. Traction

    3. Unshakable

    4. Shoe Dog (This has been my favorite book thus far of 2017, I did not think it would of left such a lasting impression on me about life and success and business)

    5. Start with Why

    6. The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*uck

  • Fahrenheit 451

    Animal Farm

    The Gene: An Intimate History

    The Martian

    Currently reading Sapiens: A brief history of humankind. I would recommend all these books, if you're interested in the subjects they are written about.

  • Currently reading: Hyperion.

    * Peak: Secretes From the New Science of Expertise

    * The Hard Thing About Hard Things

    * American Gods

    * The Dark Tower

    * Children of Time

    * Sapiens

    * The Lies of Locke Lamora: Gentleman Bastards #1

    * Red Seas Under Red Skies: Gentleman Bastards #2

    * Dark Matter

    * The Dark Tower #1

    * Guns of The Dawn

    * The Hunter Killers

    * Snow Crash

  • Reinventing Dell. How a company with an entrepreneurial spirit that allowed it to innovate then collapsed in on itself like a dying star.

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/27410889-reinventing-del...

  • 1. Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind

    2. Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! (Adventures of a Curious Character)

    3. The Loyal: The Story of Atwood and the Second Civil War (disclosure - my father wrote this book)

    4. The Power of Habit: Why We Do What We Do in Life and Business

    5. Grit

    I thoroughly enjoyed all of these. It was interesting to see how Grit and The Power of Habit played off each other.

  • 1. The Tolkien Reader by J.R.R. Tolkien - If you are into trolls living under a bridge, and more.

    2. Smoke and Mirrors: Short Fiction and Illusions by Neil Gaiman - If you are into a young knight with a cool horse looking for a holy grail but to only find out an elderly woman bought it from a thrift store, and more.

  • - The Road to Character (David Brooks)

    - Code (Charles Petzold)

    - Soft Skills: The Software Developer's Life Manual (John Z. Sonmez)

    - Zero Bugs and Program Faster (Kate Thompson)

    - Daemon (Daniel Suarez)

    - Algorithms to Live By: The Computer Science of Human Decisions (Brian Christian)

    - How to Talk to Anyone: 92 Little Tricks for Big Success in Relationships (Leil Lowndes)

  • Pretty popular and not a niche book, but I enjoyed Give and Take by Adam Grant very much [0].

    - [0] https://www.robinwieruch.de/lessons-learned-give-and-take/

  • - The Innovator's Dilemma by Clay Christensen

    - Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman

    - A Briefer History of Time by Stephen Hawking

    - The Lean Startup by Eric Ries

    - Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson

    - The Industries of the Future by Alec Ross

    - Never Split the Difference by Chris Voss

    - Start with No by Jim Camp

    - How Google Works by Eric Schmidt and Jonathan Rosenberg

    - The Everything Store by Brad Stone

    - The Inevitable by Kevin Kelly

  • Top books that I read this past year:

    - Hillbilly Elegy By JD Vance

    - Golden Son by Pierce Brown (second book in a trilogy) liked the whole trilogy

    - Rosie Project/Rosie Effect by Graeme Simsion

    - Graceling by Kristin Cashore

    - Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel

  • Worth mentioning: 1. Ready Player One 2. On The Road (re-read)

  • I would recommend Red Rising. A very good read!

  • A couple of books I've read can be found at https://www.theceolibrary.com/nick-janetakis-2771.html.

    They are mainly focused on communication and getting better at selling yourself and your code. There's also a couple mixed in that will help improve other non-technical skills which in turn amplify your existing coding skills.

  • India: A Million Mutinies Now - V.S. Naipaul

    Recommended by a friend who works on mobility policy in India.

  • * Currently reading: Edgedancer

    * Flowers for Algernon

    * Going Rogue: Spells, Swords, & Stealth

    * Split the Party: Spells, Swords, & Stealth

    * NPCs

    * Children of Time

    * Death's End

    * The Shining

    * IT

    * All 7+1 books of The Dark Tower

  • The Gods Themselves by Isaac Asimov was definitely my favorite.

  • 1. Selected Essays of Warren Buffett

    2. First, Break all the Rules

    3. Between the World and Me

  • My general rule is: if the book is in Barnes & Nobles its not worth reading. If you want true enlightening from reading branch out from what everyone else reads. The best books I have ever read in my life didn't even get published. Check out Thomas Hardy: The Poor Man and the Lady. Which was rejected my 5 publishers