Bill Gates Recommends 5 books worth reading this summer

Multibillionaire and philanthropist, Bill Gates  has released on his official website, gatenotes the list of books he recommends this summer which he believe you might enjoy.

Bill Gates Recommends 5 books worth reading this summer

According to Gates, I’ve read some terrific books lately. When I pulled together this list of five that you might enjoy this summer, I realized that several of my choices wrestle with big questions. The series of the questions are as follows;
1. What makes a genius tick?
2. Why do bad things happen to good people?
3. Where does humanity come from, and where are we headed?

He further stated that despite the heavy subject matter, all these books were fun to read, and most of them are pretty short. See the list of books below with  few notes bout the authors by gates.

1. Leonardo da Vinci, by Walter Isaacson. According to Bill Gates, I think Leonardo was one of the most fascinating people ever. Although today he’s best known as a painter, Leonardo had an absurdly wide range of interests, from human anatomy to the theater. Isaacson does the best job I’ve seen of pulling together the different strands of Leonardo’s life and explaining what made him so exceptional. A worthy follow-up to Isaacson’s great biographies of Albert Einstein and Steve Jobs.

2. Everything Happens for a Reason and Other Lies I’ve Loved, by Kate Bowler. According to Bill Gates when Bowler, a professor at Duke Divinity School, is diagnosed with stage IV colon cancer, she sets out to understand why it happened. Is it a test of her character? The result is a heartbreaking, surprisingly funny memoir about faith and coming to grips with your own mortality.

3. Lincoln in the Bardo, by George Saunders. According to Gates, I thought I knew everything I needed to know about Abraham Lincoln, but this novel made me rethink parts of his life. It blends historical facts from the Civil War with fantastical elements—it’s basically a long conversation among 166 ghosts, including Lincoln’s deceased son. I got new insight into the way Lincoln must have been crushed by the weight of both grief and responsibility. This is one of those fascinating, ambiguous books you’ll want to discuss with a friend when you’re done.

4. Origin Story: A Big History of Everything, by David Christian. According to Bill Gates, David created my favorite course of all time, Big History. It tells the story of the universe from the big bang to today’s complex societies, weaving together insights and evidence from various disciplines into a single narrative. If you haven’t taken Big History yet, Origin Story is a great introduction. If you have, it’s a great refresher. Either way, the book will leave you with a greater appreciation of humanity’s place in the universe.

5. Factfulness, by Hans Rosling, with Ola Rosling and Anna Rosling Ronnlund. According to Gates, I’ve been recommending this book since the day it came out. Hans, the brilliant global-health lecturer who died last year, gives you a breakthrough way of understanding basic truths about the world—how life is getting better, and where the world still needs to improve. And he weaves in unforgettable anecdotes from his life. It’s a fitting final word from a brilliant man, and one of the best books I’ve ever read.

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