Books

Books worth your time, with a few sentences on each. Updated when something new earns the list.

We get asked a lot what to read. This is the answer. The list is short on purpose. Books that changed how we think about something — software, money, technology, work, the world — and that we'd hand to a friend without hedging. A few sentences on each so you can decide whether it's for you.

If a book isn't here, it's not necessarily because we didn't like it. It's because we couldn't say something specific enough to make the inclusion useful.

The Four Agreements

Don Miguel Ruiz, 1997

Four sentences you could put on a wall. The ethical standards everyone should reflect on and consider as the foundation of a life. Short enough to read in an afternoon, deep enough to spend a decade getting wrong. We come back to it.

Meditations

Marcus Aurelius, c. 170–180 AD

The private notebook of a Roman emperor working through how to be a good man under impossible pressure. Two thousand years old and still the best book on how to keep your head when things are heavy. Read it slowly, a page at a time.

Beyond Good and Evil

Friedrich Nietzsche, 1886

Hard reading. Worth the work. Nietzsche on what morality actually is, where it comes from, and why most of what gets called "ethics" is something else wearing the costume. Read it after Marcus Aurelius if you can — the contrast does the teaching.

Mere Christianity

C. S. Lewis, 1952

The clearest articulation of Christian ethics ever written for a non-religious reader. Lewis was a professor of literature, not a theologian, and it shows in the best way — patient, plain-spoken, and free of the church-speak that loses most modern readers in the first chapter. Worth reading whatever your relationship to faith.

The Pursuit of God

A. W. Tozer, 1948

Short, direct, and unembarrassed about its subject. Tozer writes the way someone speaks when they've decided not to bother performing humility. If Mere Christianity is the case for the door, this is what's behind it.

The Kingdom of God Is Within You

Leo Tolstoy, 1894

Tolstoy in his late phase, after he'd given up the novels for theology and got banned from his own church for it. The book that taught Gandhi nonviolent resistance. Christian anarchism articulated by one of the great writers of the 19th century, with a force you'll feel in your chest. Difficult to read without it changing something.

The Bitcoin Standard

Saifedean Ammous, 2018

The clearest case for sound money in print. Ammous walks you through the history of money from cattle and shells through gold and fiat, and then makes the argument for Bitcoin with the patience of someone who knows you're skeptical. If you read one Bitcoin book, read this one.

The Fiat Standard

Saifedean Ammous, 2021

The companion volume. Where the first book is for Bitcoin, this one is the indictment of the system Bitcoin is replacing. Read the chapter on what fiat does to families and you'll never look at currency the same way.

The Sovereign Individual

James Dale Davidson and Lord William Rees-Mogg, 1997

Predicted, in 1997, with surprising precision: digital cash, the decline of the nation-state's monopoly on violence, the collapse of mass institutions, the rise of individuals operating outside traditional jurisdictions. Some of it has aged badly. Most of it has aged like prophecy. Read it understanding when it was written.

The Age of Surveillance Capitalism

Shoshana Zuboff, 2019

Long, dense, occasionally repetitive — and the most important book written about the technology business in the last twenty years. Zuboff's framing of "horseless carriage" thinking, the trap of judging new systems by old metaphors, is the conceptual move at the center of everything we do. Read the first 200 pages even if you don't finish it.

1984

George Orwell, 1949

The book everyone has read and few have actually read. Read it again as an adult, with the surveillance state actually built. The parts that hit hardest now are the small ones — how language gets bent, how truth becomes optional, how the people running the system don't even need to lie convincingly anymore.

Sapiens

Yuval Noah Harari, 2011

A short history of how humans went from one of several primate species to running the planet. Harari's later books we have notes on; this one we still recommend. The chapter on how money is a story we collectively agree to believe is worth the price of the book.

Atlas Shrugged

Ayn Rand, 1957

Long, polemical, and badly in need of an editor — and still the most thorough articulation of one specific worldview ever put to fiction. Read it as a thought experiment, not a manual. Useful as a mirror: the parts that resonate and the parts that don't will tell you something about yourself.

The Libertarian Mind

David Boaz, 1997

The most reasonable case for libertarianism written for a general audience. Boaz is calm, well-read, and willing to address the strongest objections rather than the weakest. Whether or not you agree, the book is the right starting point for understanding the position.

Antifragile

Nassim Nicholas Taleb, 2012

Taleb's argument that some systems get stronger under stress, not weaker — and that the systems we build today are almost all of the wrong kind. Reading this changes how you evaluate decisions. The man is insufferable on Twitter and right on the page.

Thinking, Fast and Slow

Daniel Kahneman, 2011

A Nobel laureate on the two systems running in your head — the fast, intuitive one and the slow, deliberate one — and on how reliably the fast one fools you. Required reading for anyone whose work involves decisions, which is everyone. Half the security job is knowing which system you're using.

Algorithms to Live By

Brian Christian and Tom Griffiths, 2016

Computer science applied to everyday life — when to stop dating and commit, how to organize a closet, when to cut your losses on a project. Genuinely useful. Read it once and you'll find yourself reaching for the chapter titles in conversation for years afterward.

Code

Charles Petzold, 1999 (revised 2022)

The most patient explanation ever written of how computers actually work, from electrical signals through logic gates through assembly through high-level code. Petzold builds the whole stack from scratch in plain English. If anyone in your life uses computers and feels like they don't understand them, hand them this book.

Atomic Habits

James Clear, 2018

The best practical book on habit change in print. Clear is a clear writer, the framework holds up, and the techniques actually work. Read it when you have something specific you're trying to change. It is what it claims to be, which in this category is rare.

Grit

Angela Duckworth, 2016

Duckworth's argument that grit — passion plus perseverance over time — is a better predictor of success than talent. The research holds up. The personal applications are real. Grit is the characteristic that lets you overcome almost anything, and it can be built.

Principles: Life and Work

Ray Dalio, 2017

Dalio's playbook from running one of the most successful investment firms in history, written as a set of operational rules he tested over four decades. Dense, repetitive, and worth it. The principle of "radical transparency" is harder than it sounds and changes how an organization functions when it's actually practiced.

The Lean Startup

Eric Ries, 2011

The bible for building startups quickly and validating ideas before pouring concrete. The "build, measure, learn" cycle is now so embedded in startup culture that people forget who articulated it. Read it instead of building something for two years that nobody wanted.

Zero to One

Peter Thiel, 2014

A note before the book: Thiel's recent political project is a different conversation, and we have no patience for it. The book itself, written before all of that, contains some of the sharpest thinking on monopoly, competition, and contrarian conviction we've encountered. Read it for what's on the page. Take what's useful. Leave the rest with the author.