In understanding successful people, we have come to focus
far too much on their intelligence and ambition and personality traits.
Instead, Malcolm Gladwell argues in Outliers,
we should look at the world that surrounds the successful – their culture,
their family, their generation and the idiosyncratic experiences of their
upbringing, Along the way, Gladwell reveals what the Beatles and Bill Gates
have in common, the reason you’ve never heard of the smartest man in the world,
why almost no star hockey players are born in the fall, and why, when it comes
to plane crashes, where the pilots are born matters as much as how well they
are trained.
The lives of outliers – people whose achievements fall
outside normal experiences – follow a peculiar and unexpected logic, and in
uncovering that logic, Gladwell presents a fascinating and provocative
blueprint for making the most of human potential.
Up until recently our group
has not read a lot of non-fiction, but this year we decided to make a concerted
effort to do so. The question is … what should we read? Our interests are wide
and varied so it shouldn’t be too hard to find something. The problem is, as
readers we have already read most of the non-fiction that appeals to us.
Here is where an author
like Malcolm Gladwell comes in. His books tend to be written as a social
commentary (backed with studies and statistics) on a combination of universally
significant, and yet at times seemingly banal topics. In the Outliers he talks us through the
circumstances which result in everything from star hockey players and award
winning airlines, to software magnets and multi-millionaire entrepreneurs. His
statistics can bring on a slight case of the ‘glazed eye’ syndrome, but his
research is sound and generally he argues his case in a very entertaining and
informative way.
On the whole we found the
read to be serious food for thought with an amazing amount of information fired
out at a fast pace. Certainly fast enough to keep those pages turning!
Everyone had their
favourite chapter … some liked the idea
of the magic 10,000 hours of practice, others the close look at cultural
differences, and then Gladwell’s last chapter outlining his own family background we all found extremely interesting, adding a real human touch to an author so consumed with facts and figures.
Whichever, they all culminated in a
great discussion on a huge range of topics. A perfect book for a group
interested in a constantly changing and puzzling world. Highly recommended!
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