
Bowling Alone: Revised and Updated: The Collapse and Revival of American Community
Robert D. Putnam
4.3 on Amazon
19 HN comments

Between the World and Me
Ta-Nehisi Coates
4.7 on Amazon
19 HN comments

Security Engineering: A Guide to Building Dependable Distributed Systems
Ross Anderson
4.8 on Amazon
19 HN comments

The Autobiography of Malcolm X: As Told to Alex Haley
Malcolm X, Alex Haley, et al.
4.8 on Amazon
19 HN comments

What I Talk About When I Talk About Running: A Memoir (Vintage International), Book Cover May Vary
Haruki Murakami
4.5 on Amazon
19 HN comments

Hacking: The Art of Exploitation, 2nd Edition
Jon Erickson
4.7 on Amazon
19 HN comments

An Elegant Puzzle: Systems of Engineering Management
Will Larson
4.5 on Amazon
19 HN comments

Never: A Novel
Ken Follett
? on Amazon
19 HN comments

Bitcoin: Hard Money You Can't F*ck With: Why Bitcoin Will Be the Next Global Reserve Currency
Jason A. Williams and Jessica Walker
4.8 on Amazon
19 HN comments

The Road Less Traveled: The Secret Battle to End the Great War, 1916-1917
Philip Zelikow
4.7 on Amazon
19 HN comments

The Red Book: A Reader's Edition (Philemon)
C. G. Jung , Sonu Shamdasani, et al.
4.8 on Amazon
19 HN comments

The Culture Map: Breaking Through the Invisible Boundaries of Global Business
Erin Meyer
4.7 on Amazon
19 HN comments

The Elegant Universe: Superstrings, Hidden Dimensions, and the Quest for the Ultimate Theory
Brian Greene
4.7 on Amazon
19 HN comments

Physics: Principles with Applications (7th Edition) - Standalone book
Douglas Giancoli
4.2 on Amazon
19 HN comments

Common Sense: The Origin and Design of Government
Thomas Paine and Coventry House Publishing
4.8 on Amazon
19 HN comments
vikerionJuly 7, 2020
mavelikaraonDec 5, 2019
qinonMay 22, 2019
He’ll be a publishing a book on this soon (An Elegant Puzzle) if you’re especially curious.
Disclaimer: I work with Will at Stripe.
markwaldrononOct 16, 2020
rubiquityonSep 24, 2020
spIrronMar 13, 2021
tdrgabionNov 29, 2019
acconradonMar 6, 2020
Oof, I hope not directly. Based on this evidence (also in An Elegant Puzzle) you wouldn't want more than 8-10 direct reports:
https://lethain.com/sizing-engineering-teams/
ctogdenonJuly 7, 2020
Might be interesting to you based on the above.
cerasonJuly 27, 2021
- His book on engineering management, An Elegant Puzzle: https://www.amazon.com/Elegant-Puzzle-Systems-Engineering-Ma...
- His blog also discusses management: https://lethain.com/
LameRubberDuckyonOct 28, 2019
Database Internals,
Snowden book,
Algorithms book,
BPF Performance tools,
Your Linux Toolbox,
The Go Programming Language,
The Pragmatic Programmer,
Quantum Computing,
A Programmer's Introduction to Mathematics,
An Elegant Puzzle
I had to go up to page 14 of the items list to find all of the items you listed and to find the wire-type soldering iron tip cleaner.
Edit: Took out unneeded snark. It seems I fell prey to Amazon algorithms.
eatonphilonJune 20, 2021
I do agree The Manager's Path is a good one though.
Some other favorites are High Output Management by Andy Grove, Managing Transitions by William Bridges, The Toyota Production System by Taiichi Ohno, Measure What Matters by John Doerr, Peopleware by Tom DeMarco, The Innovator's Dilemma, etc.
BlackjackCFonApr 10, 2021
I find most management books to be useful in terms of thinking about general people management.
I had takeaways from An Elegant Puzzle that I could directly apply to my day to day work. That's more valuable than anything else.
tomervonMay 9, 2021
emiphilonJune 5, 2021
It's also really ubiquitous across a bunch of disciplines, from Drucker's Management & Gerber's E-Myth & Dalio's Principles in business/org development (not even mentioning the huge field of ops management) to the broader field of systems thinking like Donnelly's Thinking in Systems. Even frameworks like the Scientific Method are a form of this type of thinking, and it's easy to forget that these are all human concepts of trying to bring order to chaos. In the software world you have contemporaries like Larson's An Elegant Puzzle focusing on the management aspect and so so so many classics like GoF/Pragmatic Programmer/Code Complete that focusing on the developer. It's neat that the same ideas apply at different levels of the bigger systems (company, project, individual contributor).
It's also easy to forget that the cogs of many of these machines are people, and this article does a good job of bringing that aspect to the forefront.
shimmsonApr 11, 2021
Technology Specific:
* An Elegant Puzzle: Systems of Engineering Management (Will Larson)
* Accelerate: The Science of Lean Software and Devops: Building and Scaling High Performing Teams (Nicole Forsgren, Jez Humble, and Gene Kim)
* Team Topologies: Organizing Business and Technology Teams for Fast Flow (Matthew Skelton and Manuel Pais)
* Empowered: Ordinary People, Extraordinary Products (Marty Cagan)
* The Phoenix Project (Gene Kim, Kevin Behr, George Spafford)
General:
* The Goal (Eliyahu Goldratt)
* Turn the Ship Around! (L David Marquet)
* Just Culture (Sidney Dekker)
* Leadership on the Line (Ronald Heifetz, Marty Linsky)
* Emotional Intelligence (Daniel Goleman)
bjterryonJune 7, 2021
I also have a little bit of the feeling that the emperor has no clothes, since in spite of all their ideas, I can't find any major company that has successfully transformed an industry based on systems thinking, nor can I find any major social ill that has been solved through the application of systems thinking. If anyone has any concrete cases of those, I'd also be interested.
I have a blog post working on applying Donella Meadows' Leverage Points to an engineering problem (incident retrospectives), but it's unsatisfying enough that I haven't figured out how to make it publishable.
goopthinkonJuly 7, 2020
2. "The Phoenix Project", "The Unicorn Project" (novels), and "DevOps Handbook" by Eugene Kim, on how different parts of a tech + non-tech organization come and work together.
3. "High Output Management" by Andrew Grove on overall technical management.
4. "Measure What Matters" by John Doerr on setting objectives and measuring their progress.
5. "The Checklist Manifesto" by Atul Gawande on thinking through replicable processes.
6. "Who" by Geoff Smart on hiring.
7. "Start with Why" by Simon Sinek and "The Culture Code" by Daniel Coyle on creating culture and reasons for why people do the work. It's an important part of any management process, double import because of how often it is lost in technical management.
amirkdvonJune 19, 2021
- The Manager's Path, by Camille Fournier
- An Elegant Puzzle, by Will Larson
- Team Topologies, by Matthew Skelton and Manuel Pais
- Thinking in Systems, by Donella Meadows
- Also see: references cited in the above and other works by same authors
Disclaimer: Not a seasoned EM and definitely not the first to recommend these on HN.