Open: An Autobiography
Andre Agassi, Erik Davies, et al.
4.7 on Amazon
6 HN comments
Shoe Dog: A Memoir by the Creator of Nike
Phil Knight, Norbert Leo Butz, et al.
4.8 on Amazon
4 HN comments
The Book of Why: The New Science of Cause and Effect
Judea Pearl and Dana Mackenzie
4.4 on Amazon
4 HN comments
Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art
James Nestor
4.7 on Amazon
3 HN comments
Moby Dick: or, the White Whale
Herman Melville
4.3 on Amazon
3 HN comments
K: A History of Baseball in Ten Pitches
Tyler Kepner
4.6 on Amazon
3 HN comments
The Anarchist Cookbook
William Powell
4.3 on Amazon
2 HN comments
The Botany of Desire
Michael Pollan, Scott Brick, et al.
4.6 on Amazon
2 HN comments
The Inner Game of Tennis: The Classic Guide to the Mental Side of Peak Performance
W. Timothy Gallwey , Zach Kleiman, et al.
4.7 on Amazon
2 HN comments
Silent Spring
Rachel Carson, Linda Lear, et al.
4.6 on Amazon
2 HN comments
Desert Solitaire
Edward Abbey
4.6 on Amazon
2 HN comments
Born to Run
Christopher McDougall
4.7 on Amazon
2 HN comments
Starting Strength: Basic Barbell Training, 3rd edition
Mark Rippetoe and Jason Kelly
4.8 on Amazon
2 HN comments
The Old Man and the Sea
Ernest Hemingway, Donald Sutherland, et al.
4.6 on Amazon
2 HN comments
Into the Wild
Jon Krakauer
4.5 on Amazon
1 HN comments
mickaelP38onJuly 31, 2021
https://commoncog.com/blog/tag/learning-techniques/
Also if you want to level up your skills, and learn about learning in general, these are some books you should check:
- Practice perfect
- Peak
- A mind for numbers
- The inner game of tennis
- Guitar zero
- The art of learning
iambenonMay 23, 2021
Whilst it's technically a tennis coaching book, the tennis is really just an example to explain bigger things.
Anyway, there's a great story in that book where he says something like "if you want to put someone off their game, compliment them on how strong their backhand [or whatever] is today. From then on they'll think about it before every stroke and destroy their own performance."