The Courage to Be Disliked

by Ichiro Kishimi & Fumitake Koga

★★★★☆

A dialogue-driven book that uses Adlerian psychology to argue that happiness is a choice, trauma doesn't determine your future, and the freedom to live your own life requires the courage to be disliked.

Key Learning:

All problems are interpersonal relationship problems. Separation of tasks is the key to freedom — what others think of you is not your task.

The Hard Thing About Hard Things

by Ben Horowitz

★★★★

Ben Horowitz's raw account of building and running startups through crisis, layoffs, and near-death moments. No inspirational platitudes — just war stories and hard-won judgment.

Key Learning:

There's no playbook for the hard moments in leadership. The only thing that prepares you is experience — and the willingness to face reality before it forces you to.

Deep Work

by Cal Newport

★★★★

Deep work is the ability to focus without distraction on cognitively demanding tasks. Cal Newport argues it's becoming rare and valuable at exactly the same time — which makes it the superpower of the knowledge economy.

Key Learning:

High Quality Work = Time Spent × Intensity of Focus. Don't take breaks from distraction — take breaks from focus. Your capacity for deep work is limited each day. Protect it. When you work, work hard. When you're done, be done.

Storyworthy

by Matthew Dicks

★★★☆

Every life has stories worth telling. The best ones are personal, honest, and show change over time. Matthew Dicks makes the case that storytelling isn't performance — it's the most direct route to human connection.

Key Learning:

A story must reflect change. You start as one version of yourself and end as another. Tell it like you'd tell it at dinner — unprepared, unrehearsed. The audience doesn't want a performance. They want to feel like they're being told something real by someone being honest.