
Alan Kay is a computer scientist best known for his work at Xerox PARC, where he pioneered object-oriented programming and envisioned the Dynabook—a portable personal computer that presaged the laptop and tablet. His research fundamentally influenced how we design and think about software systems today.
14 Books Recommended by Alan Kay
Ranked by popularity across all reading lists on this site

The Mythical Man-Month
5 people recommendedAn early look and experience with timeless truths (and gotchas) from systems building with teams
Also recommended by: Larry Ellison, Jeff Bezos, Marc Benioff, Jeff Atwood
I have never forgotten the combined shock and thrill of making my way through this in my 20s.
Also recommended by: Sam Altman, Neil Degrasse Tyson

Molecular Biology of the Cell
2 people recommendedFor many years it has been the best single volume narrative of 'life from scratch.'
Also recommended by: Sam Altman
The Art of the Metaobject Protocol
A real gem for helping to think about design and implementations.
The Sciences of the Artificial
A much stronger way to think about computing — and what 'Computer Science' might mean.
LISP 1.5 Programmer’s Manual
I have called this the 'Maxwell’s Equations' of computing, because it presents a very large part of what’s important about programming languages.
Computation
It is actually a 'math book' — with lots of ideas, theorems, proofs, etc., — but presented in the friendliest way imaginable by a great mind.
Mythology
A few more books like this, and by the time I got to first grade I had been ruined for the 'single book - single truth' ideas of school and church.
Art in the Blood
[My wife] completely nailed the Arthur Conan Doyle voice of the characters and narrative, while being able to carry a marvelous story into the much larger realm of the novel.
Advances in Programming and Non-Numerical Computation
One of the books that Bob Barton had us read in his famous advanced systems design class in 1967.