Balaji Srinivasan

Balaji Srinivasan

Balaji Srinivasan

Entrepreneur, Author, and Technology Thinker

Tech entrepreneur and author known for work in cryptocurrency and network effects. Curates a diverse reading list spanning technology, law, and social analysis.

Founders

Balaji Srinivasan is a serial entrepreneur and angel investor who has held leadership roles at several technology companies and founded multiple ventures in the crypto space. He's known for his writing on decentralized systems, network effects, and his contrarian takes on technology and governance. His reading selections reflect deep interests in understanding institutional power, economic systems, and social structures.

76 Books Recommended by Balaji Srinivasan

Ranked by popularity across all reading lists on this site

The Hard Thing About Hard Things book cover
#1

The Hard Thing About Hard Things

by Ben Horowitz

26 people recommended

@bhorowitz has written about this dynamic. Technology as a pro-social channel for revolutionary energies.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Ankur Warikoo, Mark Zuckerberg, Michael Dell, Larry Page, Peter Thiel, Drew Houston, Dustin Moskovitz, Marc Andreessen, Balaji S. Srinivasan, Andrew Ng, Andrew Wilkinson, Blake Scholl, Chris Dixon, Fred Wilson, Jodie Cook, Kathryn Minshew, Keith Rabois, Luis Von Ahn, Marty Cagan, Matt Mullenweg, Max Levchin, Peter Attia, Raoul Pal, Tim Ferriss, Vijay Shekhar Sharma

Tools of Titans book cover
#2

Tools of Titans

by Tim Ferriss

16 people recommended

There’s a continuum between individual-level prescriptive & cohort-level descriptive analyses. Just knowing what actions correlated with life improvement for folks with similar starting conditions may be helpful. A personalized version of @tferriss’s book.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Ankur Warikoo, Naval Ravikant, Balaji S. Srinivasan, Ben Greenfield, Daniel Pink, George Raveling, Greg Mckeown, Greg Norman, Jocko Willink, Jodie Cook, Kevin Rose, Mr Money Mustache, Tim Urban, Ranveer Allahbadia, Derek Sivers

The Lessons of History book cover
#3

The Lessons of History

by Will & Ariel Durant

12 people recommended

Billions of human lifetimes have passed. You have only one. You can try to figure it out all for yourself in your limited time. Or you can gain some leverage from the lessons of history.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Naval Ravikant, Eric Jorgenson, Kevin Systrom, Ray Dalio, Balaji S. Srinivasan, James Clear, Lyn Alden, Mark Manson, Shane Parrish, Tim Ferriss, Derek Sivers

AI Superpowers book cover
#4

AI Superpowers

by Lee, Kai-Fu

10 people recommended

@kmele Yeah, but they intentionally swallowed their pride & started out making plastic stuff. Then they ascended the value chain. Now they are world leaders in areas like drones (DJI) & have leverage over physical manufacturing. They aren’t to be underestimated.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Marc Benioff, Balaji S. Srinivasan, Arianna Huffington, Chris Anderson, Yuval Noah Harari, Peter Diamandis, Ryan Shea, Satya Nadella, Tim Oreilly

Only the Paranoid Survive book cover
#5

Only the Paranoid Survive

by Andrew S. Grove

9 people recommended

We’ve all read Grove. Only the paranoid survive.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Jamie Dimon, Marc Andreessen, Vinod Khosla, Balaji S. Srinivasan, Ben Horowitz, Charlie Munger

The Network State book cover
#6

The Network State

by Balaji Srinivasan

7 people recommended

The Network State is available in three formats. Read it on your phone right now: Download a PDF: Or get it on Amazon if you want the full Kindle experience:

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Naval Ravikant, Brian Armstrong, Marc Andreessen, Vitalik Buterin, Balaji S. Srinivasan, Anthony Pompliano

Deep Learning book cover
#7

Deep Learning

by Ian Goodfellow

6 people recommended

I’d seen Anscombe’s quartet many times before, but was reminded of it when flipping through this fun new book on deep learning [1]. It intentionally eschews equations, but has nice visuals like this one on conditional probability. [1]

Also recommended by: Elon Musk, Vinod Khosla, Balaji S. Srinivasan, Nassim Taleb, Satya Nadella

Who We Are and How We Got Here book cover
#8

Who We Are and How We Got Here

by David Reich

6 people recommended

Read it in combination with David Reich's work from a few years prior, which focuses much more on prehistory than the present day.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Naval Ravikant, Marc Andreessen, Balaji S. Srinivasan, Michael Mauboussin, Nassim Taleb

The Goal book cover
#9

The Goal

by Goldratt, Eliyahu M.

5 people recommended

Ok, here's one. For any sufficiently complex process (manufacturing, support queues, etc) you want at least one person with no assigned task, standing back and staying flexible like a free safety. Goldratt's book is excellent on this non-obvious concept:

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Jeff Bezos, Kevin Systrom, Balaji S. Srinivasan, Trung Phan

The Great CEO Within book cover
#10

The Great CEO Within

by Matt Mochary

5 people recommended

New book by Matt Mochary came out today. Preprint went viral on Hacker News a while back. @brian_armstrong and I used parts of this at Coinbase and @naval has used this at several of his companies. We found it helpful!

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, Alexis Ohanian, Ryan Hoover, Ryan Petersen

How the World Really Works book cover
#11

How the World Really Works

by Smil, Vaclav

4 people recommended

WTF happened in the early 1970s? Vaclav Smil argues that it was the oil crisis.

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Also recommended by: Bill Gates, Balaji S. Srinivasan, Timothy Sykes

The Gray Lady Winked book cover
#12

The Gray Lady Winked

by Rindsberg, Ashley

4 people recommended

As we entered the 20th century, mass media centralized, so a few liars at the "paper of record" could fool millions. Our saving grace is that we're in the age of decentralization now. Social media lets us piece together a true history. This is part of it:

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, David Sacks, Mark Manson

The Great Influenza book cover
#13

The Great Influenza

by John M. Barry

4 people recommended

Four books on the Spanish Flu. 1) The Great Influenza: 2) Pale Rider: 3) Flu: The Story of the Great Influenza Pandemic of 1918: 4) Pandemic 1918:

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, Brad Feld, Hugh Hewitt

Bowling Alone book cover
#14

Bowling Alone

by Putnam, Robert D.

3 people recommended

I know it sounds kind of corny to talk about a "serious relationship" with a community. But Putnam and others have documented how important this concept is to people's well being. And how a sense of belonging has been vanishing.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, Brianne Kimmel

Mao book cover
#15

Mao

by Jon Halliday; Jung Chang

3 people recommended

“The authors present evidence that refutes almost every aspect of the Chinese Communist Party’s account, from the claim that the Party fought the Japanese to Mao’s role in the Long March.”

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Richard Branson, Balaji S. Srinivasan

Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital book cover
#16

Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital

by Carlota Perez

3 people recommended

In this pod, I reference Carlota Perez. She documents a common pattern across multiple tech revolutions, going back to the age of steam, steel, & oil. A financial crash happens midway, followed by adoption. This may just be how humans install new tech.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Marc Andreessen, Balaji S. Srinivasan

Imagined Communities book cover
#17

Imagined Communities

by Anderson, Benedict

3 people recommended

@aeyakovenko 🙂I like cartoons too, but here are some real-life references: 1) Der Judenstaat: 2) Imagined Communities: 3) Invisible Countries: 4) Communistic Societies of the United States:

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, Brad Delong

Exit, Voice, and Loyalty book cover
#18

Exit, Voice, and Loyalty

by Hirschman, Albert O.

3 people recommended

Exit isn’t just escape, it’s freedom. Voice isn’t just bureaucracy, it’s reform. Loyalty isn’t just jingoism, it’s faithfulness. It’s trivial to say it, but each has their place. Hirschman’s triad identifies different tools to try at different times.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, Brad Delong

2034 book cover
#19

2034

by Ackerman, Elliot

3 people recommended

Last year, the former NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe coauthored a fictional book. It was about a China/US skirmish that escalated quickly, culminating in cities getting nuked in tit-for-tat fashion. He's said it was meant as a warning.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, Tom Keene

San Fransicko book cover
#20

San Fransicko

by Shellenberger, Michael

3 people recommended

You laugh, but the SF model is being exported all over the US, from Seattle to LA. It's legalized graft, on an enormous scale, always in the name of the people, at the expense of the people. Read @ShellenbergerMD's book about this catastrophe of a city.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, David Sacks

How the Internet Happened book cover
#21

How the Internet Happened

by McCullough, Brian

3 people recommended

Even more recent history is forgotten. Tech wasn't culturally central in 2008! It was only after the iPhone and the financial crisis that the true rise of the internet happened. McCullough's book is good on the lead up to this.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, Chris Dixon

The Nature of Mathematical Modeling book cover
#22

The Nature of Mathematical Modeling

by Gershenfeld, Neil

3 people recommended

@DylanRaithel This book is almost 25 years old (sheesh!) and there are now more modern methods for some of the topics discussed, but in terms of just packing a punch per page I really enjoyed this back in the day.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Patrick Collison, Balaji S. Srinivasan

The Journalist and the Murderer book cover
#23

The Journalist and the Murderer

by Janet Malcolm

3 people recommended

@davidnevue @bennjordan This scam is just an unusually explicit version of their usual practices. Read the Journalist and the Murderer, by Janet Malcolm of the New Yorker. Rated one of the top 100 nonfiction books of the 20th century by the Modern Library.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Patrick Collison, Balaji S. Srinivasan

The Anti-Christ book cover
#24

The Anti-Christ

by Nietzsche, Friedrich

3 people recommended

Did Christianity take down the Roman Empire? Two canonical sources on this are Gibbon [1] and Nietzsche [2] (“Christianity…undid the tremendous deed of the Romans”). See also Nixey [3]. [1]: [2]: [3]:

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, Jordan Peterson

The Age of Spiritual Machines book cover
#25

The Age of Spiritual Machines

by Ray Kurzweil

3 people recommended

Bet on technological progress.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, Steve Jurvetson

Hate Inc. book cover
#26

Hate Inc.

by Taibbi, Matt

3 people recommended

See also @arianapekary on cable news [tweet below], @mtaibbi’s book Hate Inc [1], @bungarsargon’s recent book Bad News [2], and how hate drives clicks [3]. [1]: [2]: [3]:

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, David Heinemeier Hansson

The Princeton Companion to Mathematics book cover
#27

The Princeton Companion to Mathematics

by Timothy Gowers

3 people recommended

If you only had one book.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Naval Ravikant, Balaji S. Srinivasan

Private Truths, Public Lies book cover
#28

Private Truths, Public Lies

by Timur Kuran

3 people recommended

Actions are in general more costly than words, but not always. In communist countries, there were plenty of things you couldn't say without punishment, but that you could act on, kind of. Public lies, private truths.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Marc Andreessen, Balaji S. Srinivasan

History Has Begun book cover
#29

History Has Begun

by Macaes, Bruno

3 people recommended

The virtualization of reality is a thesis that @MacaesBruno has explored at length. But the degree to which every behavior these days (politician, media, social media) is optimized for consumption on a screen is perhaps still underestimated.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Marc Andreessen, Balaji S. Srinivasan

Working in Public book cover
#30

Working in Public

by Eghbal, Nadia

3 people recommended

This is now out on Kindle for $10. Nadia is very smart and it’s worth reading anything she writes on open source.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, Brianne Kimmel

Flu book cover
#31

Flu

by Gina Kolata

3 people recommended

Four books on the Spanish Flu. 1) The Great Influenza: 2) Pale Rider: 3) Flu: The Story of the Great Influenza Pandemic of 1918: 4) Pandemic 1918:

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, Jonathan Eisen

Pandemic 1918 book cover
#32

Pandemic 1918

by Catharine Arnold

3 people recommended

Four books on the Spanish Flu. 1) The Great Influenza: 2) Pale Rider: 3) Flu: The Story of the Great Influenza Pandemic of 1918: 4) Pandemic 1918:

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, Jonathan Eisen

The Knowledge book cover
#33

The Knowledge

by Lewis Dartnell

3 people recommended

@rajatsuri I agree with you generally. I do think however that autarky-as-backup-plan may come into vogue. Not the same standard of living as free trade, but not zero either in a supply chain disruption situation. It’s not easy but may be easier than people think.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, Ryan Shea

Netflixed book cover
#34

Netflixed

by Gina Keating

3 people recommended

What actually happened: Blockbuster tried to buy Hollywood Video, but the FTC called this off on antitrust (!) grounds. By 2010 Blockbuster was bankrupt and Netflix was soaring. In retrospect, state action was completely rearward looking and unnecessary.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Ankur Warikoo, Balaji S. Srinivasan

The Little Bitcoin Book book cover
#35

The Little Bitcoin Book

by Timi Ajiboye , Luis Buenaventura, Alex Gladstein, Lily Liu, Alexander Lloyd, Alejandro Machado, Jimmy Song Alena Vranova

3 people recommended

Hackathons are a good start. Maybe there’s more we can do in terms of harnessing all that brainpower in one place? As an example, the Little Bitcoin Book was written in a few days by N people, one chapter each, and then published on Amazon. @calilyliu @jimmysong What else?

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, Anthony Pompliano

End The Fed book cover
#36

End The Fed

by Ron Paul

3 people recommended

Ron Paul was to Bitcoin what Andrew Yang is to startup societies. Mainstreams ideas, prepares the ideological battlefield.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan, Rand Paul

The Forgotten Man book cover
#37

The Forgotten Man

by Amity Shlaes

3 people recommended

@fmbutt I agree that those pressures were present. I find books like this useful as an alternate perspective on the era:

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Charles Koch, Balaji S. Srinivasan

Three Felonies A Day book cover
#38

Three Felonies A Day

by Harvey Silverglate

2 people recommended

As the saying goes, a federal prosecutor could indict a ham sandwich. A tangle of laws allows them to target even innocents, so a truly guilty party should be easy. And they're normally driven by headlines. But some force is holding them back.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

The Jewish State book cover
#39

The Jewish State

by Herzl, Theodor

2 people recommended

Nothing against Stephenson, he’s amazing. But the inspiration for the Network State is not really the fictional Snow Crash, it’s the very real state of Israel. That country was started by a book. And Herzl’s original is worth rereading today.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Graphs, Maps, Trees book cover
#40

Graphs, Maps, Trees

by Moretti, Franco

2 people recommended

What I like about Turchin & Dalio is that they're at least *trying* to be numerical in a field (history) that has resisted this. Soft sciences may get harder now that we have decades of data from billions of people. Moretti's lit history is also relevant.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order book cover
#41

Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order

by Dalio, Ray

2 people recommended

The main knock on Turchin & Dalio is that their quantification is imprecise. What's the y-axis here? Seems like a weighted sum of many variables. I couldn't find the raw data. Still, I think it's directionally interesting… [1] [2]

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

The Star Machine book cover
#42

The Star Machine

by Basinger, Jeanine

2 people recommended

@SarahTheHaider Beyond a small social circle, you need some distribution to be “cool” on a mass scale. That means elite support. Good book on how the studios worked to manufacture stars.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Invisible Countries book cover
#43

Invisible Countries

by Keating, Joshua

2 people recommended

@aeyakovenko 🙂I like cartoons too, but here are some real-life references: 1) Der Judenstaat: 2) Imagined Communities: 3) Invisible Countries: 4) Communistic Societies of the United States:

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Fateful Triangle book cover
#44

Fateful Triangle

by Madan, Tanvi

2 people recommended

By the way, @tanvi_madan, your book looks very interesting. Just bought it. The three-way relationship between the Western, Indian, and Chinese spheres is worth much more study.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

The Soviet Biological Weapons Program book cover
#45

The Soviet Biological Weapons Program

by Leitenberg, Milton

2 people recommended

There's a book on this that does mention Soviet biological weapons facilities in Ukraine. The US apparently funded former biowarfare scientists in Ukraine to disincentivize them from emigrating to places like Iran. Part of nonproliferation strategy.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Eyewitness 1917 book cover
#46

Eyewitness 1917

by Zygar, Mikhail

2 people recommended

The book version really does help understand what it means to "live through history", where the events of the future are not known to the characters of the present. And where things could have taken another turn. Thanks to @_lordmax_ for the reference.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Stiff book cover
#47

Stiff

by Roach, Mary

2 people recommended

"In ancient China, Confucian doctrine considered dissection [of cadavers] a defilement of the human body and forbade its practice. This posed a problem for the Father of Chinese Medicine, Huang Ti..."

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Exercises in Programming Style book cover
#48

Exercises in Programming Style

by Lopes, Cristina Videira

2 people recommended

This is a really fun book that does for programming what Queneau did for prose. It rewrites the same simple program over and over again in 40 different styles. The embedded version The imperative version The functional version The ML version And so on.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

The Craft book cover
#49

The Craft

by Dickie, John

2 people recommended

Anyone working on NFT collections should understand the history of the Freemasons. Many of their rituals could be usefully updated for the digital era. With modern technology, could feel like real magic.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Visual Complex Functions book cover
#50

Visual Complex Functions

by Wegert, Elias

2 people recommended

Fun book proposes plotting all complex functions as colored contour plots. Kind of an obvious idea, but it's carried through systematically here. See sin(z) and cos(z) as you've never seen them before...

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

The Cold Start Problem book cover
#51

The Cold Start Problem

by Chen, Andrew

2 people recommended

New book by @andrewchen. Useful for anyone trying to bootstrap a new community or network, which is virtually every founder these days.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Genghis Khan and the Quest for God book cover
#52

Genghis Khan and the Quest for God

by Weatherford, Jack

2 people recommended

"He created the world's greatest trading network and drastically lowered taxes for merchants, but he knew that if his empire was going to last, he would need something stronger and more binding than trade. He needed religion."

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

The Darkening Age book cover
#53

The Darkening Age

by Nixey, Catherine

2 people recommended

Did Christianity take down the Roman Empire? Two canonical sources on this are Gibbon [1] and Nietzsche [2] (“Christianity…undid the tremendous deed of the Romans”). See also Nixey [3]. [1]: [2]: [3]:

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Super Imperialism. The Economic Strategy of American Empire. Third Edition book cover
#54

Super Imperialism. The Economic Strategy of American Empire. Third Edition

by Hudson, Michael

2 people recommended

@gladstein referred me to this interesting book called Super Imperialism by Michael Hudson. Here’s his bit on Japan vs China:

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

The Manga Guide to Electricity book cover
#55

The Manga Guide to Electricity

by Fujitaki, Kazuhiro

2 people recommended

There is a set of Japanese comic books that explains many technical concepts at an undergraduate level, with illustrations. It’s called the “Manga Guide” series and it is surprisingly good.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Catching Fire book cover
#56

Catching Fire

by Richard W. Wrangham

2 people recommended

@isabelleboemeke @tferriss Wrangham makes the case for one form of techno-biological co-evolution. His thesis is that cooking made us human. By outsourcing some human metabolism to the fire pit, natural selection had more slack capacity to work with for brain development.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Bad News book cover
#57

Bad News

by Ungar-Sargon, Batya

2 people recommended

See also @arianapekary on cable news [tweet below], @mtaibbi’s book Hate Inc [1], @bungarsargon’s recent book Bad News [2], and how hate drives clicks [3]. [1]: [2]: [3]:

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Operation Snow book cover
#58

Operation Snow

by Koster, John

2 people recommended

McMeekin's book links up with Koster's Operation Snow [1] which goes into detail on how[2] and why the Soviets managed to get their Japanese and American rivals to fight. Just an under-theorized aspect of the whole thing. [1] [2]

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Stalin’s War book cover
#59

Stalin’s War

by McMeekin, Sean

2 people recommended

Sean McMeekin's latest tour-de-force makes a strong case that Stalin should be thought of as the main actor in WW2 — not Hitler or the US.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Tomorrow, the World book cover
#60

Tomorrow, the World

by Stephen Wertheim

2 people recommended

@JackNaneek You don’t achieve world domination by accident. Nothing inexorable about it. Read this interesting account of the foreign policy hands who (successfully!) turned the US into a global empire.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Move book cover
#61

Move

by Parag Khanna

2 people recommended

From @paragkhanna’s new book, Move.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

The Genetic Lottery book cover
#62

The Genetic Lottery

by Harden, Kathryn Paige

2 people recommended

Excellent new book by @kph3k. Recommended reading for all biomedical founders.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Factory Physics book cover
#63

Factory Physics

by Hopp, Wallace J.

2 people recommended

Hopp and Spearman's Factory Physics is also excellent on this general topic. It's much easier to push a button on an assembly line than to design an assembly line. And many digital processes can be understood in part as assembly lines.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Darkness at Dawn book cover
#64

Darkness at Dawn

by Satter, David

2 people recommended

"Anticipating a new dawn of freedom and democracy after the disintegration of the Soviet Union, Russians instead find themselves in a country desperately impoverished and controlled at every level by criminals."

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

The Truth Machine book cover
#65

The Truth Machine

by Paul Vigna

2 people recommended

I recall someone once wrote a good book on this! @paulvigna @mikejcasey

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Where Is My Flying Car? book cover
#66

Where Is My Flying Car?

by Hall, J Storrs

2 people recommended

What’s the next step for the global freedom class, for all the people who called crypto early, for those deploying adventure capital? Read this after you read the Sovereign Individual. The future we will fund after correcting the fiat deviation of 1971.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

UFO Hunters Book Two book cover
#67

UFO Hunters Book Two

by Birnes, William J.

2 people recommended

The 2nd is the Tinley Park Lights. Crucially, this wasn't just a mass sighting. Different people actually caught a UFO on camera from multiple angles. With three video clips, these guys tried triangulating & doing image processing. The results were odd.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

My Brother Ron book cover
#68

My Brother Ron

by Cramer, Clayton E.

2 people recommendedBuy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Merchants of Truth book cover
#69

Merchants of Truth

by Jill Abramson

2 people recommended

@matthewhughes Jill Abramson, former editor of the New York Times, on how business imperatives and pageviews drove the editorial process. From her book Merchants of Truth.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Pale Rider book cover
#70

Pale Rider

by Laura Spinney

2 people recommended

Four books on the Spanish Flu. 1) The Great Influenza: 2) Pale Rider: 3) Flu: The Story of the Great Influenza Pandemic of 1918: 4) Pandemic 1918:

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

From Third World to First book cover
#71

From Third World to First

by Lee Kuan Yew

2 people recommended

@ErikVoorhees @matthewstoller 🙂

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Start-up Nation book cover
#72

Start-up Nation

by Dan Senor

2 people recommended

@lorakolodny I love @dansenor's book! But I think we are going to see this trend accelerate. Just like there were Palm Pilots in 2000, but iPhones were bigger in 2010 and huge in 2020.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

The Man Who Invented Fidel book cover
#73

The Man Who Invented Fidel

by Anthony DePalma

2 people recommended

“[NYT reporter Herbert Matthews’] heroic portrayal of Castro, who was then believed dead, had a powerful effect on American perceptions of Cuba, both in and out of the government, and profoundly influenced the fall of the Batista regime.”

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

📖
#74

Frisco Kid

by Suzanne Brockmann

2 people recommended

If only Jack London’s Frisco was still au courant as a term for SF, this would be slightly more catchy Costco vs Frisco!

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

Physics from Finance: A Gentle Introduction to Gauge Theories, Fundamental Interactions and Fiber Bundles book cover
#75

Physics from Finance: A Gentle Introduction to Gauge Theories, Fundamental Interactions and Fiber Bundles

by Jakob Schwichtenberg

2 people recommended

@js_horne This author’s work is a lot of fun. Not exactly art, but novel approach with a lot of visual inspiration.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan

The Future Is Asian book cover
#76

The Future Is Asian

by Parag Khanna

2 people recommended

The American century is ending. The Asian century is beginning.

Buy on Amazon →

Also recommended by: Balaji S. Srinivasan