Nexus: A Brief History of Information Networks from the Stone Age to AI by Yuval Noah Harari
But power isn’t wisdom, and after 100,000 years of discoveries, inventions, and conquests humanity has pushed itself into an existential crisis.
The Source: The Secrets of the Universe, the Science of the Brain by Tara Swart
We live a life dominated by stress and are too busy to really take notice of who we are, where we are going and what we want from life. We are now at a moment where technology will disrupt our minds and bodies more than we can begin to imagine.
The Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon
No woman should be made to fear that she was not enough.
Entangled Life: How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds & Shape Our Futures by Merlin Sheldrake
We are ecosystems, composed of—and decomposed by—an ecology of microbes, the significance of which is only now coming to light.
All in Her Head: The Truth and Lies Early Medicine Taught Us About Women's Bodies and Why It Matters Today by Elizabeth Comen M.D.
When fear stops us from asking questions, it stops us from solving treatable problems.
Unmasking Autism: Discovering the New Faces of Neurodiversity by Devon Price
Diagnosis is a gatekeeping process, and it slams its heavy bars in the face of anyone who is too poor, too busy, too Black, too feminine, too queer, and too gender nonconforming, among others.
How to Be F*cking Happy by Dan Meredith
I'm a huge believer that, as long as you’re still alive and your heart beats in your chest, you can change, you can improve, you can influence, you can motivate, you can build, and you can do better.
Nightbitch by Rachel Yoder
How many generations of women had delayed their greatness only to have time extinguish it completely? How many women had run out of time while the men didn’t know what to do with theirs? And what a mean trick to call such things holy or selfless. How evil to praise women for giving up each and every dream.
Right Thing, Right Now: Good Values. Good Character. Good Deeds by Ryan Holiday
“The clearest evidence that justice is the most important of all the virtues comes from what happens when you remove it. It’s remarkably stark: The presence of injustice instantly renders any act of virtue—courage, discipline, wisdom—any skill, any achievement, worthless…or worse.”
Bloodmarked by Tracy Deonn
The unsaid thing about funerals is that directly after the communal mourning for someone you love, after everyone is gone and the connected grief dispersed, comes a solitude beyond imagining. A great, gaping nothing where a whole person and life and future used to be. The other side of a funeral is abyss.
Legendborn by Tracy Deonn
Because broken hearts strip vocabularies down to their raw bones…
Scorched by Cassie Swindon
When Kyra makes all the males disappear, she must choose her sister who hates her or the man who loves her.
The Vanishing Type by Ellery Adams
No one keeps every book they read, which means the ones we do keep are important. A person’s library is like a fingerprint.
Midnight at the Blackbird Cafe by Heather Webber
“Grief can change a person to the point where they become someone they don’t know, or even like very much. I don’t want that to happen to you.”
The Code Breaker: Jennifer Doudna, Gene Editing, and the Future of the Human Race by Walter Isaacson
The great promise of gene editing is that it will transform medicine. The peril is that it will widen the healthcare divide between rich and poor.
High Conflict: Why We Get Trapped and How We Get Out by Amanda Ripley
When conflict escalates past a certain point, the conflict itself takes charge. The original facts and forces that led to the dispute fade into the background. The us-versus-them dynamic takes over. Actual differences of opinion on health care policy or immigration stop mattering, and the conflict becomes its own reality. High conflict is the invisible hand of our time.
The Lost Story by Meg Shaffer
And that is why the world has Holy Grails - not because the world needs Holy Grails, but because the world needs heroes.
How to Know a Person: The Art of Seeing Others Deeply and Being Deeply Seen by David Brooks
There is one skill that lies at the heart of any healthy person, family, school, community organization, or society: the ability to see someone else deeply and make them feel seen—to accurately know another person, to let them feel valued, heard, and understood.
The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store by James McBride
Who cared that life was lonely, that jobs were thankless drudgery, that the romance of the proud American state was myth, that the rules of life were laid carefully in neat books and laws written by stern Europeans who stalked the town and state like the grim reaper, with their righteous churches spouting that Jews murdered their precious Jesus Christ?
The Danish Secret to Happy Kids by Helen Russell
We bring up kids to make their own choices. We don’t teach them to place all their trust in external authority - political, religious, or philosophical.