Bill Gates: Your Summer Reading List Should Include These 5 Books (2024)

Summer is a great time to escape: to the beach, to the mountains, or to the world of a great book. This year, I found myself drawn even more than usual to books that took me outside (and I don’t mean the great outdoors). The books on this year’s summer reading list pushed me out of my own experiences, and I learned some things that made me question my own thinking about how the world works.

Some of these books helped me better understand what it’s like to grow up outside the mainstream: as a child of mixed race in apartheid South Africa, as a young man trying to escape his impoverished life in rural Appalachia, or as the son of a peanut farmer in Plains, Georgia. I hope you’ll find that others make you think deeper about what it means to truly connect with other people and to have purpose in your life. And all of them will transport you somewhere else — whether you’re sitting on a beach towel or on your own couch.

A Full Life, by Jimmy Carter. Even though the former President has already written more than two dozen books, he somehow managed to save some great anecdotes for this quick, condensed tour of his fascinating life. I loved reading about Carter’s improbable rise to the world’s highest office. The book will help you understand how growing up in rural Georgia in a house without running water, electricity, or insulation shaped – for better and for worse – his time in the White House. Although most of the stories come from previous decades, A Full Life feels timely in an era when the public’s confidence in national political figures and institutions is low.

Read Bill Gates’ full review of A FULL LIFE here

hom*o Deus, by Yuval Noah Harari. I recommended Harari’s previous book Sapiens in last summer’s reading list, and this provocative follow-up is just as challenging, readable, and thought-provoking. hom*o Deus argues that the principles that have organized society will undergo a huge shift in the 21st century, with major consequences for life as we know it. So far, the things that have shaped society—what we measure ourselves by—have been either religious rules about how to live a good life, or more earthly goals like getting rid of sickness, hunger, and war. What would the world be like if we actually achieved those things? I don’t agree with everything Harari has to say, but he has written a smart look at what may be ahead for humanity.

Read Bill Gates’ full review of hom*o DEUS here

The Heart, by Maylis de Kerangal. While you’ll find this book in the fiction section at your local bookstore, what de Kerangal has done here in this exploration of grief is closer to poetry than anything else. At its most basic level, she tells the story of a heart transplant: a young man is killed in an accident, and his parents decide to donate his heart. But the plot is secondary to the strength of its words and characters. The book uses beautiful language to connect you deeply with people who may be in the story for only a few minutes. For example, de Kerangal goes on for pages about the girlfriend of the surgeon who does the transplant even though you never meet that character. I’m glad Melinda recommended this book to me, and I recently passed it along to a friend who, like me, sticks mostly with nonfiction.

Read Bill Gates’ full review of THE HEART here

Born a Crime, by Trevor Noah. As a longtime fan of The Daily Show, I loved reading this memoir about how its host honed his outsider approach to comedy over a lifetime of never quite fitting in. Born to a black South African mother and a white Swiss father in apartheid South Africa, he entered the world as a biracial child in a country where mixed race relationships were forbidden. Much of Noah’s story of growing up in South Africa is tragic. Yet, as anyone who watches his nightly monologues knows, his moving stories will often leave you laughing.

Read Bill Gates’ full review of BORN A CRIME here

Hillbilly Elegy, by J.D. Vance. The disadvantaged world of poor white Appalachia described in this terrific, heartbreaking book is one that I know only vicariously. Vance was raised largely by his loving but volatile grandparents, who stepped in after his father abandoned him and his mother showed little interest in parenting her son. Against all odds, he survived his chaotic, impoverished childhood only to land at Yale Law School. While the book offers insights into some of the complex cultural and family issues behind poverty, the real magic lies in the story itself and Vance’s bravery in telling it.

Read Bill Gates’ full review of HILLBILLY ELEGY here

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This article originally appeared on GatesNotes.com

Bill Gates: Your Summer Reading List Should Include These 5 Books (2024)

FAQs

Bill Gates: Your Summer Reading List Should Include These 5 Books? ›

Every book teaches me something new or helps me see things differently. I was lucky to have parents who encouraged me to read. Reading fuels a sense of curiosity about the world, which I think helped drive me forward in my career and in the work that I do now.

What are the five books Bill Gates says you should read? ›

5 must-read books from Bill Gates that are now free on Spotify
  • “Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow” By: Gabrielle Zevin. ...
  • “Klara and the Sun” By: Kazuo Ishiguro. ...
  • “Team of Rivals” By: Doris Kearns Goodwin. ...
  • “Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World” By: David Epstein. ...
  • “Why We Sleep” By: Matthew Walker.
Nov 18, 2023

What does Bill Gates say about reading? ›

Every book teaches me something new or helps me see things differently. I was lucky to have parents who encouraged me to read. Reading fuels a sense of curiosity about the world, which I think helped drive me forward in my career and in the work that I do now.

Why Bill Gates reads 50 books a year? ›

Books are the Key to Success

Microsoft co-founder and billionaire Bill Gates reads 50 books a year. He reads one book every week and ensures to absorb all the material in his mind. Speaking about his habit, Gates mentioned how books help him to learn new things and test his understanding.

What does Bill Gates read every day? ›

Bill Gates primarily reads non-fiction books dealing with society, technology, and science issues, but he also enjoys reading sci-fi.

Does Bill Gates read a book a day? ›

Bill Gates

The former Microsoft CEO has attested to reading 50 books a year, or roughly one book a week. Most of the books are non-fiction dealing with public health, disease, engineering, business, and science. Every now and then he'll breeze through a novel (and sometimes in one sitting late into the night).

How long does Bill Gates read a day? ›

Bill Gates, Barack Obama, Jack Ma, Elon Musk, Oprah Winfrey – they are all successful in their respective careers, and they have one thing in common – all of them follow the 5-hour rule. This means allotting one hour per weekday for reading and learning (e.g. online courses).

What is Elon Musk's favorite book? ›

"The Lord of the Rings" Musk has said he read a lot of fantasy and science-fiction novels as a kid, including the classic J.R.R. Tolkien trilogy.

How does Bill Gates read so much? ›

He takes notes as he goes, whether it be in the margins or on a yellow legal pad. He prefers paper books to ebooks and makes sure he blocks out at least an hour when he does sit down with a book. Gates says that you need at least an hour to get in a groove.

What's the IQ of Bill Gates? ›

What is Bill Gates IQ? Bill Gates's IQ is 157 ± 6, according to our mathematical analysis based on SAT score averages. With a correlation coefficient of 0.8 between SAT scores and IQ, this approach provides a trustworthy approximation. What is Einstein IQ?

Does Bill Gates remember everything he reads? ›

Bill Gates reads all the time — about 50 books a year — and is an advocate for its many benefits. So how does the billionaire book lover remember what he reads? The trick, he says, is context. “If you read enough, there's a similarity between things that make it easy, because this thing is like this other thing.

Does Elon Musk read a lot? ›

Elon Musk regularly reads science and motivational books to improve his thinking. Some of his most beloved titles include The Big Picture and Inversions by Iain M. Banks.

Was Bill Gates a billionaire at 30? ›

Mr Gates was first included on the list in 1986 as Microsoft went public. At the time, Mr Gates was worth $315m and he owned 45 per cent of Microsoft's shares. At the age of 31, he became the youngest billionaire in the world when Microsoft's rising share price rocketed his wealth to $1.25bn.

What did Bill Gates buy for $50000? ›

Bill Gates paid $50,000 to a company called Seattle Computer Products, for the exclusive rights to QDOS later known as 86-DOS, a CP/M clone.

What books does Warren Buffet recommend? ›

Popular Warren Buffett Recommended Books Books
  • 40 Chances: Finding Hope in a Hungry World Howard G. Buffett.
  • A Few Lessons for Investors and Managers From Warren Buffett Peter Bevelin.
  • Investing Between the Lines: How to Make Smarter Decisions By Decoding CEO Communications L.J. Rittenhouse.

Which Famous Five book should I read first? ›

You can start anywhere so why not try the first book Five On a Treasure Island where the children find a shipwreck off Kirrin Island or the ever popular Five Go to Smuggler's Top where the children discover underground tunnels and secret signalling out to sea.

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