Outliers: The Story of Success by Malcolm Gladwell

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(Hardcover)

Reader Rating: (165 ratings)

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  • Publisher: Little, Brown & Company
  • Pub. Date: November 2008
  • ISBN-13: 9780316017923
  • Sales Rank: 81
  • 320pp
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The Barnes & Noble Review

It's not uncommon, reading a newspaper or watching television, to learn that science has just discovered something everyone already knows. Often it sounds like awful stand-up: "Men, women different, finds ten-month toilet-seat study" or "Drunk researchers: 'Beer goggles' real." If Malcolm Gladwell's Outliers: The Story of Success were pared down to a headline, it would be "Gladwell: Life Unfair."

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Synopsis

In this stunning new audiobook, Malcolm Gladwell takes us on an intellectual journey through the world of "outliers"--the best and the brightest, the most famous and the most successful. He asks the question: what makes high-achievers different? His answer is that we pay too much attention to what successful people are like, and too little attention to where they are from: that is, their culture, their family, their generation, and the idiosyncratic experiences of their upbringing. Along the way he explains the secrets of software billionaires, what it takes to be a great soccer player, why Asians are good at math, and what made the Beatles the greatest rock band.
Brilliant and entertaining, OUTLIERS is a landmark work that will simultaneously delight and illuminate.

The New York Times - David Leonhardt

has much in common with Gladwell's earlier work. It is a pleasure to read and leaves you mulling over its inventive theories for days afterward.

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Biography

Malcolm Gladwell is a staff writer for The New Yorker and a bestselling author of narrative nonfiction that examines the intersection of science and culture. In 2005, Time Magazine named him one of the 100 Most Influential People.

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Customer Reviews

Painfully Boring!!!by Anonymous

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July 02, 2009: My opinion is that the author came up with an idea of what made some people successful and then "backed into" the supporting evidence. He is extremely redundant and downright boring at times. His opinions could have been summed up in a 10 page book.

Very Interestingby pablophil

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June 29, 2009: Gladwell's thesis of hard work, and LUCKY conditions creating the basis of success (Gates, Jobs, NY Lawyers, etc.) is undermined by his final chapter advocating KIPP schools for poor kids. Schools that drill and kill are the opposite of what creates affluent children's success. And advocating hard work without the other ancilliary opportunities available to affluent kids is much more likely to create "hard working drones" than it is to create outliers, the way Gladwell discusses them in the beginning of the book.

The book started well, and then mysteriously undercut itself at the end. Weird.


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