Fiction or Nonfiction?

What books have changed your life? Seriously, pause for a few minutes and think about the question. I'll share my list in a moment, but first come up with yours.

Do you have your list yet? Writing it down may help. Try to write down 10 books that you think have most impacted your life.

Take all the time you need before moving on.

Are you done yet? Don't cheat. Write it down then continue reading.

Okay, at this point I'm assuming you've followed instructions and wrote down your list of 10 books.

Now you have one more step. To the right of each book title, write "fiction" or "nonfiction". You can use the abbreviations "F" and "NF" if you wish.

You should now have a list that looks something like mine:

Now, count the NF's. How many do you have? I have 7. So 7 out of the 10 books that I think have most impacted my life are non-fiction. Therefore, if I have to guess whether the next book I read that greatly impacts my life will be fiction or nonfiction, my guess is it will be nonfiction.

What's your list? Do you think the next book that will greatly impact your life will be fiction or non-fiction?

Share your results here.

Notes:

  1. I read about equal amounts fiction and nonfiction. So on average, I get greater return from nonfiction reading.
  2. Reading fiction is a more enjoyable form of entertainment.
  3. This essay is in response to a comment I read a while back on HackerNews that got me thinking about the subject.


Posted 12/02/2009

Was this essay useful to you? Yes | No
Powered by
brecksblog Posts: What can a Programmer learn from Rock Climbing? Look for a Line Backpack the World with Zero Planning The Economy Explained Ruby You Can't Predict the Future Critical Thinking Kids are Neat How is Intelligence Distributed? Recommendations Are Far From Good Nature Verse Nurture Circle of Competence What Percentage of the Brain Does What The Recency Effect The Ovarian Lottery & Other Side Projects Happiness is in Mediocristan What I Want Orbits The Do You Know Game and Why We Need Celebrities Design Matters, a lot Competition and Specialization Simple, but not easy Flip Flopping The Churn Rate of Data Culture and Complexity The Invention of Free Will Why is it best to do one thing really, really well? The Hidden Benefits of Automation Metrics for Programmers HackerNews Data: Visits as a Function of Karma Don't talk about what you will do, talk about what you have done Why it's worth it to buy the book The Least You Can Do Four Tips to Improve Communication Network Effects If you can explain something logically, you can explain it simply With Computers: Don't Repeat Yourself. With People: DO Repeat Yourself When forced to wait, wait! How to Buy Low, Sell High Flee the Bubble Checklist for New Products Diversification in Startups Thoughts on Setting Goals Problems Worth Solving Make Something 40% of Your Customers Must Have SEO Made Easy: LUMPS Don't Flip the Bozo Bit (un)features Get Stuff Done By Setting Arbitrary Constraints Why You Shouldn't Save Blogging for Old Age 6 Specific Ways to Find Programming Mentors Orders of Magnitude The Many Worlds Law Twelve Tips to Master Programming Faster What's Linear Algebra? Fiction or Nonfiction? Experience is What You Get I'm Back Check out my roommates' companies:
Jellyfish Art makes great Jellyfish tanks
30 Words makes great language guides