Explore our curated collection of business & economics book reviews and recommendations.

Dream Big and Win: Translating Passion into Purpose and Creating a Billion-Dollar Business is an instant Wall Street Journal bestseller in which entrepreneur and philanthropist Liz Elting recounts how she co-founded TransPerfect — a global translation and language solutions company that originated in an NYU dorm room — and distills those hard-won lessons into a practical framework for aspiring founders and business builders.
Mar 13, 2026
The Bogleheads' Guide to Investing is a practical, DIY personal-finance handbook built on the low-cost, passive-investing philosophy of Vanguard founder John C. Bogle. Co-authored by three community leaders — Taylor Larimore, Mel Lindauer, and Michael LeBoeuf — the second edition (published by Wiley in November 2021) updates foundational Boglehead principles with coverage of backdoor Roth IRAs, ETFs as buy-and-hold vehicles, estate taxes, gifting, and recent changes to retirement-plan law. This review is based on published sources and the book's documented contents, not hands-on application.
Feb 26, 2026
J.L. Collins' revised and expanded edition of The Simple Path to Wealth, published by Authors Equity in May 2025, is an Instant New York Times Bestseller that distills the philosophy of financial independence into a direct, accessible personal finance guide built around a deceptively simple core: spend less than you earn, invest the surplus, and avoid debt. Now updated with new data, an FAQ, a Simple Path to Wealth Punchlist, and a resources section, this edition consolidates Collins' standing as a foundational voice in the financial independence community.
Feb 24, 2026
First published in 1949 and revised across multiple editions, Benjamin Graham's The Intelligent Investor remains one of the most historically significant and widely respected books on investing ever written, outlining the principles of value investing for both defensive and enterprising investors — a philosophy that shaped generations of practitioners, most famously Warren Buffett.
Feb 28, 2026
Machiavelli's The Prince is a 16th-century political treatise — composed in 1513 and first published posthumously in 1532 — that has endured for half a millennium as one of the most controversial and consequential works in the history of political thought, offering a bracingly pragmatic guide to acquiring and holding power.
Feb 22, 2026
Thomas Piketty's Capital in the Twenty-First Century is a landmark work of economic nonfiction that draws on data from twenty countries spanning the eighteenth century to the present to argue that when the rate of return on capital outpaces economic growth, wealth concentrates among a shrinking minority — and proposes a global progressive wealth tax as the remedy. Originally published in French in 2013, translated into English by Arthur Goldhammer in 2014, and reissued in paperback by Belknap Press/Harvard University Press, the book reached number one on the New York Times Best Seller list for hardcover nonfiction and went on to sell over 2.5 million copies worldwide by the end of 2017, becoming the greatest sales success in Harvard University Press history. It is an essential, if demanding, text for anyone serious about understanding economic inequality.
Feb 26, 2026
Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity, and Poverty, first published in 2012 by economists Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson, constructs a sweeping institutional theory of why some countries accumulate wealth while others remain trapped in poverty — drawing on fifteen years of original research and historical evidence spanning the Roman Empire, the Mayan city-states, the Soviet Union, North and South Korea, medieval Venice, and Africa. The book argues, against geographic, cultural, and climatic explanations, that man-made political and economic institutions are the decisive factor in national prosperity. A New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestseller, it was named one of the best books of the year by The Washington Post, Financial Times, The Economist, BusinessWeek, Bloomberg, and The Christian Science Monitor. In 2024, Acemoglu and Robinson were awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, partly for the body of scholarship this book represents.
Feb 25, 2026
First published in 1997 and reissued by HarperBusiness, The Innovator's Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail is widely regarded as the best-known work of Harvard professor and businessman Clayton M. Christensen. It introduces and systematizes the theory of disruptive innovation, explaining how well-managed, successful companies can do everything right by conventional measures and still lose their market leadership — or fail entirely — when upstart competitors build new technologies in overlooked market niches and then rapidly improve them. Essential reading for managers, entrepreneurs, and anyone navigating competitive markets shaped by technological change.
Mar 7, 2026
Freakonomics, the debut non-fiction collaboration between University of Chicago economist Steven D. Levitt and New York Times journalist Stephen J. Dubner, published by William Morrow on April 12, 2005, applies economic theory to a deliberately provocative range of subjects — from sumo wrestling corruption and crack-cocaine earnings to the role of legalized abortion in reducing crime — and went on to sell over 4 million copies worldwide by late 2009, spawning a multi-media franchise that redefined popular economics writing.
Mar 4, 2026
Nassim Nicholas Taleb's The Black Swan is a wide-ranging essay-narrative built around one relentless idea — that rare, unpredictable, high-impact events (Black Swans) drive history far more than conventional models acknowledge, and that human beings are systematically blind to this reality. Originally published in 2007, it spent 36 weeks on the New York Times best-seller list, entered the Incerto as the second of Taleb's five-volume series, and permanently embedded the "Black Swan" concept into the vocabulary of finance, risk management, and popular thought. Its strengths — a genuinely original central argument, a sweeping cross-disciplinary scope, and a bracingly combative voice — are real. So are its weaknesses: the book's reach beyond financial markets into a general theory of history draws pointed criticism, and Taleb's rhetorical style divides readers sharply.
Feb 25, 2026
Your Money or Your Life is a landmark personal finance book by Joe Dominguez and Vicki Robin that reframes money not as an end in itself but as "life energy" — something readers trade their time and vitality for — and guides them through nine structured steps toward financial independence and a more intentional life.
Mar 2, 2026
Daring Greatly is a self-help book by Brené Brown, PhD, MSW, rooted in twelve years of research, that argues vulnerability is not weakness but the truest measure of courage — a New York Times bestseller that has sold more than two million copies and shaped how readers across personal, professional, and parenting contexts think about shame, worthiness, and authentic engagement.
Mar 1, 2026Search
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