
The Power of Habit
by Charles Duhigg
An examination of the science of habit formation and how habits operate in individuals, organisations, and societies — and how to change them.
Check Price on Amazon (paid link)American · b. 1974
Pulitzer Prize winner (2013)
Charles Duhigg is an American journalist and author who translates scientific research on habits, communication, and productivity into accessible, story-driven nonfiction.
Charles Duhigg spent years as an investigative journalist at The New York Times before turning to long-form nonfiction, and that background shows in his books. He is a rigorous reporter who knows how to build a readable narrative around scientific and social research, and he has an unusually strong instinct for the case study that illuminates a broader principle. The Power of Habit, published in 2012, became one of the decade’s most influential popular psychology books, arguing that habits — formed through a neurological cue-routine-reward loop — govern far more of human behavior than we acknowledge.
Supercommunicators, his more recent work, brings the same methodology to the question of conversation, examining what separates people who connect effectively from those who talk past each other. Duhigg identifies different types of conversations — practical, emotional, social — and argues that skilled communicators instinctively match the register their interlocutor needs. The insights are genuine, though readers familiar with the communication literature may find the underlying research less novel than the packaging suggests.
Duhigg’s critics have noted that the gap between controlled studies and real-world application is sometimes glossed over, and that his frameworks occasionally feel neater than lived experience allows. But as a popularizer, he is skilled and honest, and both books offer frameworks that readers report actually using. For nonfiction readers who want ideas supported by narrative rather than just assertion, he is a dependable choice.

by Charles Duhigg
An examination of the science of habit formation and how habits operate in individuals, organisations, and societies — and how to change them.
Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
by Charles Duhigg
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Charles Duhigg investigates the science of extraordinary communicators, discovering a framework of conversation types and the skills that allow people to genuinely connect across difference.
Check Price on Amazon (paid link)guide
Where to start with Charles Duhigg — whether to begin with The Power of Habit or Supercommunicators. A complete reading guide to the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist.
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