Where to Start with Joe Navarro: A Reading Guide
Where to start with Joe Navarro — how to approach What Every Body Is Saying, his guide to reading nonverbal communication based on 25 years as an FBI counterintelligence agent, grounding body language in the limbic system's comfort and discomfort responses. A complete reading guide.
By Lena Fischer
Joe Navarro (born 1953 in Cuba) is a Cuban-American former FBI special agent, behavioural analyst, and author who emigrated to the United States as a child and joined the FBI in 1979. He spent 25 years as an agent and supervisor specialising in counterintelligence and behavioural assessment — reading nonverbal communication in interrogation, surveillance, and threat assessment contexts — before retiring and writing What Every Body Is Saying (2008). The book was a major bestseller and has been followed by several further works applying the same framework to specific contexts and problems.
Where to Start: What Every Body Is Saying (2008)
Navarro spent twenty-five years reading body language for the FBI — in interviews, interrogations, and counter-intelligence operations — before writing What Every Body Is Saying, a practical manual grounded in field experience rather than academic theory. What Every Body Is Saying distinguishes itself from the body language genre it inhabits by its explanatory framework: rather than cataloguing gestures and their supposed meanings in the manner of pop psychology, Navarro grounds everything in the limbic system — the brain’s ancient, emotionally reactive system that generates nonverbal behaviour as an involuntary response to comfort or discomfort.
The limbic system framework is the book’s central contribution. The limbic brain responds to perceived threats and opportunities before the cortex (conscious thinking) has processed what is happening; the nonverbal responses it generates — the freeze, flight, or fight reactions, the comfort-seeking and pacifying behaviours — are therefore more reliable indicators of genuine emotional state than consciously controlled speech or facial expressions. This is why body language works at all: we simply cannot monitor and control all of the signals our bodies generate, particularly under conditions of stress or strong emotion.
The feet-first approach is Navarro’s most practically distinctive contribution and the one that most surprises general readers. He argues that the feet and legs are the most honest and least consciously monitored part of the body: people pay attention to their facial expressions, and they may manage their hand gestures, but few people think about what their feet are doing. Yet feet consistently point toward what we want to approach and away from what we want to avoid. The person whose feet are pointing toward the door is ready to leave regardless of what their face is doing; the person whose feet point toward another person in a group conversation is more engaged with that person than their gaze suggests.
The deception detection section is where the book is most useful as a corrective to popular misconceptions. Navarro is explicit: there is no single nonverbal tell that reliably indicates deception. Liars do not consistently touch their nose or break eye contact; they may do the opposite. What can be identified is stress and discomfort — the physiological signatures of a brain working harder than normal to manage what it is communicating — and discomfort in context is meaningful, though it is always the cluster of signals, not the individual cue, that matters.
Reading Joe Navarro
What Every Body Is Saying is Navarro’s essential book. Dangerous Personalities (2014) is the natural follow-on for readers who want to apply the same framework to identifying high-risk character types.
For the full Joe Navarro bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Joe Navarro author page on Editors Reads.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Where should I start with Joe Navarro?
What Every Body Is Saying: An Ex-FBI Agent's Guide to Speed-Reading People (2008) is Navarro's essential book — the most credible and practically detailed treatment of nonverbal communication available to general readers. Navarro spent 25 years as an FBI special agent and supervisor specialising in counterintelligence and behavioural assessment, and the book represents the accumulated expertise of thousands of hours reading suspects and subjects in high-stakes interrogations. His framework is grounded in the limbic system rather than folk wisdom: nonverbal behaviours are reliable because they are driven by the brain's ancient comfort and discomfort responses, which operate before conscious control.
What is What Every Body Is Saying about?
The book is organised around the body from feet to face — starting with the most reliable and least consciously controlled signals and working toward the most easily manipulated. Navarro argues that the feet and legs are the most honest part of the body: people monitor their facial expressions and even their torso orientation, but few people think about what their feet are doing, and feet consistently point toward what we want (approach) or away from what we do not (avoidance). The primary analytical framework is comfort versus discomfort: the limbic system responds to perceived threats and opportunities with consistent, observable signals, and learning to read those signals is the book's practical contribution. The deception detection sections are more nuanced than popular culture suggests — Navarro is careful to avoid claiming that single signals indicate lying.
How reliable is the body language knowledge in this book?
More reliable than most body language books, for specific reasons. Navarro's framework is grounded in neuroscience (limbic system responses) rather than folk wisdom, his experience comes from high-stakes professional application rather than casual observation, and he is scrupulous about not overstating the reliability of individual signals. He consistently emphasises baseline behaviour (what is normal for this specific person in this context) over universal rules, acknowledges cultural variation, and warns against the pop psychology error of treating single cues as definitive. The deception detection sections in particular are careful to explain that there is no single tell — clusters of signals in context are what matter.
What should I read after What Every Body Is Saying?
After What Every Body Is Saying, Navarro's Dangerous Personalities (2014) applies the same nonverbal and behavioural framework specifically to identifying dangerous character types — narcissists, predators, unstable personalities. Paul Ekman's Emotions Revealed covers facial expressions with the depth that Navarro's chapter on the face approaches but does not fully develop. Malcolm Gladwell's Talking to Strangers covers the misreading of strangers at scale — a useful counterpoint to Navarro's more optimistic assessment of what careful observation can achieve. For the underlying neuroscience, Daniel Goleman's Emotional Intelligence covers the affective processes that Navarro's limbic system framework draws on.
