Editors Reads

Best Psychology Books

76 expert-reviewed books — page 2 of 4

Superforecasting book cover
Editor's Pick

Superforecasting

by Philip E. Tetlock & Dan Gardner

4.4

Philip Tetlock's twenty-year research programme found that a small group of ordinary people — 'superforecasters' — consistently outperform intelligence analysts with access to classified information. This book explains what they do differently.

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Thinking in Bets book cover
Editor's Pick

Thinking in Bets

by Annie Duke

4.3

Former World Series of Poker champion Annie Duke argues that all decisions are bets — commitments made under uncertainty — and that the key skill in life and business is separating the quality of a decision from the quality of its outcome.

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Outliers book cover
Bestseller

Outliers

by Malcolm Gladwell

4.5

Malcolm Gladwell challenges the myth of the self-made success story, arguing that high achievers are the product of hidden advantages, extraordinary opportunities, and cultural legacies — not just individual talent and hard work.

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Mastery book cover
Bestseller

Mastery

by Robert Greene

4.4

Robert Greene examines the lives of history's greatest masters — Leonardo da Vinci, Charles Darwin, Mozart, Bobby Fischer — to identify the common path toward genuine mastery of any field.

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The 5 Love Languages book cover
Bestseller

The 5 Love Languages

by Gary Chapman

4.4

Marriage counselor Gary Chapman identifies five distinct ways people express and receive love — words of affirmation, quality time, receiving gifts, acts of service, and physical touch — and argues that mismatches cause most relationship conflict.

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The Laws of Human Nature book cover
Bestseller

The Laws of Human Nature

by Robert Greene

4.4

Robert Greene analyzes eighteen fundamental aspects of human psychology — from narcissism and envy to grandiosity and conformism — and shows how understanding them enables better navigation of people and situations.

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Blink book cover
Bestseller

Blink

by Malcolm Gladwell

4.3

An exploration of the power of intuitive snap judgments — when they are reliable, when they fail, and how thin-slicing works in experts and everyday people.

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Daring Greatly book cover
Bestseller

Daring Greatly

by Brené Brown

4.3

Research professor Brené Brown argues that vulnerability — the willingness to be seen in all our uncertainty and imperfection — is not weakness but the foundation of courage, connection, and creativity.

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Drive book cover
Bestseller

Drive

by Daniel H. Pink

4.3

Daniel Pink argues that the science of human motivation has been ignored by business, which relies on carrot-and-stick incentives that actually undermine performance for complex work.

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Range book cover
Bestseller

Range

by David Epstein

4.3

David Epstein argues that in a complex world, generalists who develop broad knowledge and late specialization often outperform narrow specialists — challenging the prevailing gospel of early specialization.

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The Anxious Generation book cover
Bestseller

The Anxious Generation

by Jonathan Haidt

4.3

Social psychologist Jonathan Haidt documents the sudden rise in adolescent mental illness since 2012 and argues that smartphone-based childhood — specifically social media — is the primary driver.

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The Tipping Point book cover
Bestseller

The Tipping Point

by Malcolm Gladwell

4.3

An investigation into how ideas, trends, and social behaviours spread like epidemics — reaching a tipping point where a small change triggers a massive, cascading effect.

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