We posted quite a bit over on twitter this week. We tried pulling together what we saw people saying about business books, recommendations for business books and some ideas around the future of publishing at large. Here is the what we found:
# Authors 4 #followfriday @gladwell @stevenbJohnson @danielpink @alanmwebber @jack_welch @suzywelch @johncmaxwell @tonyrobbins @Rich_Dad about 4 hours ago from web
# RT @TalentAcquisit The Art of War by Sun Tzu is 1 of the best business strategy books. For business strategy check out http://www.sonshi.com 9:18 PM Apr 29th from web
# RT @charlesseybold Books: finished Predictably Irrational (****), starting Art of Profitability (v good so far), biz novel like The Goal 1:52 PM Apr 29th from web
# @kennypratt yes, here is the mystery box url: http://800ceoread.com/mysterybox 10:04 PM Apr 28th from web
# RT @tomewing:The Cluetrain Manifesto is the Velvet Underground of biz books: everyone who read it formed a dodgy start-up. (via @ricklevine) 3:57 PM Apr 28th from web
# RT @mdrips Escape from Cubicle Nation is ok; Think Big Manifesto totally sucks; Me 2.0 is mediocre. Few biz books are worthwhile. 3:56 PM Apr 28th from web
# RT @robbiebax @BtoBGuru great non-social media biz books 2008 “forces for Good” “back of the napkin” “predictably irrational“–loved em all! 3:02 PM Apr 28th from web
# RT @whgtoga Cool book ! One of the top 100 biz books of all time. (CEO READ) The Story Factor- Annette Simmons. 2:57 PM Apr 28th from web
# Great to see @jack_welch joining Twitternation today.2:38 PM Apr 28th from web
# oops RT @sarahcannon Finished reading Tribes over wkend, halfway thru The Tipping Point this wk. Both read too easily to be biz books…2:35 PM Apr 28th from web
# @sarahcannon Finished reading Tribes over wkend, halfway thru The Tipping Point this wk. Both read too easily to be biz books…2:35 PM Apr 28th from web
# Looking for what business books to read? Check out our 377 reviews – http://800ceoread.com/blog/… 3:52 PM Apr 27th from web
# RT @Techmeme Amazon Acquires Stanza, an E-book Application for the iPhone (Brad Stone/Bits) http://bit.ly/JkHFz (via @debbiestier)3:42 PM Apr 27th from web
# RT @sharif28 Just kick-started my daily reading regimen by ordering 3 new books: Tribes, Business Stripped Bare and the Think Big Manifesto.3:33 PM Apr 27th from web
# RT @LauraJDaley My two favorite biz books are Primal Leadership & A Whole New Mind. 12:00 PM Apr 26th from web
# You can follow Nancy at @nancyduarte.12:00 PM Apr 26th from web
# Nancy Duarte on passion and purpose – http://bit.ly/JFNAX The Element, Outliers, and Talent Is Overrated all intersect here. 11:58 AM Apr 26th from web
# RT @chinasolved Pirated biz-books now @ my sbwy sta. Saw ‘Black Swan’ ‘Essential Drucker” & ‘Outliers’ for 10 rbm each. 10:51 AM Apr 26th from web
# RT @fredwilson: Kenny Lerer is co-founder of HuffPo & here’s his thoughts on newspapers http://bit.ly/v8Z0y
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Steve Farber, one of the best minds on leadership out there, and author of
How to Be Useful is an antidote to the cynicism and naivete that Hustad believes have seeped into the veins of younger generations of workers, who have developed an attitude of fundamental resistance to all things “corporate” and “ambitious.” She explains that the book “aims to be a corrective to this strange, counterproductive loop of naivete and cynicism. It’s a crash course in successful literature designed to help the tenderhearted and creative people I like so much to avoid these existential potholes.” Hustad introdues some of the most successful pieces of business success literature–from Emily Post’s 1922 best-seller Etiquette: In Society, In Business, In Politics, and at Home, to Stephen Covey’s The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, to Napoleon Hill’s classic works–and “turned them upside down and shaken out every last bit of wisdom that might be useful to those low on the office totem pole today.” She explains that “this is a short tour of a section of literary history–and what genre of letters is more screamingly American than this one?–but it’s also a critical guide to one’s first few years of salaried labor. (
The How of Happiness at first looks like another installment in the recent influx of happiness books, but it offers more than stellar scientific research and psychological analysis. Sonja Lyubomirsky focuses on the “how”:
CHAPTER 10
There’s a new excerpt up on our 
