What and How I read in 2022: Top Book Recommendations
Christopher M. Schroeder
Internet/Media CEO; Venture Investor; Writer on Startups, Emerging Markets and the Middle East
That half of the books I read in 2022 came from people I admire is a reminder that there is no better gift to share than one’s insight, joy in learning something new and wonder in being wrong. I thank these wonderful contributors at the end of this post.
This year as every year, I tend to focus on similar categories: American History and Experience; Antiquity; Asia; The Brain, Faith, and Spirituality; China; Europe; Global Perspective; Literature and Art; The Middle East; South Asia; Technology and Science. Perhaps the greatest compliment I receive each year is someone writes to me saying I mis-categorized some book. The best feedback I receive is recommendations for next year.??
I read for pleasure, but more so to be pushed both on the issues of our times and their context and how and why we think and act as we do. This year was better overall for me than I deserved, but also one of great loss and reflection. I dug particularly into mourning and meaning in life explicitly but believe how I read everything had an added sense of humility and wonder in how we have gotten to where we are today.
We are not the first people to navigate great uncertainty, to feel our leadership is lacking, to succumb to FOMO, to wonder what it all means. The books are wonderful reminders that we are not alone and encourage us to appreciate what we do have and the opportunities that lie ahead. Each book is a life, really, and I was able to live many this year.
It was very hard to pick favorites, but I will share be category here – please read on and scan all the books beyond as they were excellent. I hope something captures your imagination and inspires new context and enthusiasm for the coming year!???????
American History and Experience:
The great historian Gordon Wood’s Power and Liberty may be his best book and is short primer on the history of the making of our Constitution. Elliot Ackerman’s The Fifth Act is a stunning personal reflection on War and the messy end of our recent Wars – a true gut punch. Professor Skip Gates at Harvard unearthed Hannah Craft’s 1850’s novel The Bondwoman’s Narrative, perhaps the first fiction written by slave herself. My friend Richard Reeves?????‘ Of Boys and Men is a powerful, data-filled analysis on struggling men and the raising of boys with enormous and often undiscussed ramifications on society. I wrote a review of Richard’s book here also.
Antiquity:
I delved much into primary sources this year, including Herodotus, Gilgamesh, and the epistles and odes of Horace - all magnificent. ?On this 100th anniversary of the discovery of King Tutankhamen’s tomb, I salute the archeologist Bob Brier’s Tutankhamun: Tomb that Changed the World, which is a superb overview of this little understood life, and the archeology from Howard Carter to today.
Asia:
I read a great deal on China, below, and put this wonderful memoir under Asia. ?Hiroo Onoda’s No Surrender is his story as the last hold out in the Philippines from World War II who refused to surrender until 1974.
The Brain Faith and Spirituality:
Carl Scovel is something of a legend in Boston, long serving as the pastor of King's Chapel. He, as a boy, was a prisoner in a Japanese internment camp (the same, interestingly, that held the Scottish missionary Eric Liddell – later made famous in Chariots of Fire.) His Never Far from Home is a collection of reflections on life, loss and hope that were brief weekly radio broadcasts he did for many years. I was thrilled to read them each night after my mother’s passing.
China:
This was a superb year of books on China, and it is hard to choose. For the current state of play and thoughtful assessment of tensions in the US/China relations, the former Prime Minister of Australia Kevin Rudd wrote The Avoidable War. (I wrong a review here also on Rudd’s book and Karim and Mohammad Alwady’s great China Phobia). I finally got around to Henry Kissinger’s clear-eyed, magisterial history through his own experiences to today, On China.?Let me add this beautiful first novel by Belinda Hujiuan Tang. A Map for the Missing. It poignantly captures the experience of coming of age in China from ‘70s to the ‘90s. Similarly powerful is Karen Cheung’s The Impossible City - A Hong Kong Memoir, a deeply personal look at growing up in this great city through the recent rebellion.
Europe:
One of the best books I have read on Stalinism, authoritarianism and how we submit to bad regimes is Czeslaw Milosz’s classic The Captive Mind. I thought I had a decent handle on the rise of Europe after World War II, but thanks to Tony Judt’s extraordinary Postwar I realized I knew next to nothing. Catherine Belton’s Putin’s People is for me the definitive history of the rise of Putin and the broader corruption of Russia. And just for fun if you love Rome this was wonderful, Corrado Augias, The Secrets of Rome - a tour de force collection of essays, historic and cultural, on Rome. Augias writes in the tradition of the great travel writer, HV Morton.
Global Perspective:
This astounding overview of the rise and processes of dictators holds up extremely well from its writing in 1956, Carl J. Friedrich and Zbigniew Brzezinski’s Totalitarian Dictatorship and Autocracy. I thought Chris Miller’s Chip War was a China book but it is rather a superb history of the rise of the importance of silicon chips and the war(s) plural from the Soviet Union to Japan to China today. It may be one of the most important books written this year. This technology is at the essence of everything. Most hopeful of all my reading this year was my friend Adria Dunn's The Vine: Messages of Hope From Around the World. Seeing the global pandemic as a moment to restart, she pulled together some of the most inspiring figures reflecting on their work and a better future. They are letters, really, from figures including the Dalai Lama, Jane Goodall, Andrew Young, Djimon Hounsou and many more. Each page is an inspiration of hope amidst a media that seems to want to convince us otherwise.
Literature and Art:
In his time, Kenneth Clark was viewed as one of the greatest art historians, running at a very young age some of the most important museums in Britain. His 1969 documentary series was an astounding tour of primarily western art from the Middle Ages to the present captured equally well in his similarly named book Civilisation. I was not as thrilled by Wolf Hall as many, but with more context, a good Cromwell biography mentioned below, I fell in love with her second in the series Bring Up the Bodies. Somerset Maugham’s The Razor’s Edge could have been placed in my post above under spirituality as it unpacks what life (and whose life) we are living. I started re-reading Shakespeare and everything you want to know about political motivation today is found in Julius Caesar.
The Middle East:
I’m cheating here because I mentioned my friend Amal Ghandour’s This Arab Life last year because I had read it in draft. It is a superb, deeply personal view of coming of age in the Middle East and where we are today. Malcolm Kerr, who gave his life as President of the American University of Beirut in ?Lebanon and is also the father of a pretty good basketball coach, wrote The Arab Cold War. It is an excellent and brief look at Nasir and the Arab perspective and on the Cold War on their terms. Finally, I re-read after 20 years T.E Lawrence’s Seven Pillars of Wisdom – and it is a significant piece of literature on the Arab uprisings during World War 1.
South Asia:
I cannot get enough of William Dalrymple in his histories of India and South Asia more broadly – his attention to detail and primary sources rendered in riveting prose is unique. His The Last Mughal is magisterial with extensive documentation of the revolt to 1857 that changed India forever. I’ve read some fiction and poetry from the region. A friend, a descendant of Saadat Hasan Manto, was right to push me to read the Toba Tek Singh Stories. They are a beautiful, hard look at India/Pakistan from the ground and in Partition.
Technology and Science:
I rely almost exclusively on blogs and podcasts for science, tech, and tech entrepreneurship. But Alice Bentinck and Matt Clifford’s How to be a Founder is the clearest, least jargony, how-to and reality check on building something from nothing. (I also wrote a review here.) Jon Clifton’s Blind Spot: The Global Rise of Unhappiness and How Leaders Missed. It is a must read, data filled look from the CEO of Gallup examining society, science, research, and the economy well beyond GDP and traditional stats. I reviewed in detail here. ?????????
?And here are the rest:
?American History and Experience
Dan Charnas??????????????????????????????????????????????????Dilla Time
Biography and analysis of one of the most revolutionary innovators in rap history.
Chris Christie?????????????????????????????????????????????????Republican Rescue
One part personal memoir, one part call for a fact-based, competitive Republican Party.
James Ivory???????????????????????????????????????????????????Solid Ivory
Memoir of the great film director, and memories of people he knew/places he filmed.
Fredrick Logevall???????????????????????????????????????????JFK
Superb look at the President’s early years; Remarkable new documents available
Mark Perry?????????????????????????????????????????????????????Grant and Twain
A unique friendship that helped spawn the most important non-fiction and fiction in America
S.C. Gwynne?????????????????????????????????????????????????Empire of the Summer Moon
The definitive look at the history of the Comanche and Indian Wars. Astounding
Arthur Herman???????????????????????????????????????????????Joseph McCarthy??????
A balanced overview of this complicated man, often oversimplified by history.
David Horowitz??????????????????????????????????????????????The Progressive Threat
A blunt, no-holds-barred short argument summarizing the view from the right today.
Hampton Sides??????????????????????? ??????????????????????Blood and Thunder????
Brilliantly written history of conflict and complexity of Native Americans in America.
Jeff Yang, Phil Yu and Philip Wang??????????????Rise: Pop History of Asian Americans
A creative, graphic tour of significant shifts and rising in culture leadership ‘90s to today.
Michelle Zauner?????????????????????????????????????????????Crying in H Mart
Very moving look at the immigrant experience and connections with one’s mother
Philip Zellikow????????????????????????????????????????????????The Road Less Travelled (World War I)
I’ve studied WW I and had no idea of the 1916 peace efforts that could have saved millions.
Antiquity
Guy de la Bedoyere???????????????????????????????????????Gladius: The World of the Roman Soldier
Excellent overview of Roman military across the centuries, from the soldier’s perspective.
Mary Beard and Keith Hopkins?????????????????????The Colosseum
Fascinating history of the great building, and its perceptions over time.
Mary Beard????????????????????????????????????????????????????Confronting the Classics
Superb collection of essays reviewing the state of classics and historical analysis.
Saint Benedict ??????????????????????????????????????????????The Rule of Benedict
Powerful reflections and also historical context to the early days of Monastic life in Europe.
Leondard Boye??????????????????????????????????????????????St. Clement’s Rome
The best guide to a historic location I have read; a must see in Rome.
Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges?????????????????The Ancient City
A dense magisterial look at the rise of religion, law and institutions in Greece and Rome.
Adrian Goldsworthy???????????????????????????????????????The Fall of Carthage
Very good, accessible overview of the three Punic Wars.
Adrian Goldsworthy???????????????????????????????????????How Rome Fell
A balanced and comprehensive look at the decades/centuries it took for Rome to “fall.”
Gregory the Great??????????????????????????????????????????The Life of Saint Benedict
A fascinating text still considered the most important source on the life of the saint.
Herodotus??????????????????????????????????????????????????????Histories
As much a great travel book from antiquity as well as an important history as literature.
Horace (David Ferry translated)????????????????????The Epistles
Brilliant, moving poetic reflections on life more broadly, and daily Republican Rome.
Horace (David Ferry Translated)???????????????????The Odes
Equally brilliant, moving, more poetic view on life goals, and daily Republican Rome.
Tom Holland???????????????????????????????????????????????????Rubicon??????????
Survey of the history of the Roman Republic and the rise and fall of Caesar.
Lloyd Llewelyn-Jones????????????????????????????????????The Persians
It is astounding, even embarrassing, we know much about the Greeks/Romans and not this.
Madeline Miller???????????????????????????????????????????????Circe
Brilliant and beautiful rendering of Greek mythology of Goddesses and Odysseus.
Madeline Miller???????????????????????????????????????????????Song of Achilles
Brilliant and beautiful fictional account on the Iliad from the lens of Patroclus.
Stephen Mitchell Translation/annotations??????Gilgamesh
A stunning and moving poem a thousand years before Homer, with excellent analysis.
Barry Strauss?????????????????????????????????????????????????The War that Made the Roman Empire
A wonderful one-volume on the buildup and historical ramifications of the battle of Actium.
Aloys Winterling?????????????????????????????????????????????Caligula
Was Caligula actually insane, or young, impetuous and oversimplified by history?
The Brain, Faith and Spirituality
Bridget Brady ??????????????????????????????????????????????Cosmic Warrior
A handbook and tour of concepts and tools of spirituality
Julia Cameron???????????????????????????????????????????????The Artist’s Way
A structured look at unpacking one’s creativity and what blocks action. Very actionable.
Nick Chater????????????????????????????????????????????????????The Mind is Flat
Provocative dive in the brain’s spontaneous processing/decision making. Counter-intuitive.
Pema Chodron???????????????????????????????????????????????When Things Fall Apart
Thoughtful reflections on love and loss, ground in Buddhist frameworks.
Paul Coelho???????????????????????????????????????????????????The Alchemist
A legendary parable/story about the journey for seeking one’s priorities and impact.
David Epstein???????????????????????????????????????Range: Generalists Triumph in Specialized World
A tribute to foxes over hedgehogs - how knowing many things/experiences better outcomes
Hector Garcia and Francesc Miralles??????????Kigai: Japanese Secrets to Long/Happy Life
To what do we dedicate our most attention; Where and how do we prioritize our time?
Marshall Goldsmith??????????????????????????The Earned Life – Lose Regret, Choose Fulfillment
What got us to where we are, what is needed to be change and make the next act.
Herman Hesse ??????????????????????????????????????????????Siddhartha
The classic novel having us all rethink why we prioritize what we do in ourselves.
CS Lewis????????????????????????????????????????????????????????Grief Observed
A moving, blunt reflection/journal on loss - of those we love and wrestling faith
BJ Miller/Shoshana Berger????????????????????????????A Beginner’s Guide to the End
A thoughtful overview in detail of what to expect in the final months of a loved one’s life.
Sir Thomas More???????????????????????????????????????????A Dialogue of Comfort Against Tribulation
Contemplation of life, power, sorrow and redemption toward the end of his life.
Michael Singer???????????????????????????????????????????????The Surrender Experiment
A personal memoir of going through success, loss and letting life call the shots.
Michael A. Singer???????????????????????????????????????????The Untethered Soul
A fascinating, readable look from a Buddhist lens of moving beyond what traps us.
Richard Rohr???????????????????????????????????Falling Upward (Spirituality for Two Halves of Life)
A Franciscan priest unpacks our core priorities often buried in early like, unleashed in time.
领英推荐
Eckhart Tolle??????????????????????????????????????????????????A New Earth
A guide to clearing out the ego, processing and focusing on the present moment.
Jim Towey?????????????????????????????????????????????To Love and Be Loved: Portrait of Mother Teresa
Memoir of an extraordinary woman of impact and faith; unique insight from her as well.
China
Karim and Mohammad Alwady?????????????????????China Phobia: A Wasted Opportunity
A bottom up look at the rising tensions between US/China by authors who know both.
Phyllis Birnbaum????????????????????????????????????????????Manchu Princess, Japanese Spy
Biography of WW II Spy for Japan in China, featured in The Last Emperor
Hal Brands, Michael Beckley????????????????????????Danger Zone
Thorough look at relative strengths and concerns, and strategic recommendations.????????????
Margaret MacMillan???????????????????????????????????????Nixon In China
Best one-volume overview of this riveting and crucial “week that changed the world.”
Jonathan Spence???????????????????????????????????????????Mao Zedong
Very short and readable biography by one of the greatest Chinese scholars.
Desmond Shum?????????????????????????????????????????????Red Roulette
A painful read of greed, corruption and losing one’s way; this time in go-go era of China.
Joseph Torigan??????????????????????????????????????????????Prestige, Manipulation and Coercion
A superb review about what drives transitions from totalitarianism. USSR and China.
Michael Wood????????????????????????????????????????????????The Story of China
A comprehensive very good partner to his documentary of the same name.
Europe
Tadeusz Borowski?????????????????????????????????????????This Way to the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen
The most poignant and brutal look, in short stories, of his experience at Auschwitz.
Karen Dawisha??????????????????????????????????????????????Putin’s Kleptocracy
A thorough overview of the rise of corruption of the Russia state over 20 years.
Vaclav Havel??????????????????????????????????????????????????The Power of the Powerless
His 1978 mediations on political dissent – superbly relevant today.
Carlo Levi???????????????????????????????????????????????????????Christ Stopped at Eboli
A beautiful memoir of poverty and humanity in southern Italy in the Fascist era.
Diarmaid MacCulloch????????????????????????????????????Thomas Cromwell
Superb and definitive biography of the tragic and ambitious advisors to Henry VIII.
Justin Pollard?????????????????????????????????????????????????Alfred the Great
Excellent, readable bio of one of the most important people in English history too unknown.
Axel Vervoordt???????????????????????????????????????????????Stories and Reflections?????????
A beautiful collection of experiences and insight on art and design from a global life.
Global Perspective
Foreign Affairs???????????????????????????????????????????????A Century of Foreign Affairs
A marvelous selection of some of the most influential writings in their historic contexts.
Henry Kissinger??????????????????????????????????????????????Leadership
A magisterial tour of Adenauer, De Gaulle, Nixon, Sadat, Lee, and Thatcher?
Scott Reynolds Nelson??????????????????????????????????Oceans of Grain
A fascinating look at the history of grain as the foundation of geopolitical/economic history.
Literature and Art
Albert Camus?????????????????????????????????????????????????The Stranger
I have not read since college, and the choices and unexpected outcomes very relevant today.
Kenneth Clark??????????????????????????????????????Leonardo da Vinci; His Development as an Artist.
Epic 1940 analysis of the great mind’s work in the context of his times.
Graham Greene?????????????????????????????????????????????Our Man in Havana
A beautiful, funny, amazing spy novel by the great Cold War novelist (film is excellent also)
Hilary Mantel??????????????????????????????????????????????????Wolf Hall
A comprehensive, in-depth, deeply researched telling of Thomas Cromwell and Henry VIII.
James Stourton??????????????????????????????????????????????Kenneth Clark; Life, Art and Civilisation
Engrossing biography of the great art expert and creator of Civilisation, the BBC series.
Miriam Toews????????????????????????????????????????????????Women Talking, A Novel
Beautiful, shocking look of a true story of assault on women in the Mennonite community.
Middle East
Agatha Christie??????????????????????????????????????????????Come, Tell Me How You Live
A wonderful memoir of her time with her archeologist husband in Syria in the 1930s.
Michael Palin?????????????????????????????????????????????????Into Iraq??????????
A sensitive travelogue of the admired comedian. I eagerly await his TV show of the same.
Edmund Richardson????????????????????????????????????The King’s Shadow; Lost City of Alexandria
Impossible adventure story on seeking Alexander’s city in Afghanistan in the 19th century.
South Asia
Jamil Ahad?????????????????????????????????????????????????????The Wandering Falcon
A beautiful novella set where Pakistan and Afghanistan border; 80 year old’s first novel.
Jyoti Thottam?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sisters of Mokama
A moving, personal look at India from the partition through the lens of missionary nuns.
Technology and Science
Galileo Galilei?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sidereal Messenger
The great man’s note books as he first uses his telescope and discovers the moons of Jupiter.
Kissinger/Schmidt/Huttenlocher????????????????????The Age of AI and Our Human Future
Raises more questions than it answers, but interesting blend of science/behavior and policy.
Thanks for your generous recommendations:
Hannah Allam
Herb Allen
Karim Alwadi
Marc Andreessen
Julia Azarcon
Jen Balderama
Marcus Brauchli
Matt Clifford
Jim Clifton
Jon Clifton
Sandy Coburn
Marc Cohen
Heather Conley
James Crabtree
Jos Dirkx
Rodney Faroan
Nate Fick
Amal Ghandour
Fadi Ghandour
Marc Grossman
Michael Faye
Sarah Friar
John Gardner
Heather Henyon
David Hoffman
Ben Horowitz
David Ignatius
Sohaib Khan
Steve Kupka
Sleem Manto
Tom Mueller
Vali Nasr
Evan Osnos
Helery Pop
Prakash Raman
Richard Reeves
Ben Schroeder
Elaine Schroeder
Jack Schroeder
Julia Schroeder
Claire Scoville
Neal Simon
Andrew Stevens
Virginia Tam
Zenna Tavares from Satori
Gayle Trotter
Catherine Barr Windels
Bryan Wish
Jennifer Xu
Bob Zoellick
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9 个月Mona Vainy ?????. Ida Maria Pan ??????????Christopher M. Schroeder
Partner @ DGA Group | Market Entry, Geopolitical Risk Management & Trend Spotter
2 年What a fantastic list. Thanks for sharing it.