chief product officer @hardcover, regular dad and cat dad, building a healthy reading habit
Location:Paris
308 Books
See allFeatured Prompt
338 booksBooks read in your formative years can shape the person you become just as much as parents, teachers and friends. What were some of the books that you remember most from your childhood years?
Featured Prompt
58 booksA great movie can lead to even more readers of the source material. What are some books you read that had movies that you enjoyed the most.
Featured Prompt
82 booksThe publishing industry has struggled to embrace new voices. Many amazing authors have managed to get their voices out–overcoming all obstacles. What books stand out to you as your favorites by bla...
Featured Prompt
54 booksNew readers often struggle to find books that they connect with. It often takes exploring different genres and writing styles from a many points of views to understand your own tastes. If you've ma...
Although I haven't been the top student in my class in physics I've always been drawn to it. Contemporary physics is so weird and complicated that I had no hopes of ever understanding any of it. That's where Feynman steps in. Reading complex formulas and accepting the ambiguity of how things work is only possible if it's explained like Feynman explains it. You're not being underestimated, but you feel cared for. And most importantly, you end up understanding things you'd never dreamt of ever understanding.
I initially had trouble adjusting to the tone this is written in. Sounded like someone attempting a David Attenborough larp. The chapters have a nice structure once you get used to that.
A few things I didn’t know about how the ecosystems of this world came into being. It ends on a balanced note about climate change.
Still not addressing how disproportionate the effects of mitigating it are in the West vs the rest of the world. But an optimistic view of what we can do, which I didn’t expect.