The book I am reviewing is a great non-fiction book about our worlds outliers. The book is written by Malcolm Gladwell who’s a staff writer at the New Yorker. The book talks about the outliers in our society. It’s topics stretches from rice paddies to music performers that have excelled in their fields. But all the topics are related by a sense of success and the ability to achieve that success. I like this books style because it was completely different than any other type of book I’ve before. The book didn’t really have a plot but every chapter was informative in their own way. Even though each chapter was very different each one contributed to the main idea. This book has wonderfully solid information that makes it very hard to argue or deny the main idea. …show more content…
For example Malcolm talks about the smartest man in the and he talks about his upbringing. He also talks about the most successful hockey players were never born in the fall. He talks about their life in a way that makes the book seem kind of like a self help book. Though I really enjoyed this book I did find that at some points I was saying in my head “I get it!” I think my slight boredom with this book was simply from the lack of experience with this kind of book. Normally in the past the books I’ve read were fiction and were action packed. However I would easily understand if someone who was big on literature really found this book entertaining. This book will easily make you think about others lives and make you evaluate your own. With a buffet full of information this book is good read to better understand the world around you. Outliers is an amazing book that can make your gears
Like the book “Outliers” its author Malcolm Gladwell is also an outlier himself. Having all of his books published as well as becoming a NY times best selling author, accomplishing a great feat. According to the Huffington Post website, in human history only, 130 million books were published. While the number may not seem big, it is not a small amount compared to the people who want to be great authors. Gladwell being able to accomplish his success as an author, makes him more accomplished than many others in his field; Therefore making him an outlier. According to “Outliers” in the epilogue, Gladwell talks about how he became an outlier because of extrinsic factors Gladwell was able to become an outlier. There are several extrinsic factors
In Big and Bad by Malcolm Gladwell, he states that S.U.V.s are not safe, although they may seem like they are. Specifically, he states that S.U.V.s are the opposite of safe. In the text, Gladwell discusses how people generally think, “If I am bigger and taller, I’m safer.” In other words, many people feel that if they are driving a bigger, heavier vehicle, they will be protected from harm. The article argues that the massive weight of the S.U.V. negatively influences the handling of the vehicle, leading to how fast you can navigate and control the S.U.V. The article counters the false sense of security by claiming that there is a higher chance of your S.U.V. rolling because of how big and cumbersome it is.
Although my interest was lost in certain parts of the book, it did teach me a lot about being successful
Criminal case is always tedious when it involves little or no information about the offender, like in the 9/11 terrorist attack which annihilated most of the workers in and damaged the New York Trade Center building. However, in an attempt to identify the offenders, government officials and investigators try out different ways such as criminal profiling and others. Thus, in the New Yorker article, “Dangerous Minds” by Malcolm Gladwell; the author informs the deeper problems with FBI profiling and argues that it is ineffective. He questions the usefulness of criminal profiling, “But how useful is that profile, really?” and uses other criminal cases, group research analyses, and analogies to refute
Outliers is Malcolm Gladwell 's examination of what makes some people excessively more successful than others. These "outliers," as he calls them, are commonly thought to possess talent and intelligence far above that of the average person, but he challenges this popular belief by looking at the background of some notable outliers.
I did actually really like this book. I was not sure if I was going to enjoy it when the project was first assigned, but after reading for a while, I became really interested
I wouldn’t recommend this book to the average reader. It is a bit hard to read because the author goes into so much depth that the reader could very often forget the main idea. It is a good, informative book but a bit drawn out.
Audience: Outliers answers the unanimous question about those who become successful and “what they’re like”, “what makes someone successful?” or “what are successful people like?”. Gladwell directs his book towards an extremely broad audience. He talks about financial success, musical success, athletic fame, and everything in between, interesting everyone because who does not want to be successful? Outliers teaches lessons that are beneficial to people of all ages, and shows the readers what it takes to make it to the top.
Gladwell, Malcolm. Outliers: The Story of Success. 1st ed. New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2008. Print
Starting in Chapter 6 Gladwell presents us with the mysterious and seemingly inexplicable series of events that occurred in Harlan, Kentucky in the 19th century to introduce the enormous effect of cultural legacies.
Q1. What is the general focus of Part 2? Answer: The general focus of Part 2 is ‘legacy’.
In the book, The Outliers: The Story of Success, written by Malcom Gladwell he described an outlier as someone who does something out of the ordinary or different, something that lies outside the box. His beliefs about people being successful are easily supported. He reviews the lives of extremely successful people and how they obtained success while utilizing their social interactions, last name and distinct events that occurred throughout their life. His writing throughout the book was sturdy and powerful. Gladwell writes effectively to get his point across by using deductive organization, repetition and logos.
In the book Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell, he uses repetitive story plots to challenge the minds of America’s today and Americas’ tomorrow. It excels the limitations of what the reader was questioning what made someone so intellectual for instants, Bill Joy or where they came from, Joe Flom. The compelling story Gladwell was telling of who are Outliers; the turning point for Gladwell was when he gave his opinion instead of someone else’s story.
A theory that an individual’s behavior is most likely based on factors such as personal convictions, personality, or inherited genes is a common belief in nowadays’ society. This theory seems like reasonable and logical because it is quite natural that a person’s behavior follows his or her characters. Malcolm Gladwell, however, in his essay, “The Power of Context: Bernie Goetz and the Rise and Fall of New York City Crime,” examines those factors affecting peoples’ behaviors and comes up with his own theory. Gladwell believes that the environmental conditions have the most significant influence on how one behaves. Throughout his essay, he presents a few different studies to help persuade
In the beginning of the book, “The Story of Success”, the author Malcolm Gladwell began by giving the definition of the word outlier which he defined as a person, situation, or thing that is different from others. This word defined is of something that is markedly different from the normal or the average which is the foundational principle of Gladwell’s book. Gladwell continues by studying people and situations that are above average or that stand out from the normal, and he looked into all of the different factors that played a role in creating their individual success. People who are among us who are