Books in 2019 
Monday, December 30, 2019 at 10:38AM
Roy Rubenstein in Andrew Schmitt, Bill Gartner, Cignal AI, Cisco Systems, Scintil Photonics, Slyvie Menezo, books

Gazettabyte asks industry figures each year to cite the memorable books they have read. These include fiction, non-fiction and work-related titles. 

Here are the choices of Cisco’s Bill Gartner, Sylvie Menezo of silicon photonics start-up, Scintil Photonics, and Andrew Schmitt, directing analyst at Cignal AI.  


 

Bill Gartner, Senior Vice President and General Manager, Cisco Optical Systems and Optics.

At the top of my list is The Gene: An Intimate History, by Siddhartha Mukherjee. Mukherjee does an amazing job of telling the story of the gene, providing historical context dating back to pre-Darwin times through to modern advances in gene therapy. The material is complex but he is great at describing the evolution of thinking about genes and progress in the genome project in layman's terms. 

The book leaves me in awe of how much has been accomplished, especially in the past 20 years, and yet how much more we have to learn about this fascinating topic, how progress in this area might be applied to solve some of medicine’s most challenging problems, and the moral dilemma that we confront as we think about altering nature’s work.

The Billionaire Who Wasn't: How Chuck Feeney Secretly Made and Gave Away a Fortune by Conor O’Clery is an amazing story of a man who went from rags to riches, built one of the most profitable private businesses in history (Duty-Free Shops), and earned billions. He then gave it all away and did so anonymously. He lived frugally and was adamant that his contributions be kept secret. It is an inspiring story of an American hero who touched the lives of millions who will never know.

Longitude: The True Story of a Lone Genius Who Solved the Greatest Scientific Problem of His Time by Dava Sobel includes a foreword by Neil Armstrong. I am fascinated by stories that highlight how one individual persists in a vision and has a major impact on the world. In the 18th century, it was common for entire fleets of ships to run aground or get lost as navigation techniques were primitive.

Latitude was relatively straightforward, based on the angle of the sun relative to the horizon (and the date), but determining longitudinal position was often guesswork. After several disasters, including one where over 200 sailors were killed, the British government established a prize for the solution. 

This is a fantastic story of a relatively unknown watchmaker who single-handedly solved the problem and then persuaded the sceptics that his chronometer was superior to any available method.  

Lastly, I read Franklin and Winston: An Intimate Portrait of an Epic Friendship by Jon Meacham. This is a fantastic story of the intimate and at times stormy relationship between FDR and Winston Churchill. The story, unlike many WWII narratives, is told from the perspective of their interactions. FDR and Churchill were magnificent leaders, each of whom took a principled stand against Nazism and Fascism. It is also frightening to contemplate the course history may have taken had lesser leaders been in place.

 

Sylvie Menezo, CEO and CTO of Scintil Photonics. 

The book I recommend is a novel I read this summer, La Tresse (The Braid) by Laetitia Colombani. It is a tale of three women, each from a different continent and experiencing different living conditions, yet their lives happen to be connected by something at the end of the book. To me, all three are very beautiful and strong women figures, moved by a ‘different something’ deep inside them, and that is what makes them beautiful!

 

Andrew Schmitt, founder and directing analyst at Cignal AI

It was a good reading year for me. Starting with fiction, my overall pick of the year is the Three-Body Problem series by Cixin Liu, a science fiction story of epic scale that stretches from the Cultural Revolution in China into the distant future. 

It was written in Chinese and as a result, the style, prose and cultural perspective are different in a refreshing way. This series is right up there with Dune, Asimov and all the sci-fi greats. It is a must-read if that is your thing.

Martha Wells turned out more short novels to conclude the Murderbot Diaries, a series that I reviewed in 2018. I also read Neal Stephenson’s FALL; or, Dodge in Hell: A Novel this year. He’s maintained a steady production of books but I don’t think his latest books are as good as his archive (Snow Crash, Cryptonomicon, others). FALL was very disappointing, particularly the second half – I don’t recommend it. Read the archive instead.

It was an intense non-fiction year, so I’ll hit the good stuff that I strongly recommend.

I picked up Nobody Wants to Read Your Sh*t: And Other Tough-Love Truths to Make You a Better Writer by Steven Pressfield on a twitter recommendation and it resonated with me. So much written market research lacks respect and appreciation of the client’s time and Pressfield shares simple, useful tips to make your reader care about what you are writing. Anyone who writes for others should read this, and it is quick.

This book leads me to one of Pressfield’s big hits, Gates of Fire: An Epic Novel of the Battle of Thermopylaea narrative history of the Spartans and the battle. As an engineer, I never had the time - and frankly, the interest - to study Ancient Greece. Pressfield vividly brings Sparta and Greece to life and recounts the events leading up to the battle of the famous “300”. A fantastic book.

My son had to read Midnight in Chernobyl: The Untold Story of the World's Greatest Nuclear Disaster by Adam Higginbotham over the summer for High School. 

We read it together; a highly recommended thing to do with your teenagers. Better yet, after the book, we were treated with the excellent “Chernobyl” drama on HBO. If you liked the HBO series, definitely read the book as it tells the story in a comprehensive and detailed way without an artistic license. The size, scale, and sacrifices endured by the Soviets to contain the disaster are incredible. The organisational ineptitude before and right after the event are horrifying. The same top-down decision hierarchy that caused the problem was paradoxically the only way to get it cleaned up.

My last recommendation is Shoe Dog: A Memoir - by the Creator of Nike, by Phil Knight. It recounts the genesis of the company as a supplier of track shoes made in Japan following WWII as the country rapidly emerged as an export powerhouse. It is a book about post-war Japan, raw entrepreneurship, and building what at the time was a new sales and marketing model combining athletics and fashion. One of the better business books I’ve read.

 

Books in 2019 - Final part, click here 

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