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All books
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- I Am Charlotte Simmons (23)
- A Novel
- By Tom Wolfe
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- The Tipping Point (150)
- How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference
- By Malcolm Gladwell




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- Harvard Business Review on Managing Yourself (1)
- (Harvard Business Review Paperback Series)
- By HBSP




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- influence (19)
- The Psychology of Persuasion (Collins Business Essentials)
- By Robert B. Cialdini
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- The Last Lecture (56)
- By Randy Pausch, Jeffrey Zaslow




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- Jonathan Livingston Seagull (23)
- By Richard Bach




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- Atomised (3)
- By Michel Houellebecq




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- The World Is Flat (104)
- A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century
- By Thomas L. Friedman




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- The 4-Hour Workweek (30)
- Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich
- By Timothy Ferriss




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- My Start-Up Life (1)
- What a (Very) Young CEO Learned on His Journey Through Silicon Valley
- By Marc Benioff, Ben Casnocha
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- How to Become a Straight-A Student (1)
- The Unconventional Strategies Real College Students Use to Score High While Studying Less
- By Cal Newport
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How to Become a Straight-A Student



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Cal Newport shares the results of his interviews with straight-A students all over the U.S.. It's a wonderful collection of tips and recommendations which make a studying system on they're own.
Totally recommended to anyone who wants to improve his/her studying efficiency. - — Sep 11, 2008 | Add your feedback
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- The Teachings of Don Juan (3)
- A Yaqui Way of Knowledge
- By Carlos Castaneda




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My Start-Up Life
The book explains the story of how Ben Casnocha founded his first venture when he was 12, how he decided to ditch it two years later and build his second one, Comcate, and how he brought it to being the leading e-government technology firm in the US.
The story is so wonderfully explained that i ... (continue)
The book explains the story of how Ben Casnocha founded his first venture when he was 12, how he decided to ditch it two years later and build his second one, Comcate, and how he brought it to being the leading e-government technology firm in the US.
The story is so wonderfully explained that it mixes the plot with a whole lot of advice which just makes sense to me, but I wouldn't be able to think on my own. His writing seems honest and, in general, modest.
The whole book is an entrepeneurship manifesto. A must-read.
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