Excellent books Bill Gates recommends? When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi: This book is a memoir of Dr. Paul Kalanithi which tells us about his life, his role as a neurosurgeon and his battle with stage IV metastatic cancer. It was published posthumously. Rapid weight loss and chest pains which were mild initially rapidly grew intense until he realized that instead of saving patients’ lives, now, he was a patient who was struggling to stay alive. How does it feel when all of a sudden your number of days are numbered and you do not have a goal to strive for? How do you live the last days of your life? A heartbreaking and sad memoir that will make a place in your heart as it teaches you the philosophy of life, its struggles and the relationship a doctor and a patient shares as Paul Kalanithi has been both in his lifetime. Find additional details on https://snapreads.com/magazine/bill-gates-recommended-books/.
Catcher in the Rye is undoubtfully a classical work of the American literature and is very popular in “Top 10 books” lists. This novel was the peak of J.D. Salinger’s career, as after it was published, he decided to live a life of a hermit. The main character being an expelled student named Holden Caulfield, the book is a first-person story written in the accordingly stylized language. Though he is just 16, he encounters many events that tend to preclude adults. Catcher in the Rye is about a youth of 1960-s,but it is still actual today.
Gates has three offspring and you must think they are very lucky for they will amass all their father’s fortune eventually. But did you know that each of them will only inherit $10 million each? This is just a fraction of their father’s $81.1 billion net worth. “Leaving kids massive amounts of money is not a favour to them,” he explained in an interview. Even if multilingual people abound Gates’ family, he is monolingual and can only fluently speak in English. “I feel pretty stupid that I don’t know any foreign languages,” Gates admitted in an interview.
Put simply, Bill Gates has about two million times more money than the median US household income. It’s estimated that Gates is making about $11 million a day, and that’s not even the peak of his earnings. At one point, he had more than $150 billion. Bill Gates held the money title belt almost every year from 2000 to 2017. The only exception was the 2010-2013 period when Jeff Bezos gave him a run for his… well, money. As of 2022, Gates is the fourth richest person in the world after Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and Bernard Arnault. If you wonder who that last guy is—he’s the chairman and CEO of the French conglomerate LVMH (Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton).
How the World Really Works by Vaclav Smil : Another title from the Czech-Canadian professor and Gates’s favorite author, this one is apparently a light read compared to Smil’s other more technical tomes. The book “represents the highly readable distillation of this lifetime of scholarship,” according to The Wall Street Journal. It offers readers an overview of exactly how our material world, from concrete to fertilizer, is made. The Better Angels of Our Nature by Steven Pinker : “Steven Pinker’s The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined stands out as one of the most important books I’ve read–not just this year, but ever,” wrote Gates back in 2012. Apparently his opinion hasn’t changed in a decade. Read additional info on https://snapreads.com/.