Aug 3rd 2024 (This is when I bought it)
A book about improving performance by Brendon Burchard
My Reading Journey Backwards and Forwards
Aug 3rd 2024 (This is when I bought it)
A book about improving performance by Brendon Burchard
March 3, 2025
A Book about systems thinking by Donella Meadows
I’m afraid I didn’t take much of value from this read. Her political agenda was woven throughout, and I found it more distracting than enlightening.
“In fact, we don’t talk about what we see; we see only what we can talk about. Our perspectives on the world depend on the interaction of our nervous system and our language—both act as filters through which we perceive our world.”
This next quote, according to Amazon, was highlighted by over 15,000 Kindle readers;
“Purposes are deduced from behavior, not from rhetoric or stated goals.”
4.6 out of 5 Stars on Amazon.
There are a few books that encapsulate a way of thinking so simply, so clearly and so compellingly that I find myself giving little kisses of delight to the cover. I read this on a Kindle, so this resulted in quite a lot of smudging. (this was a long review so you can read the rest here if you are interested)
I got this book because we develop systems for patient compliance, the reviews were high, and I was eager to learn from such an expert of high acclaim. In fact, the book is a superficial collection of high-level ideas with little to no added value or insight. The book is a spectacular example of what Feynman called “cargo science”. Do meaningful, not just quantifiable. Indeed. The book is also heavily influenced by the author’s environmental agenda, which should be disturbing to anyone with an engineering or physics education used to system analysis. Read Bellman’s classic “Adaptive Control Processes – A guided tour” for real thought and insights on systems.
262 people found this helpful
Redemption and forgiveness are possible even in the most difficult of circumstances.
This book holds a 4.3 rating on Amazon, with only 60% of reviewers giving it five stars. On Goodreads, the rating dips even lower to 3.9 from over 9,000 reviews.
I was surprised! I loved this book and got teary reading it more than once – half a dozen times, really. I am in awe of his mastery of the English language and his ability to write with such candor and grace about such a difficult topic.
I turned, as I often do, to the 1 and 2 start reviews to see what other people didn’t like. It seems some folks find him a bit tedious and whiny.
I find that kind of review somewhat tedious and whiny. At least Pat Conroy had something to whine about –
A book about accomplishing more through delegation by Dan Sullivan
My rating of this book is based not on the quality of its writing or content but on how practical and valuable it has been in my life or business.
“There is no limit to the amount of good you can do if you don’t care who gets the credit.”
Ronald Reagan
I lowered my star rating to a four because while this book offers valuable insights, the entire book is a sales pitch for Strategic Coach.
Their eight-hour workshop, already sold out for 2025, comes with a hefty price tag of $13,500 as of late 2024. A one-day workshop for $13k isn’t practical for me, thus the lowered rating.
A Book about Life’s Scarcest Commodity By Klein Stefan
When does now end?
“How long does the present last?”
I started this book in February 2024 and finished it in December 2024. I’m not sure it lives up to its name, but it was worth reading. It seems like it was mainly about the relativity of time when it goes slow and when it goes fast. He also talked about time and memory.
While reading it, I paid more attention to how I was spending my time; it got harder to enjoy playing my game – I tried considering what value the hour I had just lived had to me. What did I remember of it?
As I read this book, I find myself paying more attention to how I spend my time – considering more seriously if I’m willing to give my life to the activity I’m engaged in.
Everyone says that time is money, but it isn’t.
According to this book, children acquire their first conscious recollections at about 18 months.
A recollection is not the same as a memory; I looked this up because I thought they were the same and replaced the word recollection in the sentence above with memory, rendering it inaccurate.
Recollection is the active process of retrieving specific memories, while memory is the system or ability to remember something, which begins to develop in humans at birth. A baby can recognize its mother’s face within 2 hours.
This is a stop doing. Stop spending so much time playing my phone game.
Especially during times, I could be doing something I can see later.
This book only has 82 reviews on Amazon, 3% 1 star and 62% 5 star. On Good Reads, it has 23 ratings, an average of 4.17, and only three reviews.
Looking at the 1-star review on Amazon, I see that it’s a complaint about formatting with no discussion of content.
By David Graeber
A book about doing better by Seth Godin.
“The number on the car’s speedometer isn’t always an indication of how fast you’re getting to where you’re going. You might, after all, be driving in circles, really quickly,” Seth Godin
A Book About Insight by Gary Klein
“In truth, learning is the only sustainable source of competitive advantage in a world of disruption and complexity.” (Dan Montgomery, Start Less, Finish More)
A book about Agile Project Management by Dan Montgomery
The title is almost enough.
The title is almost enough.
© 2026 Vienna's Views
Theme by Anders Noren — Up ↑