Outliers: The Story of
Success
Click to order via
Amazon
by Malcolm Gladwell
Hardcover: 320 pages
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company (November 18, 2008)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0316017922
ISBN-13: 978-0316017923
Product Dimensions: 7.9 x 5.5 x 1.2 inches
Book Review by
Kam Williams
“This is a book about outliers, men and women who do
things that are out of the ordinary. I’m going to introduce
you to one kind of outlier after another: to geniuses,
business tycoons, rock stars, and software programmers. In
examining the lives of the remarkable among us, I will argue
that there is something profoundly wrong with the way we
make sense of success...
People don’t rise from nothing. We do owe something to
parentage and patronage… It makes a difference where and
when we grew up. The culture we belong to and the legacies
passed down by our forbears shape the patterns of our
achievement in ways we cannot begin to imagine.
It’s not enough to ask what successful people are
like, in other words. It is only by asking where they are
from that we can unravel the logic behind who succeeds and
who doesn’t.”
—Excerpted from Chapter One (page 17-19)
Why are so many major league baseball players born in the
Fall, and so many pro hockey players born during the Winter?
What do the Beatles and Bill Gates have in common? Why do Asians
generally excel in mathematics? Why isn’t IQ a reliable
predictor of achievement?
These are some of the intriguing questions answered in
Outliers, the latest examination of human idiosyncrasies by the
New Yorker Magazine’s Malcolm Gladwell whose previous two books,
The Tipping Point and Blink, were both #1 best sellers as well.
Gladwell, the son of a British engineer and a Jamaican
psychotherapist, has a knack for researching arcane subjects and
breaking down his surprising findings into readily-digested
layman terms. What’s more, he has an engaging writing style
which turns the most mundane topic into a fascinating curiosity.
In Outliers, his quest was to probe the secrets to success.
Conventional wisdom attributes extraordinary achievement to some
combination of intelligence, luck and a good work ethic. But
Gladwell uncovered some bizarre explanations for why many manage
to make it to the top of their chosen professions.
For example, since little league hockey players are grouped
by the calendar year in which they were born, those with
birthdays in January, February and March enjoy an undeserved
advantage just because they’re a little older than the rest of
the competitors in their age group. This leads to their being
preferred by coaches and thus enjoying more playing time, simply
by virtue of their being more mature. Over the course of a
childhood, the extra attention translates into a maximized
potential, hence the preponderance of pros born during the
calendar year’s first quarter.
Other novel chapters assess phenomena ranging from a “town in
eastern Pennsylvania where no one has ever had a heart attack”
to the connection between pilots’ cultures and plane crash rates
to why 10,000 hours of practice are needed to master a skill to
why there is little difference between geniuses with I.Q.s of
150 and 200. Overall, Outliers is a compelling page-turner which
often reads like an edge of your seat mystery thriller, even
though the information ultimately unearthed by the author isn’t
guaranteed to improve your odds of joining the elite class which
has so captured his imagination here.