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Brush up on the best performance and well-being strategies for 2020 with these books from 2019.
Brush up on the best performance and well-being strategies for 2020 with these books from 2019. (Photo: Andrew Peacock/Tandem)

9 Self-Improvement Books Actually Worth Reading

Our wellness columnist on his favorite books of the year

Published: 
Brush up on the best performance and well-being strategies for 2020 with these books from 2019.
(Photo: Andrew Peacock/Tandem)

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Most of my work this yearhas integrated ideas, research, and practices from diverse domains. People often ask me how I do this.The answer is simple: I try to live in the world with my eyes open, which isn’talways easy,and I read lots of books.

Before I get into the list, it’s worth mentioning that I learned more from one book than any of the others. Yes, I know it’s a self plug, butwas a three-year project in which I aimed to better understand where motivation, drive, and obsession come fromand how one can best channel these forces. The process of researching, reporting, and writing this book taught me infinite lessons I use in my daily life as a writer, athlete, coach, partner, and parent. If you like this column, I think you’ll love the book.

With that, in no particular order, here are the books I loved most in 2019. Some are newly published, others have been around for decades. Read these books and you’ll do better, be better, and feel better.

Digital Minimalism,by Cal Newport

(Courtesy Portfolio)

I’ve long known I could do a better job managing my relationships with digital devices. I almost didn’t read this book, because I thought I knew everything there was to know. Yetthere was something about how Newport wrote this book that actually led me to change my behavior in positive ways. I’m a much better person for it. I recommend this book to all my coaching clients.


Range,by David Epstein

(Courtesy Riverhead Books)

Epstein covers a vast body of researchand brings it to life with entertaining stories to show that the key to a high-performing and fulfilling life isn’t to force yourself to specialize in one thingbut rather to follow your interests wherever they take you. Everything is grist for the mill.


Stillness Is the Key, by Ryan Holiday

(Courtesy Portfolio)

In a world with so much noise,it’s getting harder and harder to findstillness. And yetthe ability to do so is becoming increasingly important. Holiday takes us on a tour of the wisdom traditions—Buddhism, Stoicism—and delves into how their lessons on stillness have been applied throughout history by notable figures. I’ve always loved Holiday’s writing, and this is my favorite work of his. It reads more like a history book than anything. The chapter on Churchill is dynamite.


How to Do Nothing, by Jenny Odell

(Courtesy Melville House)

A to the books above, Odell traces the historical and cultural forces that have led us to a moment whereit’s so hard to do nothing. If you’ve ever had a guilty feeling or an urge to keep working when there was no real need, ended up doing the work, and felt kind of gross after, then this book is for you.


The Wisdom of Insecurity, by Alan Watts

(Courtesy Vintage Books)

I went on a Watts kick at the end of this year. What a free-spirited thinker and communicator. In Wisdom,Watts puts into words things I’ve felt strongly forever but could never describe. What if the reason we are insecure is because we are scared to be insecure (and everyone tells us we should be scared)? What if we embraced our insecurity and understood it’s as much a part of life as seeing or hearing, and then used it not to isolate ourselves but rather to connect to everyone and everything else that is also insecure? If you read this book, buckle up. There are multiple passages that blew me away.


The Second Mountain,by David Brooks

(Courtesy Random House)

I’ve never loved David Brooks, because his work can feel like he’spreaching what’s right and what’s wrong from on high(or, more literally, from atop the ivory tower at Yale). But The Second Mountainwas different. Humbled by a divorce and a change in his political identity, Brooks wrote more gracefullythan he has in the past. (It’s not just me.Oprah picked up on this, too!) I learned a lot in this book, and Brooks’s metaphor of the second mountain—after you’ve reached peak “success,” whatever that means, what are you going to do?—has stuck with me.


Devotions,by Mary Oliver

(Courtesy Penguin House)

For a while this year, I ended each workday by reading from Devotionsfor 30 minutes. Oliver’s writing is piercing. “We shake with joy, we shake with grief. What a time they have, these two, housed as they are in the same body.” I don’t normally love poetry, but I love Mary Oliver, and this collection of her best works is something to keep on your desk.


After the Ecstasy, the Laundry, by Jack Kornfield

(Courtesy Bantam)

Everyone loves to talk about the breakthrough—the peak performance, spiritual awakening, intense love. But what happens after? How can you come down from these experiences and get on with daily life? How can you carry these experiences with you, even when you’re doing administrative chores, shuttling the kids to activities, or, as Kornfield writes, doing the laundry? This bookpoints toward a way of integrating the holy with the daily.


Sounds Like Me,by Sara Bareilles

(Courtesy Simon & Schuster)

I love Sara Bareilles. I think she is the best songwriter and singer on the planet.Her new album, , is utterly awesome and has carried me through my own chaos on a few occasions. I dug her autobiography, which was published in 2015. AndI’d love to see an update, including some of the things she’s gone through since then.


And Five Novels

I keep my annual list of top books to nonfiction, because that’s what I write. But I also read some incredible novels this year. My top five:(a huge book,but actually that good), (also a huge book, perhaps even better), , , and .

Brad Stulberg () coaches on performance and well-being and writes ϳԹ’s Do It Better column. He is the bestselling author of the books and . Subscribe to his newsletter .

Lead Photo: Andrew Peacock/Tandem

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