• 1984 (Nineteen eighty-four) Nile Kenya1984 (Nineteen eighty-four)
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    1984 (Nineteen Eighty-Four)

    In a world where every thought is monitored and every truth is manufactured, one man dares to remember what it means to be free. 1984 is a harrowing descent into a society ruled by fear, where language is weaponized, love is treason, and the past is endlessly rewritten. As the walls close in, the quiet rebellion of a solitary mind becomes a question with no easy answer: can the human spirit survive when even reality is no longer its own? Stark, prophetic, and unrelenting, this is a story of resistance in the age of absolute control.

    • Originally Published: June 8, 1949
    • Publisher: Penguin Books, 2008
    • Genre: Science fiction, Dystopian Fiction, Social science fiction, Political fiction
    • Pages: 1231
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-0241969694
    • Access: Members
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    21 Lessons for the 21st Century

    In a world swirling with fake news, fractured identities, and artificial intelligence, 21 Lessons for the 21st Century is a lucid meditation on how to remain human in an age of dizzying change. With calm urgency and philosophical depth, it challenges readers to confront the crises of our time — from the collapse of truth to the erosion of freedom — not with panic, but with clarity. Can we still find meaning when ancient myths no longer hold and the future is written in code? These twenty-one lessons are not answers, but flares — illuminating the darkness so we might choose our path with eyes wide open.

    • Originally Published: 2018
    • Publisher: Penguin Random House, 2018
    • Genre: Non-fiction
    • Pages: 352
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-1787330672
    • Access: Members
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    A Brief History of Mathematical Thought: Key concepts and where they come from

    From the ancient geometries etched in sand to the abstract symmetries of modern logic, A Brief History of Mathematical Thought is a luminous journey through the minds that dared to measure the universe. This is not merely a chronicle of numbers, but a meditation on how we shape the world—and ourselves—through patterns, proofs, and paradoxes. As it weaves through the philosophical, the aesthetic, and the profoundly human aspects of mathematics, the book asks: what does it mean to understand reality through symbols we cannot touch? At once intellectual and intimate, it invites the reader to see mathematics not as a cold discipline, but as a creative force pulsing through the story of civilization.

    • Originally Published: 2015
    • Publisher: Constable & Robinson, 2015
    • Genre: Non-fiction
    • Pages: 321
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-1472117113
    • Access: Members
  • Against the Gods - The Remarkable Story of Risk
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    Against the Gods: The Remarkable Story of Risk

    In Against the Gods, the ancient chaos of fate is challenged by humanity’s relentless quest to measure, predict, and master the unknown. From the gamblers of Renaissance Italy to the architects of modern finance, this sweeping narrative traces how risk—once the realm of divine caprice—was transformed into a tool of decision, progress, and power. But can numbers truly conquer uncertainty, or do we merely wrap randomness in the illusion of control? Blending intellectual history with sharp economic insight, this book invites readers to reconsider how we understand the future—and how that understanding shapes the choices we make today. It is both a celebration of reason’s triumph and a quiet meditation on its limits.

    • Originally Published: 1998
    • Publisher : Wiley, 1998
    • Pages: 400
    • Genre: Investing
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN-13: 978-0471295631
    • Access: Prime Membership

     

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    Animal Farm

    On a quiet farm, where the animals rise in revolt against their human masters, an ideal of freedom is born—only to curdle into tyranny beneath the hoofprints of power. Animal Farm is a fable sharpened into a political blade, where noble dreams decay into slogans, and those who promise equality learn to walk upright over the backs of others. How does liberation become a new form of control, and why do the oppressed so often trade one master for another? With deceptively simple prose and chilling clarity, this tale reveals that the most dangerous lies are the ones we tell ourselves. A story for every age, it asks: who truly governs when all are supposed to be free?

    • Originally Published: August 1945
    • Genre: Novella, Political Satire
    • Pages: 101
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9780451526342
    • Access: Members
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    Anna Karenina

    Beneath the glittering ballrooms and snowbound estates of imperial Russia, Anna Karenina unfolds as a sweeping tale of passion, betrayal, and the fragile architecture of human happiness. Caught between the demands of a rigid society and the call of her own heart, Anna dares to pursue love at any cost—only to find that desire can both liberate and destroy. Around her, lives intersect in a delicate ballet of hope and despair, raising a timeless question: can true fulfillment ever exist within the confines of duty, marriage, and convention? Lyrical and unflinching, Tolstoy’s masterpiece captures the full spectrum of the human soul, from ecstasy to ruin.

    • Originally Published: 1873
    • Publisher: Penguin Books, 2002
    • Genre: Novel
    • Pages: 880
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-0140449174
    • Access: Members
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    Antifragile: Things that Gain from Disorder

    What if the key to enduring chaos is not merely to withstand it—but to thrive because of it? In Antifragile, ideas crackle like lightning as it dismantles the illusion of stability and celebrates systems, individuals, and ideas that grow stronger under pressure, volatility, and disorder. Through paradox and provocation, it asks: Why worship resilience when you can embrace something better—something that feeds on uncertainty and emerges sharper, fiercer, and wiser? With a voice that is both incendiary and exacting, this book maps a radical philosophy for living wisely in a world that will never be safe, still, or predictable. It is not a manual for survival—but a manifesto for transcendence.

    • Originally Published: 2012
    • Publisher : Penguin Books, 2013
    • Genre: Self-help
    • Pages: 544
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN-13: 978-0141038223
    • Access: Members
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    Atlas Shrugged

    What happens when the world’s thinkers, builders, and dreamers vanish, one by one, into silence? Atlas Shrugged is a thunderous epic set in a collapsing civilization, where the engines of progress are halted by a society that punishes excellence and rewards mediocrity. Amid the smoke of industry and the ruins of broken ideals, a defiant few must decide: is it moral to serve a world that drains your soul—or to walk away and let it crumble? With sweeping prose and unflinching vision, this novel challenges the very foundations of duty, ambition, and what it means to live with purpose. It is a story of resistance, of love forged in fire, and of the relentless power of the human mind.

    • Originally Published: 1957
    • Publisher: Signet, 2004
    • Genre: Fiction
    • Pages: 1088
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9780451191144
    • Access: Members
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    Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones

    Atomic Habits reveals the extraordinary power hidden in the smallest of changes—how tiny shifts in behavior can cascade into profound transformations over time. With clarity and insight, it uncovers the subtle architecture of habits that bind or liberate us, inviting readers to rethink identity, willpower, and the nature of progress itself. What if success is less about radical reinvention and more about the delicate art of compounding small victories? This is a blueprint for those who seek not just to change what they do, but to reshape who they are, one deliberate step at a time.

    • Originally Published: 2018
    • Publisher: Penguin Random House, 2018
    • Genre: Self-help
    • Pages: 320
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9781847941831
    • Access: Members
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    Bad Samaritans: The Guilty Secrets of Rich Nations and the Threat to Global Prosperity

    What if those who claim to rescue the global poor are the very ones tightening their chains? Bad Samaritans rips away the moral façade of free-market evangelism, revealing a world where rich nations preach openness while guarding their own prosperity behind walls of hypocrisy. With sharp wit and unforgiving logic, it exposes the quiet sabotage embedded in economic advice—how development is stifled not by corruption or incompetence alone, but by the deliberate policies of those who “help.” Is the path to progress paved by imitation, or rebellion? This book dares readers to question the fairness of the global order—and to see who truly benefits when the powerful cry reform.

    • Originally Published: 2007
    • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2008
    • Genre: Non-fiction
    • Pages: 288
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9781905211371
    • Access: Members
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    Basic Economics: A Common Sense Guide to the Economy

    Basic Economics is a lucid, unsentimental journey through the invisible architecture that shapes every choice, every price, every life. With clarity and force, it strips away jargon and ideology to reveal how the simplest human actions—buying, selling, saving—echo across cities, nations, and generations. In a world pulsing with wants and limited means, what happens when good intentions collide with hard realities? This book invites readers to see the marketplace not as cold arithmetic, but as the ongoing story of human trade-offs, incentives, and unintended consequences. It is both a guidebook and a mirror for anyone seeking to understand how societies thrive—or unravel.

    • Originally Published: 2000
    • Publisher : Basic Books, 2014
    • Genre: Economics
    • Pages: 704
    • Book Type: Hardcover
    • ISBN-13: 978-0465060733
    • Access: Prime Membership
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    BE 2.0 (Beyond Entrepreneurship 2.0): Turning Your Business into an Enduring Great Company

    Beyond Entrepreneurship 2.0 is a masterclass in transforming vision into enduring impact, unraveling the intricate dance between bold innovation and disciplined leadership. It challenges the entrepreneur to transcend mere survival, inviting a profound inquiry: what does it take to build an enterprise that not only grows but thrives with purpose and resilience through uncertainty? This book pulses with the tension of ambition meeting strategy, illuminating the path from chaotic beginnings to lasting greatness. In the crucible of entrepreneurship, will you rise as a leader who shapes the future—or be consumed by the relentless demands of building something truly remarkable?

    • Originally Published: 1992
    • Publisher: Portfolio, 2020
    • Genre: Non-fiction
    • Pages: 352
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-0399564239
    • Access: Members
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    Beyond Good and Evil: Prelude to a Philosophy of the Future

    With a blade sharpened by irony and insight, Beyond Good and Evil tears through the comfortable illusions of morality, truth, and human greatness. In this audacious philosophical voyage, the reader is invited to abandon inherited certainties and peer into the abyss of power, instinct, and will. Is our conscience a noble guide—or a cage built by forgotten tyrants of thought? With lightning-bolt aphorisms and searing clarity, this work dares us to rethink the foundations of justice, virtue, and even the self. It is not a map, but a mirror—reflecting who we are, and who we might become when we step beyond the veil of good and evil.

    • Originally Published: 1886
    • Publisher: Cambridge University Press, 2002
    • Genre: Philosophy
    • Pages: 230
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-0521779135
    • Access: Members
  • Blue Ocean Strategy
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    Blue Ocean Strategy: How to Create Uncontested Market Space and Make Competition Irrelevant

    In a world where businesses battle for scraps in bloody waters, Blue Ocean Strategy charts a bold course toward untamed markets where competition fades and innovation reigns. It is a call to creators, visionaries, and restless thinkers to abandon the fight for dominance and instead redraw the map entirely. Through strategic clarity and imaginative leaps, it reveals how the most successful ventures are not those who outfight their rivals—but those who make them irrelevant. Can you build value without a battlefield? This is not just a book on business—it is a manifesto for those who dare to swim beyond the horizon.

    • Originally Published: 2004
    • Publisher: Harvard Business School Press, 2005
    • Genre: Business Management
    • Pages: 256
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-1591396192
    • Access: Members
  • Brave New World - Nile KenyaBrave new world
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    Brave New World

    In a world engineered for comfort, pleasure, and perfect order, what becomes of the soul that aches for meaning? Brave New World unfolds in a gleaming dystopia where humanity has traded truth for tranquility and freedom for engineered bliss. Yet beneath the narcotic hum of conformity, a quiet rebellion stirs—one that questions whether a life without pain is worth living at all. With eerie grace and razor-edged irony, this is a tale of longing in a society that has forgotten how to long.

    • Originally Published: 1932
    • Publisher: Vintage Classics, 2004
    • Genre: Novel, Science fiction, Dystopian Fiction
    • Pages: 229
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-0099477464
    • Access: Members
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    Capital Without Borders: Wealth Managers and the One Percent

    What if the true architects of global inequality wear no robes of office, but whisper behind closed doors, stitching loopholes into the fabric of the law? Capital Without Borders pulls back the velvet curtain on the elusive world of wealth managers—elite professionals who quietly move trillions through shadowy jurisdictions to preserve dynasties and defy the very notion of the nation-state. This is a journey into the parallel universe of the ultra-rich, where borders are illusions and accountability dissolves into strategy. In mapping this discreet empire, the book confronts an unsettling question: can democracy endure when capital plays by its own rules?

    • Originally Published: 2016
    • Publisher : Harvard University Press, 2020
    • Pages: 400
    • Genre: Finance
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN-13: 978-0674244771
    • Access: Members
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    Chip War: The Fight For the World’s Most Critical Technology

    Invisible to the naked eye yet powerful enough to shape empires, the microchip is the modern world’s most precious—and contested—resource. Chip War peels back the layers of global conflict not fought with missiles, but with silicon, code, and supply chains stretching across continents. In this high-stakes techno-thriller of nonfiction, nations race to control the circuitry that powers economies, armies, and everyday life. As alliances falter and dependencies deepen, one question echoes louder than ever: who holds the future when power lies in something smaller than a fingernail? Gripping, urgent, and chillingly real, this is the untold story of the silent war redefining our century.

    • Originally Published: 2022
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster, 2023
    • Genre: Non-fiction
    • Pages: 431
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9781398504127
    • Access: Members
  • Chronicles From the Land of the Happiest People on EarthQuick View
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    Chronicles From the Land of the Happiest People on Earth

    In a nation cloaked in irony—celebrated as the “happiest on earth” yet corroded by rot beneath its smiles—a doctor uncovers a macabre trade in human body parts, unraveling a sinister conspiracy that binds faith, politics, and power in a deadly knot. Chronicles from the Land of the Happiest People on Earth is a darkly satirical epic, where absurdity and horror walk hand in hand through the corridors of privilege and corruption. Can truth survive in a land where joy is manufactured, and silence is the price of peace? With baroque language and blistering wit, this novel holds up a fractured mirror to society—daring us to ask whether laughter is a balm or a mask. It is a profound and unsettling journey into the theatre of power, where even hope wears a disguise.

    • Originally Published: 2021
    • Publisher: Vintage, 2022
    • Genre: Fiction
    • Pages: 464
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9780593314470
    • Access: Members
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    Contagious: Why Things Catch On

    Why do some ideas light up the world while others fade into silence? Contagious peels back the curtain on the science of social transmission, revealing the invisible levers—emotion, story, visibility, and value—that make content irresistible and messages magnetic. With brisk insight and captivating clarity, it decodes why whispers become roars, why we share what we do, and how influence often hides in plain sight. At its core lies a tantalizing question: Is virality crafted or caught? This is a playbook not just for marketers, but for anyone who wants their ideas to live—and spread.

    • Originally Published: 2013
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster, 2013
    • Genre: Non-fiction
    • Pages: 256
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-1451686579
    • Access: Members
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    Crime and Punishment

    In the stifling alleys of St. Petersburg, a young man commits a murder—not out of greed, but out of a fevered belief in his own moral exception. Crime and Punishment plunges into the shattered psyche of Raskolnikov, whose act of violence births a torment more relentless than justice itself. As guilt and redemption collide, the novel becomes a harrowing descent into the abyss of conscience, a crucible where reason and madness blur. Can one transcend morality to reshape the world—or does the soul exact its own terrible price? This is not merely a crime story, but a haunting meditation on what it means to be human in a world of suffering and consequence.

    • Originally Published: 1866
    • Publisher: Dover Publications, 2001
    • Genre: Fiction, Psychological
    • Pages: 448
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-0486415871
    • Access: Members
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    Currency Wars: The Making of the Next Global Crisis

    Currency Wars is a chilling dispatch from the hidden battlefield where nations clash not with bombs, but with bonds, reserves, and manipulated exchange rates. In this high-stakes realm of shadow finance and strategic deception, currencies are weapons, and economic collapse is a silent coup. As the world’s financial system teeters on the edge of engineered chaos, one question rises: can a nation defend its sovereignty when its money becomes its most vulnerable flank? Rickards draws the reader into a world where monetary policy is modern warfare, and the victors may not fire a single shot—but leave entire economies in ruins. Gripping and sobering, this is a call to understand the quiet violence of global finance before its consequences become deafening.

    • Originally Published: Nov 2011
    • Publisher: Portfolio, 2012
    • Genre: Global Finance
    • Pages: 320
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-1591845560
    • Access: Members
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    Dead Aid: Why aid is not working and how there is another way for Africa

    Dead Aid delivers a fierce and fearless indictment of the foreign aid system, arguing that what was meant to heal Africa may, in fact, be helping to hold it down. With unflinching logic and moral urgency, it dismantles the comfortable myth that money alone can fix poverty, revealing instead a cycle of dependency, corruption, and arrested growth. This is not a rejection of compassion—it is a challenge to rethink what true empowerment looks like. What if generosity, poorly aimed, becomes a weapon disguised as a gift? In the ruins of well-meant intentions, Dead Aid dares to ask what Africa truly needs to rise.

    • Originally Published: 2009
    • Publisher: Penguin, 2010
    • Genre: Politics, Economics
    • Pages: 188
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-0141031187
    • Access: Members
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    Death of a Salesman

    In Death of a Salesman, the quiet tragedy of the American Dream unfolds through the fractured life of Willy Loman—a man chasing success with empty hands and fading hope. Haunted by memory and illusion, he wanders the wreckage of his past, measuring his worth in missed opportunities and imagined glory. As family and reality close in, the question echoes: what remains of a man who stakes his identity on a dream that never loved him back? Miller crafts a sorrowful, aching portrait of ambition, delusion, and the cost of needing to matter. This is not just the story of one salesman’s downfall—it is a mirror held to a society that sells identity for applause.

    • Originally Published: 1949
    • Publisher : Fingerprint Classics, 2017
    • Genre: Tragedy
    • Pages: 136
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN-13: 978-8175994300
    • Access: Members!
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    Devil on the Cross

    In a land where the soil is rich but the people starve, Devil on the Cross follows a young woman returning to her homeland only to confront a grotesque masquerade of power, greed, and betrayal. As she journeys through the heart of postcolonial Kenya, she finds herself caught in a surreal pageant of thieves who celebrate the plunder of their own nation. Told with searing lyricism and satirical fire, the novel exposes a world where devils wear the faces of patriots and justice is a song barely remembered. Can a wounded soul ignite a revolution when the devil himself is nailed not to punishment—but to praise? This is a haunting fable of resistance, dignity, and the desperate poetry of survival.

    • Originally Published: 1980
    • Publisher: Penguin Classics, 2017
    • Pages: 320
    • Genre: Novel
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9780143107361
    • Access: Members
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    Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

    Beneath the fog-choked streets of Victorian London, a brilliant doctor dares to divide the good from the evil within himself—only to unleash a darkness he cannot contain. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is a chilling psychological thriller that probes the monstrous duality of human nature with unnerving precision. As civility gives way to savagery, can one ever truly separate virtue from vice, or are both bound in the soul’s unbreakable mirror? This haunting tale whispers a question still echoing through the ages: what lurks within us when no one is watching?

    • Originally Published: 1886
    • Publisher: Vintage Classics Library, 2016
    • Genre: Gothic, Horror
    • Pages: 240
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9781784871604
    • Access: Members
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    Ego is the Enemy

    In a world that rewards noise, ambition, and self-promotion, Ego is the Enemy is a quiet rebellion—an urgent call to master the inner war between aspiration and humility. With stories of rise and ruin from history’s corridors, it unveils how ego—disguised as confidence or vision—can quietly sabotage success, cloud judgment, and sever meaning from achievement. What if the greatest obstacle to fulfillment is not the world outside, but the unchecked voice within? Clear-eyed and fiercely practical, this book offers a path not to glory, but to greatness born of self-mastery. In the silence after ego fades, what might we finally hear?

    • Originally Published: 2016
    • Publisher: Portfolio, 2016
    • Genre: Self-help
    • Pages: 256
    • Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-1591847816
    • Access: Members
  • Emotional IntelligenceEmotional Intelligence: Why It Can Matter More Than IQ
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    Emotional Intelligence: Why It Can Matter More Than IQ

    Beneath the veneer of intellect lies a hidden force that shapes our lives: the art of understanding and mastering our own emotions. Emotional Intelligence unravels the delicate threads that connect self-awareness, empathy, and resilience, revealing how these unseen powers govern success, relationships, and well-being. It challenges the myth that intelligence alone determines destiny, inviting readers into a profound journey of inner discovery and transformation. What if the key to unlocking human potential is not in logic, but in feeling? This book beckons you to explore the subtle alchemy of the heart and mind entwined.

    • Originally Published: 1995
    • Publisher: Bantam, 2005
    • Genre: Self-help
    • Pages: 352
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-0553383713
    • Access: Members
  • Emperor of All Maladies
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    Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer

    A biography not of a person, but of a relentless adversary, The Emperor of All Maladies charts the epic, often harrowing saga of cancer—from its shadowy origins in ancient texts to the modern laboratories where science battles fate. It is a tale of human defiance, where hope flickers in the corridors of hospitals and the minds of those daring to outwit a shape-shifting foe. How do we confront an enemy that is, in many ways, a distorted mirror of ourselves—our cells, our evolution, our very survival instinct gone rogue? Lyrical, haunting, and deeply humane, this is a chronicle of resilience, of the fragile victories and sobering costs that define the war against one of humanity’s oldest diseases.

    • Originally Published: 2011
    • Publisher : Fourth Estate, 2011
    • Genre: science
    • Pages: 586
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN-13: 978-0007250929
    • Access: Members
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    Execution: The Discipline of Getting Things Done

    Execution lays bare the vital, often overlooked art of turning vision into reality—a disciplined journey where strategy falters without action, and leadership is measured by results, not intentions. With incisive clarity, it exposes the tensions between ambition and accountability, revealing how the relentless pursuit of flawless execution can forge or fracture organizations. What does it take to bridge the chasm between planning and doing, and how do leaders inspire teams to carry the weight of responsibility without faltering? This book challenges readers to confront the hard truths of leadership and the unforgiving demands of making things happen in an uncertain world.

    • Originally Published: 2002
    • Publisher: Crown Business, 2002
    • Genre: Non-fiction
    • Pages: 320
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-0609610572
    • Access: Members
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    Following the Leader: Ruling China, from Deng Xiaoping to Xi Jinping

    What does it take to steer the world’s most populous nation through the crosscurrents of ambition, fear, and reform? Following the Leader opens a rare window into the minds of China’s political elite, revealing a system where power is personal, loyalty is currency, and the future hinges on a delicate dance between control and change. As rising leaders navigate an unforgiving terrain of ideology, bureaucracy, and global scrutiny, the question looms: who truly leads in a country where obedience and initiative must coexist? Both revealing and restrained, this is a story not just of politics, but of the human instincts that shape empires.

    • Originally published: February 3, 2014
    • Publisher: University of California Press, 2019
    • Genre: Non-fiction
    • Pages: 320
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9780520303478
    • Access: Members
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    Fooled By Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in the Markets

    In a world desperate for patterns, Fooled by Randomness delivers a sobering truth: much of what we call success is luck masquerading as skill. With sharp wit and intellectual daring, the book peels back the layers of financial markets, human behavior, and belief systems to reveal how easily we are deceived by noise dressed as signal. How many of our convictions rest not on reason, but on stories we tell ourselves after the fact? This is a mind-bending journey through uncertainty, where arrogance meets probability, and where humility may be the only reliable compass. It is a mirror held up to our illusions—inviting us not just to see the world differently, but to think more wisely within it.

    • Originally Published: 2001
    • Publisher: Penguin Books, 2007
    • Pages: 368
    • Genre: Self-help
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN-13: 978-0141031484
    • Access: Members
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    Frankenstein

    In a quest to conquer death itself, a brilliant but tormented scientist breathes life into a being stitched from forgotten fragments, unleashing a profound struggle between creation and creator. Frankenstein weaves a haunting tapestry of ambition, isolation, and the desperate yearning for connection in a world quick to shun the unfamiliar. As the creature grapples with its own existence and the shadows of rejection, the story probes the boundaries of human responsibility and the price of playing god. What defines true monstrosity—the malformed flesh or the heart that beats within? This timeless tale challenges us to confront the ethical depths of invention and the fragile nature of humanity.

    • Originally Published: 1818
    • Publisher: Wordsworth Classics, 1992
    • Genre: Fiction
    • Pages: 174
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9781853260230
    • Access: Members
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    Game Theory: A Very Short Introduction

    Game Theory by Ken Binmore is an elegant invitation into the grand theater of strategy, where every choice is a move and every player a potential ally or rival. With clarity and wit, it unveils the hidden logic behind cooperation, conflict, and competition—whether in politics, poker, or everyday life. Beneath its mathematical surface lies a profound question: if we are all rational, why is life so unpredictable? This is a book not just about games, but about the delicate dance between reason and desire, structure and spontaneity. In the end, it dares you to ask—are you playing the game, or is the game playing you?

    • Originally Published: 2007
    • Publisher: Oxford University Press, 2007
    • Genre: Non-fiction
    • Pages: 208
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-0199218462
    • Access: Members
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    Getting to Yes: Negotiating Agreement Without Giving In

    What if negotiation wasn’t a battle of wills, but a search for mutual truth? Getting to Yes reveals a radical yet quietly powerful approach to conflict—one where listening becomes strategy, and principled compromise paves the way to lasting resolution. In a world where egos clash and positions harden, this book dares to ask: can we separate the people from the problem, and still win? Practical yet profound, it turns the tense theatre of negotiation into a space for clarity, calm, and transformation. The stakes? Not just deals or agreements—but trust, dignity, and the art of human connection.

    • Originally Published: 1981
    • Publisher: Penguin Books, 2011
    • Genre: Self-help
    • Pages: 240
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-0143118756
    • Access: Members
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    Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism

    The Globalists pulls back the curtain on a powerful, often invisible movement—one that sought not to dismantle the nation-state, but to encase it in a legal and economic armor that would protect markets from the turbulence of democracy. Through the rise of neoliberal thought in the 20th century, it tells the provocative story of economists and visionaries who believed freedom was best safeguarded not by parliaments, but by institutions beyond the reach of the people. Can true democracy survive when sovereignty is traded for stability, and when markets are placed beyond the will of the majority? With piercing clarity and unsettling relevance, this book traces the quiet construction of a global order designed not for chaos—but for control. It is the intellectual history of a world remade behind closed doors.

    • Originally Published: March 2018
    • Publisher: Harvard University Press
    • Published: March 16, 2018
    • Genre: Neoliberalism
    • Pages: 400
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-0674979529
    • Access: Members
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    Globalization and its Discontents

    In a world knitted ever tighter by the threads of commerce and capital, Globalization and Its Discontents pulls back the curtain on the uneven bargains and broken promises of the global economy. With piercing clarity and moral urgency, it chronicles how international institutions meant to uplift the poor instead deepen their despair, as policies crafted in distant boardrooms unravel the lives of millions. Can a system that claims universality serve justice when its power is so unequally distributed—and whose voice counts when nations rise or fall on decisions they did not choose? This is not merely a critique, but a plea—for accountability, for empathy, and for a new vision of global prosperity rooted in dignity rather than dominance. It is a story of ambition betrayed, and of the silent rebellions that ripple through the streets of the global South.

    • Originally Published: 2002
    • Publisher : W. W. Norton & Company, 2003
    • Pages: 304
    • Genre: Non-Fiction
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN-13: 978-0393324396
    • Access: Members
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    Good Strategy Bad Strategy: The Difference and Why It Matters

    In a world awash with lofty goals and hollow jargon, Good Strategy/Bad Strategy cuts like a scalpel through the fog of wishful thinking to reveal a brutal truth: most plans fail not from poor execution, but from the absence of strategy itself. With the precision of a strategist and the clarity of a skeptic, it exposes the seductive ease of bad strategy—grand visions without focus, ambition without action—and replaces it with a sharp-edged framework for real-world advantage. What if the key to power lies not in setting more goals, but in confronting the hardest problem head-on? This is a thinker’s call to arms: to resist noise, embrace clarity, and dare to lead with intent in a world that rewards distraction.

    • Originally Published: 2011
    • Publisher: Profile Books, 2017
    • Genre: Non-fiction
    • Pages: 336
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-1781256176
    • Access: Members
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    Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap…And Others Don’t

    What separates the merely good from the truly great—and why do so few ever make the leap? Good to Great is a lucid, empirical exploration of the hidden engines that propel ordinary companies into excellence, revealing that greatness is not a matter of luck or charisma, but of disciplined people, relentless focus, and a willingness to confront brutal truths. Like a masterfully drawn map, it charts a course through the fog of mediocrity to a summit few dare to climb. Can greatness be engineered—or must it be born? In these pages lies a quiet but radical answer: greatness, though rare, is within reach—if we are willing to do the work.

    • Originally Published: 2001
    • Publisher: Harper Business, 2001
    • Genre: Non-fiction
    • Pages: 300
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-0066620992
    • Access: Members
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    Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance

    What if the secret to extraordinary success is not talent, but tireless resolve? Grit dives deep into the engine of human potential, arguing that passion fused with perseverance outpaces raw ability every time. With stories that pulse with triumph and defeat, it exposes the invisible force that separates the merely gifted from the truly great. In a world enamored with quick wins and natural brilliance, this book asks: what happens when you bet everything on persistence? A compelling manifesto for anyone determined to turn long days and deep purpose into lasting achievement.

    • Originally Published: 2016
    • Publisher: Scribner, 2016
    • Genre: Self-help
    • Pages: 352
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9781501111105
    • Access: Members
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    Guns, Germs and Steel: A short history of everybody for the last 13,000 years

    Why did history unfold so differently across continents, and what silent forces shaped the fate of entire civilizations? Guns, Germs and Steel is a sweeping, sobering detective story of humanity’s uneven march through time—where geography, biology, and chance played far greater roles than genius or will. In tracing the roots of global inequality not to culture or intellect but to crops, microbes, and metal, it overturns long-held myths with unflinching clarity. This is not just a chronicle of conquests, but a meditation on the fragile accidents that shaped the modern world. What if the seeds of dominance were sown in the soil itself?

    • Originally Published: 1997
    • Publisher : Vintage, 2017
    • Pages: 580
    • Genre: Non-Fiction
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN-13: 978-0099302780
    • Access: Members
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    Hacking Growth: How Today’s Fastest-Growing Companies Drive Breakout Success

    What if the secret to explosive business growth lies not in big budgets or blind luck, but in bold experiments and relentless curiosity? Hacking Growth is a fast-paced blueprint for those ready to abandon traditional marketing myths and embrace the agile, data-fueled mindset that has built some of the world’s most iconic companies. With each chapter, it challenges readers to reimagine how products spread, customers engage, and momentum is sustained—not by chance, but by design. In a world where attention is fleeting and loyalty hard-won, can growth be engineered rather than hoped for? This is the modern entrepreneur’s playbook—part science, part rebellion, and all about unlocking unstoppable traction.

    • Originally Published: 2015
    • Publisher: Penguin Random House, 2017
    • Genre: Non-fiction
    • Pages: 320
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9781524760007
    • Access: Members
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    Hamlet

    In the shadowed halls of Elsinore, a prince wrestles with grief, betrayal, and the maddening question of justice—whether to act swiftly or be paralyzed by doubt. Hamlet unfolds as a profound exploration of conscience and revenge, where the line between appearance and reality blurs into a haunting dance of suspicion and despair. What price does one pay when the soul is torn between duty and doubt, action and reflection? This timeless tragedy probes the depths of human frailty and the elusive nature of truth, inviting readers to confront the paradox of inaction amid urgent turmoil.

    • Originally Published: 1623
    • Publisher: Wordsworth Classics, 1992
    • Genre: Tragedy, Shakespearean tragedy
    • Pages: 200
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9781853260094
    • Access: Members
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    Hard Times

    In the soot-stained city of Coketown, where facts are sacred and imagination is a crime, lives are measured in productivity and hearts are left to wither. Hard Times tells the story of those caught in the iron grip of industry and ideology—children molded into machines, love reduced to calculation, and wonder smothered by cold logic. Yet even in this world of grinding gears and grim utilitarianism, a question lingers: can the soul survive where only numbers matter? With biting wit and deep compassion, this is a tale of rebellion not in battle, but in the quiet persistence of feeling, curiosity, and hope.

    • Originally Published: August 12, 1854
    • Publisher: Penguin Classics, 1985
    • Genre: Novel
    • Pages: 328
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-0140430424
    • Access: Members
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    Harry Oppenheimer: Diamonds, Gold and Dynasty

    In the glittering corridors of wealth and the shadowed chambers of apartheid South Africa, Harry Oppenheimer emerges as both titan and paradox—an industrial magnate who wielded diamond dust and political subtlety with equal precision. This sweeping biography lays bare the intricate dance between conscience and capitalism, legacy and complicity. Can a man build empires while resisting the moral decay that often feeds them? With piercing insight, the book explores how power can be used not only to dominate, but to influence, reform, and sometimes quietly defy. It is a portrait of a life lived at the fault lines of history, where ambition meets ethical ambiguity.

    • Originally Published: 2023
    • Publisher: Jonathan Ball Publishers, 2023
    • Genre: Biography
    • Pages: 593
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-1868428014
    • Access: Members
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    Heart of Darkness

    A steamer drifts up the Congo River, deeper into a wilderness that mirrors the shadows within the human soul. Heart of Darkness follows Marlow, a sailor haunted by his quest to find the elusive Kurtz—a man revered and corrupted in equal measure. As civilization fades into jungle and reason gives way to something more primal, the line between savagery and enlightenment begins to blur. What is revealed when we journey not outward, but inward, into the darkest chambers of power, greed, and conscience? Stark, hypnotic, and unsettling, this is a tale where the true horror lies not in the wild, but in the hearts of men.

    • Originally Published: April, 1899
    • Publisher: Collins Classics, 2016
    • Genre: Fiction, Novella
    • Pages: 130
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9780007368624
    • Access: Members
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    Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow

    What happens when humanity, having conquered war, famine, and plague, turns its gaze not toward survival—but toward godhood? Homo Deus is a hauntingly lucid exploration of our next great ambition: to engineer happiness, eternal life, and perhaps even divinity itself. As algorithms begin to understand us better than we understand ourselves, the book poses an unsettling question: will Homo sapiens remain masters of their destiny, or become relics of their own creation? With the cold fire of prophecy and the precision of science, this narrative beckons the reader to walk the fault line between intelligence and consciousness, freedom and programming, mortal limits and divine dreams.

    • Originally Published: 2017
    • Publisher: Vintage, 2015
    • Genre: Non-fiction
    • Pages: 526
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-1784703936
    • Access: Members
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    How Boards Work: And How They Can Work Better in a Chaotic World

    In a world where corporations shape the fate of economies, How Boards Work opens the door to the secret chambers of power—where strategy is sculpted, risk is reckoned with, and the future is quietly decided. Through lucid analysis and insider clarity, this book unravels the anatomy of the boardroom, revealing the delicate balance between governance and ambition, ethics and profit. What happens when the stewards of capitalism must choose between short-term gains and long-term survival? With poise and urgency, it challenges us to rethink who holds the reins of our financial destiny—and how they ought to wield them. A vital guide for those who dare to sit at the table where decisions ripple across the world.

    • Originally Published: May 2021
    • Publisher: Basic Books, 2021
    • Genre: Business
    • Pages: 304
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 978-1541619425
    • Access: Members
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    How the World Works

    Pulling back the curtain on empire, propaganda, and profit, How the World Works is a bracing excavation of the hidden engines driving global power. With scalpel-sharp clarity, it exposes the elegant lies and quiet violence beneath foreign policy, media narratives, and the illusion of democratic choice. This is a world where the loudest ideals mask the deepest betrayals—and where truth itself is a casualty of convenience. Can justice survive in a system built to obscure it?

    • Originally Published: 2010
    • Publisher: Hamish Hamilton, 2022
    • Genre: Non-fiction
    • Pages: 336
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9780241145388
    • Access: Members