A few years ago, Adam Gopnik, a longtime writer for The New Yorker and three-time winner of the National Magazine Award, started thinking about all the things he wasn't good at. He couldn't dance the foxtrot or bake a brioche. Well into his 50s, he still had no idea how to drive a car. To make matters worse, when he looked around, he saw people who could do these things — often with great skill. How, he wondered, did they do it? How do any of us get good at the things we're good at? And how do some of us become next-level masters? To answer those questions, Adam set out to master the skills he lacked, and he has written up the results in a profound little book, "The Real Work: On the Mystery of Mastery."
AFTERLIFE: Sebastian Junger’s Journey to the Edge and Back
FUNNER: How Language Evolves and Why It Matters
DEMON OF UNREST: Why the Civil War Matters Today (with Erik Larson)
ALGEBRA OF WEALTH: Scott Galloway’s Formula for Financial Success
WHY WE REMEMBER: The New Science of Improving Your Memory
SLOW PRODUCTIVITY: Can We Get More Done by Doing Less?
MAGICAL OVERTHINKING: Why Modern Life Is Making Us More Irrational
Everything Paul Bloom Knows About Psychology
GET THE PICTURE: Why Bother With Art?
LOOK AGAIN: How to See Your Life With Fresh Eyes
GENEROSITY: How Simple Acts of Kindness Can Change the World
BURN BOOK: Kara Swisher Takes on Big Tech
SUPERCOMMUNICATORS: How to Connect With Anyone
MIDLIFE: Once a Crisis, Now an Opportunity
RADICAL CANDOR: Why Compassionate Honesty Is a Gift
BLOCKCHAIN: Why Chris Dixon Still Thinks It Matters
BIG BETS: A Practical Guide to Changing the World
CLIMATE OPTIMISM: Can We Still Build a Sustainable World?
FREE WILL: Are We Better Off Without It?
ATOMIC HABITS: James Clear’s Ultimate Guide to Building Good Habits (and Breaking Bad Ones)
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Vanished Podcast
American Scandal
The Generation Why Podcast
The Minds of Madness - True Crime Stories
American History Tellers