Hidden Gems
Books cited repeatedly by other authors but rarely surfaced by mainstream reading lists.
Every book below has been cited at least three times by other titles in the collection. Yet each one is either older than most "must read" lists or sits below the inflated-rating threshold most recommendation engines chase. These are the books power readers keep discovering second-hand — the quiet influences other authors never stop returning to.
1Thinking, Fast and Slow
by Daniel Kahneman
Cited by 1012011
2Flow
by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
Cited by 681990
3Influence
by Robert Cialdini
Cited by 511984
4Emotional Intelligence
by Daniel Goleman
Cited by 471995
5Good to Great
by Jim Collins
Cited by 432001
6Man's Search for Meaning
by Viktor Frankl
Cited by 431946
7Mindset
by Carol Dweck
Cited by 402006
8The Selfish Gene
by Richard Dawkins
Cited by 371976
9The Innovator's Dilemma
by Clayton Christensen
Cited by 331997
10The Lean Startup
by Eric Ries
Cited by 292011
11The Origin of Species
by Charles Darwin
Cited by 291859
12The Mythical Man-Month
by Frederick Brooks
Cited by 241975
13Meditations
by Marcus Aurelius
Cited by 23180
14The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
by Stephen Covey
Cited by 231989
15The Effective Executive
by Peter Drucker
Cited by 211967
16Nudge
by Richard Thaler
Cited by 202008
17Steve Jobs
by Walter Isaacson
Cited by 202011
18The Black Swan
by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Cited by 192007
19The Design of Everyday Things
by Don Norman
Cited by 181988
20How to Win Friends and Influence People
by Dale Carnegie
Cited by 161936
21Guns, Germs, and Steel
by Jared Diamond
Cited by 151997
22The Tao Te Ching
by Lao Tzu
Cited by 15
23The Lessons of History
by Will Durant
Cited by 151968
24Getting Things Done
by David Allen
Cited by 142001
25Built to Last
by Jim Collins
Cited by 141994
26Drive
by Daniel Pink
Cited by 142009
27Silent Spring
by Rachel Carson
Cited by 141962
28Predictably Irrational
by Dan Ariely
Cited by 132008
29Letters from a Stoic
by Seneca
Cited by 1265
30The Art of War
by Sun Tzu
Cited by 11