New from Riverhead Books: Messy: The Power of Disorder to Transform Our Lives by Tim Harford.
About the book, from the publisher:
From the award-winning columnist and author of the national bestseller The Undercover Economist comes a provocative big idea book about the genuine benefits of being messy: at home, at work, in the classroom, and beyond.Learn more about the book and author at Tim Harford's website, Facebook page, and Twitter perch.
Messy: The Power of Disorder to Transform Our Lives celebrates the benefits that messiness has in our lives: why it’s important, why we resist it, and why we should embrace it instead. Using research from neuroscience, psychology, social science, as well as captivating examples of real people doing extraordinary things, Tim Harford explains that the human qualities we value – creativity, responsiveness, resilience – are integral to the disorder, confusion, and disarray that produce them.
From the music studio of Brian Eno to the Lincoln Memorial with Martin Luther King, Jr., from the board room to the classroom, messiness lies at the core of how we innovate, how we achieve, how we reach each other – in short, how we succeed.
In Messy, you’ll learn about the unexpected connections between creativity and mess; understand why unexpected changes of plans, unfamiliar people, and unforeseen events can help generate new ideas and opportunities as they make you anxious and angry; and come to appreciate that the human inclination for tidiness – in our personal and professional lives, online, even in children’s play – can mask deep and debilitating fragility that keep us from innovation.
Stimulating and readable as it points exciting ways forward, Messy is an insightful exploration of the real advantages of mess in our lives.
Tim Harford: top 10 undercover economics books.
The Page 69 Test: The Undercover Economist.
The Page 69 Test:The Logic of Life.
The Page 99 Test: Adapt: Why Success Always Starts with Failure.
The Page 99 Test: The Undercover Economist Strikes Back.
Writers Read: Tim Harford (February 2014).
--Marshal Zeringue