Books Bill Gates recommends right now? The Great Gatsby F. Scot Fitzgerald: The book portrays the Jazz Age very accurately talks about the disillusionment of money, status and lavish living. The story revolves around a rich man Jay Gatsby who threw glamourous parties at his Long Island’s mansion. Although there were hundreds of guests, loud jazz music, champagne and confetti all around, Jay Gatsby was distant and uninterested because he had only one guest to impress – a married, elegant and charismatic woman from Kentucky, Daisy Buchanan. A tragic pursuit by Gatsby for attaining the unattainable even when he was living an ‘American Dream’ life shows that happiness is more than what money and status are all about. Here is what Bill Gates said about this book: “The novel that I re-read the most. Melinda and I love one line so much that we had it painted on a wall in our house: ‘His dream must have seemed so close that he could hardly fail to grasp it.'” “Power comes not from knowledge kept but from knowledge shared.” Read additional details on Bill Gates recommendation books.
While compiling books for his annual summer recommendations, Bill Gates realized that the topics in his list were hardly the “stuff of beach reads.” At the top of that list is “How the World Really Works” by Vaclav Smil, Gates’ favorite author. The book focuses on the intricacies of industry and innovation. “If you want a brief but thorough education in numeric thinking about many of the fundamental forces that shape human life, this is the book to read,” Gates wrote in a blog post.
Doors crashed through the powerful World Book Encyclopedia set at age 8, however, he had maybe his greatest impression as an 11-year-old in his congregation affirmation class. Consistently, Reverend Dale Turner moved his students to remember parts 5-7 of the Book of Matthew – a.k.a. the Sermon on the Mount – and offered the effective ones supper on the Space Needle. At the point when Gates proceeded, Reverend Turner was paralyzed as the kid presented the around 2,000-word text with zero blunders. While 31 of his cohorts ultimately got to chow down at the Space Needle Restaurant, Gates was the main one to convey an immaculate exhibition.
Bill and his now ex-wife Melinda Gates have three kids—Jennifer, Rory, and Phoebe. A fun fact is that they weren’t allowed to have a phone until the age of 14. They also won’t inherit their dad’s entire fortune. We don’t feel too bad about them, though. The year was 1975. Bill Gates and his partner and childhood friend Paul Allen founded software company Microsoft—and the rest is history. When he stepped down from the company in 2020, however, he owned just about 1% of its shares. So, who is the owner of Microsoft now? According to Yahoo! Finance, the largest shareholder as of 2022, is Vanguard Group, Inc., with 8.2%. No single individual has a majority interest in the company.
The Heart by Maylis de Kerangal: I have to confess I’m not entirely sure about this one, as Gates says only “Heart” is one of his favorites and there are a lot of books out there with the word “Heart” in the title. But I think it’s a fair bet that he’s referring to this novel about the untimely death of a young man and his family’s decision to donate his heart because Gates wrote a rave review about it several years back. “It’s poetry disguised as a novel,” Gates said of the book at the time, noting, “At times I found myself reading more slowly than usual, simply because the way she describes things is so beautiful. Find even more information at snapreads.com.