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Surrender to Lead by Jessica Kriegel The Counterintuitive Approach to Driving Extraordinary Results

What's it about? Surrender to Lead (2026) challenges you to abandon the exhausting illusion of total control in favor of cultural alignment and shared ownership. It lays out how to build high-performance environments by shifting your focus from managing individual actions to shaping the experiences that drive collective beliefs. The result is a practical approach to leading with clarity, adaptability, and an “Above the Line” mindset. You likely know the exhaustion that comes with feeling solely responsible for every outcome in your life and work. The belief that if you just grip the wheel a bit tighter, the road will finally straighten out. Yet that constant pressure often leaves you feeling more like a passenger in your own career than the driver you were meant to be. In this lesson, you’ll find a path to a different kind of strength – one that doesn’t rely on force or the relentless pursuit of control. By the end, you’ll move beyond the frantic energy of micromanagement and in...

Super Nintendo by Keza MacDonald The Game-Changing Company That Unlocked the Power of Play

What's it about? Super Nintendo (2026) traces Nintendo’s rise from its origins to one of the world’s most influential game companies, focusing on the ideas, people, and products that shaped its history. It explores the stories behind franchises like Mario, Zelda, and PokΓ©mon, along with consoles such as the Game Boy, Wii, and Switch, to show how Nintendo changed the way people play. For more than a century, Nintendo has kept returning to the same basic question: What makes play feel alive? The answer changed shape over time – from hanafuda cards to toys, handhelds, consoles, and game worlds packed with surprises – but the core idea stayed remarkably steady. Nintendo rarely built its identity around raw technical power alone. What set it apart was a steady focus on delight, curiosity, and the small pleasures that make play feel immediate and human. Seen that way, Nintendo’s history represents a way of thinking about why games matter, and why play remains such a deep part of being ...

Permanence by Lisa Broderick Become the Person You Want to Be – and Stay That Way

What's it about? Permanence (2026) reveals a simple daily system that turns good intentions into steady, lasting personal change. You’ll discover how a handful of short questions, answered honestly each day, can sharpen your focus, strengthen your follow-through, and keep your growth on track even when motivation dips. This is a practical guide for those who like structure, and small habits that compound into big results. If you’ve come to this lesson, there’s a good chance you’ve tried your hand at some self-help techniques in the past. Perhaps it was to be better at your job, to be a better parent or partner, or maybe just to take better care of yourself. And yet, even when these techniques are easy to understand, we keep struggling and looking for more solutions. Why is that? Well, there’s a big difference between understanding what needs to be done and doing it. In this lesson, we’re going to narrow that gap. We’re going to look at a way to help nudge you in the direction of ...

Change Your Game by J. Chad Mitchell Ditch Doubt, Find Your Voice, and Impact the World

What's it about? Change Your Game (2026) is a story-driven guide for teens and young adults, which makes the case that leadership isn’t something to grow into someday – it’s something you can practice right now, no title or permission required. Drawing on real-world examples, it helps you build the confidence, empathy, and self-awareness to positively influence the people around you. The world has a leadership crisis, but not the kind you think. We don’t lack leaders – we lack leaders worth following. Pick up any newspaper and you’ll find politicians driven by greed, executives blinded by quarterly profits, and influencers peddling hollow values. The previous generation handed us a world scarred by their choices, and now they offer advice from the same playbook that created the mess. Here’s what they won’t tell you: the best people to lead young people aren’t weathered executives or seasoned politicians. They’re you. Right now, there are 1. 8 billion people aged 10–24 on this pla...

Your Best Meeting Ever by Rebecca Hinds 7 Principles for Designing Meetings That Get Things Done

What's it about? Your Best Meeting Ever (2026) explains how to redesign meetings like a well-built product, so they consistently produce clear decisions, real progress, and accountability. It offers practical principles for deciding when a meeting should happen at all and for structuring preparation, participation, and follow-through so time spent together actually moves work forward. Have you ever walked out of a meeting feeling a little lost, unsure what actually changed because you were there? That’s usually a sign the time together wasn’t planned with enough care. When meetings run on autopilot, they tend to spread and blur, and the hours you meant to spend doing focused work get pushed to the edges of your day. Before long, your calendar is setting the agenda for you, and progress slows down in subtle ways. The good news is that this isn’t mysterious or complicated to fix. A handful of clear rules and repeatable habits can make meetings noticeably tighter and more useful. ...

Everything is Obvious by Duncan J. Watts Once You Know the Answer

What's it about? Everything Is Obvious offers insights into the failures of the most commonly used method of explaining human behavior: common sense. By offering sound solutions to common sense reasoning, it gives the reader the tools to better attempt to understand human behavior. Every morning, people wake up and make thousands of decisions without thinking twice. Which shoe goes on first. Whether to grab an umbrella. Which side of the escalator to stand on. These micro-choices flow effortlessly, guided by something we rarely question: common sense. It's the accumulated wisdom of ordinary life – a mental library built from years of navigating social situations, avoiding embarrassment, and learning what works. Common sense tells you not to show up to work without pants. It tells you not to touch the stove when it's glowing red. It's the reason you know to look both ways before crossing the street, even when the light is green. But here's where things get interest...