61 pages • 2 hours read
410
Book • Nonfiction
2009
Adult
16-99 years
Malcolm Gladwell's What the Dog Saw and Other Adventures is a collection of 19 eclectic essays from The New Yorker that delve into various topics like minor geniuses, flawed reasoning in disasters, intellectual property, and societal generalizations about success. The essays explore figures like Ron Popeil and Cesar Millan, critique modern assumptions about data interpretation, and question conventional views on genius and personality assessment. The book includes material related to catastrophic events and criminal behavior patterns.
Informative
Contemplative
Inspirational
105,718 ratings
Loved it
Mixed feelings
Not a fan
Malcolm Gladwell's What the Dog Saw is praised for its engaging storytelling and insightful analysis of various subjects. Reviewers appreciate the thought-provoking nature and clarity of Gladwell's essays. However, some critics note a lack of depth in certain topics and feel the collection is uneven, with some essays more compelling than others. Overall, it is a stimulating read for fans of Gladwell's work.
Readers who enjoy What the Dog Saw by Malcolm Gladwell are curious about human behavior, intrigued by sociology, and appreciate narrative nonfiction. Fans of Freakonomics by Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner or Outliers by Gladwell himself will find similar appeal in its engaging exploration of everyday marvels and anomalies.
105,718 ratings
Loved it
Mixed feelings
Not a fan
410
Book • Nonfiction
2009
Adult
16-99 years
Continue your reading experience
Subscribe now to unlock the rest of this Study Guide plus our full library, which features expert-written summaries and analyses of 8,000+ additional titles.