I didn’t set a target for books that I want to read this year but taking inventory of the total number today shows that I did not do badly.
I categorise books into four groups; Non-Fiction, Fiction, IT Related and In Progress.
NON-FICTION:
- Killing the Rising Sun by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard: I love history and most especially World War II, this book explains the Pacific Ocean Theater and the Atomic Bomb. Amazon and Goodreads review
- Chaos Monkey by Antonio García Martínez: I learnt a lot about Silicon Valley, Facebook, Marketing and Advertisement from this book. Amazon and Goodreads review
- Sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari: As a Christian, I don’t agree with most of what the writer says but mehn, this book has widened my knowledge of history. Amazon and Goodreads review
- Disrupted by Daniel Lyons: Entertaining book on Start-Ups and the author’s experience working for one. Amazon and Goodreads review
- Killing Patton by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard: I enjoy all Bill O’Reilly books and this is no exception. Amazon and Goodreads review
- 13 Hours by Mitchell Zuckoff: The true story of the Battle of Benghazi, I prefer the book to the movie. Amazon and Goodreads review
- Lights Out by Ted Koppel: Fascinating and frightening book on what will happen to the power grid in the USA in the event of Cyber Attack. Amazon and Goodreads review
- The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg: Interesting book on the science of habits. Amazon and Goodreads review
- When to Rob a Bank by Stephen J. Dubner and Steven Levitt: A curated collection of ideas or suggestions from the Freakonomics blog. Amazon and Goodreads review
FICTION:
- Rogue Lawyer by John Grisham: Goodreads review
- The Survivor by Vince Flynn: Goodreads review
- The Black Widow by Daniel Silva: Goodreads review
- The English Spy by Daniel Silva: Goodreads review
- How to get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia by Mohsin Hamid: Goodreads review
- The Phoenix Project by Gene Kim, George Spafford, and Kevin Behr: A must read for anyone in IT. My favourite book for this year. Amazon and Goodreads review
IT RELATED:
- Ansible: From Beginner to Pro by Michael Heap: I learnt how to create Ansible playbooks in my labs with this book. Amazon review
- RHCSA/RHCE Red Hat Linux Certification Study Guide by Michael Jang: I read this book for my RHCSA, it is highly recommended for anyone that’s interested in either certification. I will definitely use it for my RHCE next year. Amazon review
- Learning Proxmox VE by Rik Goldman: I switched from XenServer to Proxmox as my homelab hypervisor because of this book. PacktPub link
- XenServer Administration Handbook by J.K. Benedict and Tim Mackey: I like Xenserver not only because it is free but also because it is robust and high scalable and can handle almost everything like Vsphere ESXi. I recommend this book for SysAdmins that want to manage XenServer in production. SafariBooksOnline
- Docker for Sysadmins by Nigel Poulton: This book explained Docker and Containers to me in simple terms. Amazon review
- Windows Server 2016 Cookbook by Jordan Krause: This book will be my reference for Windows Server 2016. Amazon and PacktPub
- Building a Modern Data Center by Scott D. Lowe, David M. Davis & James Green: This is a must read for those interested in HyperConvergence and Software Defined Data Center. Amazon
IN PROGRESS:
These are books that I am still reading or that I have abandoned. Finishing a book is a herculean task for me because I am easily bored, distracted and constrained for the time by my other interests such as movies and video games. The books that I have abandoned this year are more than the ones that I completed. I am still interested in completing the five books below. ??
- God’s Generals Volume 1 by Roberts Liardon: Goodreads review
- Ghettoside by Jill Leovy: Goodreads review
- The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins: Goodreads review
- The Girl in the Spider’s Web by David Lagercrantz: Goodreads review
- Homo Deus by Yuval Noah Harari: Amazon review