Recently, I am unsatisfied about spending a lot of time on consuming knowledge, rather then producing. As soon as I get to some level of expertise in some area, the benefit of passive reading approaches zero. So I plan to write more and code more (mastering Julia for mathematics and CS) in 2020.
A few titles I enjoyed this year:
"An Invitation to Applied Category Theory" by Brendan Fong, David I. Spivak.
It was fun to dig deeper into categories and read how you can apply thinking in them to different domains: databases, signal processing, circuits. Some mathematical background is probably required. It is available for free as a PDF:
http://math.mit.edu/~dspivak/teaching/sp18/ or if you are, like me, love collecting good titles in paper, a hardcover copy is nice with good paper and colour pictures:
https://www.amazon.com/Invitation-Applied-Category-Theory-Co...
"Can't Hurt Me" by David Goggins. https://davidgoggins.com/book/ It helped me to start running, and I keep doing it. It improved my mindset about overcoming physical discomfort, inspired to cultivate a savage mindset within. I lost a few kgs as well. There is an audio version of it.
This and Object Prototypes (You Don't Know JS Series)
Fall: Or Dodge in Hell
Fortress Marin
Count Zero
Become What You Are (Alan Watts)
Swords and Circuitry
Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth
The High Sierra of California
Trees of Power
I highly recommend Data Intensive Applications, as have many others on HN.
If you live around San Francisco, and don't know the history of the shore batteries across the Bay, Fortress Marin is a nice, short, illustrated history of California's coastal defenses. There are good places to go hiking / camping in that area around the old fortifications.
I'm into planting trees and gardening, so I thoroughly enjoyed Trees of Power by Akiva Silver.
Designing Data-Intensive Applications: The Big Ideas Behind Reliable, Scalable - One of best industry related books I have read, and I think I need to read it couple more times. I highly recommend it.
Burn the Fat, Feed the Muscle - Explains and gives you action plan for your weight loss/muscle gaining yourney. It cleary explains macronutrients, how much to eat and in what proportions. Since there is so much misinformation on internet about nutrition, this book exlpains "real truth" and makes it simple as it is.
Child 44 - Amazing novel that took place in Staljinistic Russia. Except great plot it gives you great insight in what was to live in Communist system under Staljin regime.
A few titles I enjoyed this year:
"An Invitation to Applied Category Theory" by Brendan Fong, David I. Spivak. It was fun to dig deeper into categories and read how you can apply thinking in them to different domains: databases, signal processing, circuits. Some mathematical background is probably required. It is available for free as a PDF: http://math.mit.edu/~dspivak/teaching/sp18/ or if you are, like me, love collecting good titles in paper, a hardcover copy is nice with good paper and colour pictures: https://www.amazon.com/Invitation-Applied-Category-Theory-Co...
"Can't Hurt Me" by David Goggins. https://davidgoggins.com/book/ It helped me to start running, and I keep doing it. It improved my mindset about overcoming physical discomfort, inspired to cultivate a savage mindset within. I lost a few kgs as well. There is an audio version of it.
"Turn the Ship Around" by David Marquet http://davidmarquet-com.3dcartstores.com/Autographed-Book-Ha... A book on leadership, told as a story of transforming the team on the nuclear submarine USS Santa Fe. Not that boring like usual leadership titles.