Eight months in, 2020 has turned out to be a year like no other in recent memory—one dominated by a global pandemic, destabilizing lockdowns, unending work-from-home weeks, and—depending on which continent you’re on—upended summer or winter travel plans. Meanwhile, we’ve borne witness to an unprecedented groundswell of protests and dialogue, especially in the US, as we collectively grapple with enduring racial-justice and equity challenges.
Now, we find ourselves at that moment in August when, even in a pandemic, professional lives often slow down. It’s also the moment when McKinsey Global Publishing typically asks business leaders to share books they have recently read, plan to revisit, or look forward to reading.
This year, we have consciously broadened our horizons to ask leaders and personalities from diverse fields and global organizations to talk about the books that have inspired them or, in many cases, provided a much-needed respite from our daily, often virtual, realities. We hope you will be as intrigued as we were when these 60 leaders shared their recommendations with McKinsey Global Publishing’s Raju Narisetti.
For added inspiration, we have also curated summer book recommendations from the Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, Washington Post, Guardian, Harvard Business School, and the long list of the 2020 Booker Prize. We’ve also included some recommendations from the editorial staff of McKinsey Global Publishing. Our hope is that this compilation helps you find opportunities to reflect and recharge as we prepare for what will likely be a challenging and unpredictable fall.
On August 17, the Financial Times unveiled the 2020 long list for our annual Business Book of the Year Award. The judges winnowed those selections to a short list that was announced September 23 by McKinsey senior partner Dame Vivian Hunt. Read more about this year’s short list on our blog. The 2020 winner, announced December 1, is No Filter: The Inside Story of Instagram, by Sarah Frier. Learn more about the winning book, and see who received the Bracken Bower Prize for the best 2020 business book proposal, on our blog.
If you haven’t read it already, we recommend the 2019 winner Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Men, by journalist and activist Caroline Criado Perez. Here’s more from our blog on last year’s short list and winner.