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Slow Productivity: The Lost Art of Accomplishment Without Burnout

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Do fewer things. Work at a natural pace. Obsess over quality.

From the New York Times bestselling author of Digital Minimalism and Deep Work, a groundbreaking philosophy for pursuing meaningful accomplishment while avoiding overload.

Our current definition of “productivity� is broken. It pushes us to treat busyness as a proxy for useful effort, leading to impossibly lengthy task lists and ceaseless meetings. We’re overwhelmed by all we have to do and on the edge of burnout, left to decide between giving into soul-sapping hustle culture or rejecting ambition altogether. But are these really our only choices?

Long before the arrival of pinging inboxes and clogged schedules, history’s most creative and impactful philosophers, scientists, artists, and writers mastered the art of producing valuable work with staying power. In this timely and provocative book, Cal Newport harnesses the wisdom of these traditional knowledge workers to radically transform our modern jobs. Drawing from deep research on the habits and mindsets of a varied cast of storied thinkers—from Galileo and Isaac Newton, to Jane Austen and Georgia O’Keefe—Newport lays out the key principles of “slow productivity,� a more sustainable alternative to the aimless overwhelm that defines our current moment. Combining cultural criticism with systematic pragmatism, Newport deconstructs the absurdities inherent in standard notions of productivity, and then provides step-by-step advice for workers to replace them with a slower, more humane alternative.

From the aggressive rethinking of workload management, to introducing seasonal variation, to shifting your performance toward long-term quality, Slow Productivity provides a roadmap for escaping overload and arriving instead at a more timeless approach to pursuing meaningful accomplishment. The world of work is due for a new revolution. Slow productivity is exactly what we need.

244 pages, Hardcover

First published March 5, 2024

5081 people are currently reading
79465 people want to read

About the author

Cal Newport

109books9,697followers
Cal Newport is Provost’s Distinguished Professor of Computer Science at Georgetown University, and the author of seven books. His ideas and writing are frequently featured in major publications and on TV and radio.

From his website: "I write about the intersection of digital technology and culture. I’m particularly interested in our struggle to deploy these tools in ways that support instead of subvert the things we care about in both our personal and professional lives."

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 2,320 reviews
Profile Image for Vicky.
86 reviews37 followers
March 10, 2024
Unfortunately, I didn’t like this book. I wholeheartedly agree that we have to change how we measure productivity in knowledge work and that you need time to produce something of value, so I expected clear proposals of possible solutions or at least a well structured how-to guide.

It was everything but. The book is a collection of stories about famous people from different fields (Jewel, Benjamin Franklin, Stephenie Meyer, Steve Jobs etc.) which are relatively entertaining. Then the author draws whatever conclusions he needs to get to his point, sometimes contradicting the story or simply focusing on whatever he wants. It felt like he had read a bunch of biographies and wanted to write about them. The self-help aspect was just to sell the book to wider audiences.

When we actually get to the parts where he offers advice, it’s either very vague or non-applicable to the majority of knowledge workers. And while he addresses some of that (what to do if your schedule is not your own etc.) I found it very superficial. Many of his suggestions left me feeling like I’m not privileged enough to implement them. Find an investor? Yeah, sure.

Also, he constantly confuses knowledge work with creative work. I was confused whether I need to work less to pursue my creative hobbies that I would be able to monetise in the future (a.k.a hustling) or do I have to dedicate less time to administrative tasks so I can focus on valuable tasks in my field?

Finally, his advice is full of contradictions. Scale down your living expenses to work less but have more time! But also pay 2K for app subscriptions to make your work easier. Simplicity is the key! But also you should buy expensive things like software, hardware and notebooks to feel more “pro�. It feels like he wanted this book to be applicable to so many different people that it ended up being applicable to no one.

This book should have been a blog post.
Profile Image for Joe James.
28 reviews11 followers
March 6, 2024
I've read enough of Newport to see that like 80% of the book is just rehashing his old ideas. There are some nuggets of novelty, but also some boring anecdotes about famous people that kind of extend this book even longer. If you're in this productivity space and have heard his pitch before, there's not much to be gained here.
16 reviews2 followers
March 17, 2024
I've been a follower of Cal Newport for a while, and highly respect his approach to productivity. I particularly enjoy his typical analysis to productivity topics - he often takes a pragmatic and scientific approach to determining why his proposed theories and strategies on producing quality work actually work. This book, in no way, rises to the quality that I expect from him.

Firstly, a large portion of the book feels like re-hashed lessons from other books of the Newport canon. For instance, strategies to implement point #1 ("Do fewer things") was literally described as "greatest hits" from Deep Work and other previous books.

Second, the book excessively describes biographies of historical figures. 90% of the book seems to be retelling the history of: scientists of the 17th and 18th centuries, singer-songwriters from the late 20th century, and modern day writers. If you are the average cubicle-dwelling "knowledge worker" that Cal is apparently writing for, I hope you can relate to Jewel, because you are going to get her entire life story.

The advice here is sparse, and a large portion is inaccessible to the knowledge workers he's trying to write for. What I walked away with is: I need to be more of cinephile, have a remote cabin in the woods, not take meetings on Mondays, and tell my coworkers to basically f-off. Great, thanks Cal, I think these tips will really help my career...

When I think of this book, on a good day it makes me sad, and on a bad day it makes me mad. Why? Because Cal is better than this. This is barely a step up from those absolute trash articles like "Why YOU need to start Benjamin Franklin's ELITE morning routine". One step up. It's cherry picked historical examples that are wildly tangential.

And what makes my most mad of all is that the terrible quality of this book betrays the deep truth it's trying to advocate for - that taking your time, choosing quality and persistence over mania, pays off. And it didn't. This book had tremendous responsibility and utterly betrayed it, if not invalidated it - which is why this is such a travesty.

Profile Image for Ivan.
731 reviews116 followers
January 1, 2024
Cal Newport is my productivity sherpa. He does it again. “Do fewer things. Work at a natural pace. Obsess over quality.� He confronts the cult of pseudo-productivity and argues for a slow and steady pace. Many of his insights were tried in different formats, including his writing for The New Yorker and his podcast. So a lot of of the tactical suggestions are what he calls his “best hits.� I appreciated the ample use of historical examples, living and dead (e.g. John McPhee, Benjamin Franklin, Jane Austen, Kerouac, Ian Fleming, Lin Manuel-Miranda, Georgia O’Keefe, Jewel, John Grisham, Neil Gaiman, Tolkien, et al.).
Profile Image for Kristen Christen.
76 reviews5,405 followers
December 29, 2024
I read this book at the perfect time! Recommended by my sister Grace the successful cooperate business woman of the family. Her work was reading Slow Productivity together like a book club which is so darn cute! Reading this at the end of 2024 gave me so many ideas to bring into the new year. The idea that I can slow down but create better work by focusing on quality! So many gold nuggets! If you are a creative or entrepreneur I would HIGHLY recommend!
Profile Image for Subhashini Sivasubramanian.
Author5 books180 followers
March 27, 2024
This book was a disappointment. I love Cal Newport‘s podcast and was excited to pick this book.

I feel more confused after reading this book. Cal contradicts himself so much. I liked his other two books - Deep work and So good they can’t ignore you. They provided solid advice and were coherent. This book is incoherent though.

I think Cal had clear target audience for his other two books and he catered for them really well. In this book, he didn’t seem to have a clear target audience. He was writing for everyone and no one at the same time.

I have got more useful nuggets from his single podcast episode than this whole book. I recommend his podcast and other books, not this one.
Profile Image for Sebastian Gebski.
1,164 reviews1,275 followers
May 7, 2024
Massive disappointment - like almost every Newport's book after his stunning debut. Why so? Because of fundamental errors & hasty execution:

1. The author keeps misleading knowledge workers with creative workers & scientific researchers (that is just one example) - the nature of their work is COMPLETELY different. 90%+ examples brought here (like M. Curie-Sklodowska or astronomers) simply do not make sense ;/
2. Even the main issue the author tries to tackle seems defined wrongly ;( It's not about slow-or-fast work (as the speed of work for knowledge workers is hardly variable), but less-vs-more work (fewer or more working hours).
3. The author completely ignores the importance of execution. Creativity, awareness, correct analysis - this is all important, but the success is 90% about execution. And with execution: bandwidth/capacity is the constraint. There is time/space for creative work with "more slack" (to give space for deep thought/reflections), but sometimes it's freaking crunch time & speed-to-market is indeed what matters. Whether we like it or not :(
4. This book contains a lot of theory, but it's only backed up with bad examples (of scientists/artists/researchers), which kills all credibility.
5. Survivorship bias screams aloud from every corner of this book ;/
6. I was really glad when I realized there'd be a chapter on the pull-vs-push approach (in managing the flow of work), but ... seriously, this was very bad. If you're interested, read Goldratt or Reinertsen. You'll real 10x more.

Massive disappointment. 1.8 stars, rounded up to 2, because maybe it will inspire someone to work more on their work-life balance.
Profile Image for Antigone.
595 reviews808 followers
August 8, 2024
I was unfamiliar with Cal Newport. Which makes this my mistake.

Newport teaches computer science at Georgetown University. He's written several books and hosts a podcast called Deep Questions - none of which provided me the heads-up I required to recognize this work would be a throw-back to the wisdom we once received from efficiency experts. Because that's what the book aims toward, how to make the most efficient use of your professional energy, your professional focus, and your professional time. I, in my poetic fugue state, imagined something more along the lines of how technology has crapped all over our attention spans and snapped its whip to chivvy us through "speed art" the same way some of the more desperate among us have succumbed to speed dating. I thought, hey, Mr. Newport is going to remind me that I should be spending days and weeks and months, some serious temporal investment, on whatever I was attempting to create because the journey's the thing, and genius loves itself a patient hand, and intricacy is not only a good skill to master, it's a fine skill to master and worth going after. Byzantium, eh? Nay.

Mr. Newport, instead, would like to talk to me about "pseudo-productivity," and how much it's costing us at work to pretend to look busy. How businesses have come to value quantity of projects over quality of output. His primary focus is on "knowledge work," which he defines as: "The economic activity in which knowledge is transformed into an artifact with market value through the application of cognitive effort." And just like those efficiency experts of old who'd tighten up a factory's assembly line, our author is pretty much leading the movement to apply the same principles to office work.

Now you get a sense of how very far off-base I was with all of this. The movement is afoot, though. It's definitely afoot. And he has some excellent observations on professional burn-out, not to mention a surprising section on Jane Austen as "a powerful case" for a slower approach to productivity. In fact, his choice of personalities to sample as he made his point was distinctive and interesting and kept me going through to the end. Had I been seeking something new on the business philosophy front, this might have been the ticket. Maybe someday, who knows?
Profile Image for Maddie Fisher.
288 reviews7,239 followers
December 31, 2024
RATING BREAKDOWN
Themes: 4⭐️
Personal Enjoyment: 3⭐️
Total Rounded Average: 3.5⭐️

This non-fiction was a well-researched and validating reminder that the quality of work produced, and the satisfaction from producing it, require focus, time, and priority. I loved the tips and anecdotes throughout. I appreciate the message so much and am inspired to continue to say no, schedule focus blocks, and obsess over quality in my work and life.
Profile Image for Janssen.
1,801 reviews7,191 followers
April 1, 2024
This gave me SO MUCH to think about both in my work life and my personal life!
Profile Image for Jessica.
575 reviews
March 5, 2024
“I have two goals for this book. The first is focused: to help as many people as possible free themselves from the dehumanizing grip of pseudo-productivity. As I noted in the introduction, not everyone has access to this outcome. The philosophy I developed is meant primarily for those who engage in skilled labor with significant amounts of autonomy�

I feel like this quote should have been in the introduction and this is the issue I have with most of Cal's advice. Still giving it 4 stars cause this is good advice, but advice that many people will not be able to apply to their own work. I feel like his books are written for people who are either freelancers or higher executives. Most of us regular knowledge workers do not have any say in the way we use email or how we set up meetings.

“My suggestion is to try to put aside an afternoon to escape to the movies once per month, protecting the time on your calendar well in advance so it doesn’t get snagged by a last-minute appointment�>

That made me laugh, like I am not the master of my own hours :D I cannot do that unless I take the afternoon off. I still do it once in a while (taking the afternoon off) and I highly recommend doing the same, cause there is something so satisfying about going to the movies when everyone is at work.

Also kind of annoyed with the obsession of many digital minimalists advocates over "talking to real people". First some of us like to avoid that thank you very much, then when did you have an impromptu conversation that only laster 5 minutes? I will introduce you to some of my coworkers. As someone who works in an open plan office when I'm on site, the office is not a place where I can do deep work. At least if I'm at home I can manage the distractions (cause I am the master of the notifications of my digital tools)

So I did like the book, but I feel like the slower productivity community has the same issues as the regular one (it's very masculine for starters), it only talks to and about a very specific category of workers. Which now that I think of it, might be why I can't stick to one productivity system (or tools), those are developed by the same kind of people, and they won't work for me (you're welcome for that sudden realisation).
Profile Image for Nada Elshabrawy.
Author3 books9,258 followers
July 17, 2024
It’s not Newport’s best work but it’s still plenty useful and beneficial for me, especially now that I’m starting a PhD program and in need of every bit of inspiration.
Profile Image for Maja (majareads)  Milocanovich ☕️.
117 reviews166 followers
April 20, 2024
A slow DEATH.
I usually love Cal, let me first add that. But, this book !
Gave absolutely no value, recycled and repetitive “ideas� & if i hear “knowledge worker� one more time I’m gonna shoot myself

Sorry but this was excruciating
Profile Image for Tim Casteel.
200 reviews79 followers
March 25, 2024
Kind of choppy: Lots of “I wrote in a 2021 article that…� It felt like 30 podcasts and blog posts stitched together.

Definite step down from Deep Work and Digital Minimalism. This one was an easier/quick read but felt like an intentional move toward more story-telling a la Malcolm Gladwell, Charles Duhigg, and the Heath brothers (whereas, I prefer a more to-the-point approach). I don't need to be entertained. The upside: easy to ingest via audiobook.

Previously I would have said that Newport is on a very short list (6!) of "authors I will automatically buy and read anything they publish� but I think I’ll wait on his next one and see if it’s worth reading.

One major miss of the book: I think he mis-diagnoses what drives our need to be insanely busy.

Newport attributes it to a need to appear busy. Sending a lot of emails, constantly responding to slack makes you look like you’re a good worker. He calls this enemy "Pseudo-productivity- the use of visible activity as the primary means of approximating actual productive effort.�
That definitely happens and is a helpful reminder that activity � progress.

But I don’t think that’s at the root of what drives us to fill our schedules to the breaking point. I really like how all his books are very practical and immediately applicable. But because his diagnosis is wrong, his prescriptions are inadequate.

I think Byung-Chul Han is much closer to the truth in Burn Out Society re the auto-exploitation that is inevitable in the Achievement Society.
"Today, everyone is an auto-exploiting labourer in his or her own enterprise."

We’re all on a treadmill constantly asking “How much more do I need to achieve?� And the answer is always “More!"
But no one is making us work hard. We’re doing it to ourselves. WHY?

Because there is no one on earth who will say to us - “That’s enough.� “YOU are enough.�
Only by receiving the approval of God can we get off the treadmill.
Profile Image for Kaylee Stanton.
28 reviews1 follower
March 7, 2024
I listened to this book and the author/narrator (same person) left much to be desired. I felt good about myself while listening because I feel like I already do a lot of the things they talk about. One (and most importantly) is switching my career for something more sustainable for myself and adopting a more leisurely pace when it comes to getting stuff done and taking more intentional breaks to make sure I'm working from a full cup. Did I need to read this book? No. Am I happy I read it? Eh. Would I recommend it? Probably not.
Profile Image for Chadi Raheb.
498 reviews421 followers
reading-reviews-or-title-was-enough
May 28, 2024
The book in a nutshell without any need for reading it:
- Do less
- Focus on quality instead of quantity
- Keep a normal pace
Profile Image for Kathleen.
668 reviews90 followers
March 25, 2024
Ik las nooit eerder iets van Cal Newport hoewel ik al twee boeken van hem in mijn boekenkast heb staan. Ongelezen dus. Oeps.

Maar soms kruist een bepaald boek je weg en moet je het gewoon lezen. Dit was the right book at the right time voor mij. Ik heb er ontzettend veel aan gehad. Het heeft me aan het denken gezet over hoe ik processen binnen mijn eigen zaak kan vereenvoudigen of kan aanpakken zodat ik niet altijd aanwezig moet zijn in mijn zaak.

Voor het push/pull principe neem ik mee, want volgens mij was dat toch wel één van de redenen waardoor ik een beetje begon door te draaien. En social media blijft nog even van mijn telefoon. Als ik Instagram wil checken, dan kan ik altijd via de website snel een blik werpen.

Sowieso een boek dat ik er in de toekomst nog een aantal keren bij zal nemen en wie weet zelfs opnieuw zal lezen. En misschien moet ik toch ook maar eens werk maken van die ongelezen boeken van dezelfde auteur die hier stof staan te verzamelen. Misschien staat daar ook nog het één en het andere interessant in. Ahum.
Profile Image for Ryan Lewis.
89 reviews2 followers
March 8, 2024
This book is a miss for Newport, and it feels very much like he’s cashing in on the anti-work/quiet quitting trend. What’s good here is nothing new from his other books (especially Deep Work). Very conspicuously absent in the book is the counter, which would be the successes of people who are incessantly hustling.
Newport calls out pseudo-productivity, and this is good. But that’s also the whole point of Deep Work.
He gives his permission (thanks Cal!) and provides techniques to get away with doing less without getting noticed. Maybe some people do want or need this?

I am actually fine with what quiet quitting says that it is: stop going above and beyond and just fulfill your basic job duties. But this isn’t really what quiet quitters do. They try to see how little work they can do without getting caught and reprimanded.

If you need a break from going above and beyond and you fear that somehow that will make you fall behind in the rat race, then maybe you will find this book interesting or useful.

I found all of the stories of other people who took things slow to be interesting and inspiring (but not completely consistent).

Also, the book is written by someone who hustles incessantly.
Profile Image for David Steele.
526 reviews29 followers
March 14, 2024
I wanted to like this an awful lot more than I did. It's surprisingly full of padding for such a short book; far too many rambling digressions and anecdotes to illustrate points that were perfectly obvious without them. It's a pity, because I was a big fan of . I've noticed that the author is doing the rounds on the Podcast circuit and I think you'd be likely to get everything of value from one of those programmes in quarter of the time.
Profile Image for Montgomery Bertschy.
2 reviews
April 10, 2024
This could have been an email�

While the ideas in the book are good, they could have been described in a much shorter text, or even a 5-minute discussion. The examples used are also quite weak, but sometimes that is necessary to extend an essay into a full length book.
Profile Image for Victoria Lynn.
Author9 books1,003 followers
March 17, 2025
It's a very palatable read but I would personally have preferred less stories and more getting to the point.

A helpful approach however and a good reset if you don't know how to unplug from the grind.
Profile Image for Vinayak Hegde.
678 reviews90 followers
April 14, 2025
The majority of the book can be summed up as
1. Do fewer things
2. Work at a natural pace
3. Obsess over quality

The book has a lot of different examples of how each of these factors work. While I did like the book especially the first half, the second half felt like cherry picked examples and mostly repetition. Earlier in the book Cal Newport talk about busywork and productivity performance theatre as "some meetings could have been emails". In the context of this book, I think this could have been a long blog post or a longread article. I did not like the conflating of different types of creative work (such as a writer, scientist or a programmer). Each work has it's own rhythm and requirements set by individuals as well the context, environment and commercial considerations but the book papers over these nuances. The book surely was entertaining because of random facts which we learn about individuals but little less than the top three points above. I would rate this a 2.5 but rounding it up to 3.
Profile Image for Spens (Sphynx Reads).
702 reviews35 followers
June 2, 2025
This could have been a blog post. The principles are sound, but even then, I'm not sure how helpful this book was in suggesting how they should be executed. A lot of the book meanders when it could all just be summarized into "slow down at work and you'll have more quality results and better quality of life."
Profile Image for Hannah.
2,187 reviews380 followers
August 8, 2024
3.5. Rounding up to 4. Lots of interesting ideas worth trying with plenty of examples as to why. I’m getting ready to retire, so I found much of the content irrelevant. Perhaps I’ll find it more useful at a later point in my life under different circumstances.
Profile Image for Samin_pzr.
153 reviews32 followers
June 12, 2024
ایده جالبی داشت و خب توی مدت زمان کمی هم خوندمش ولی کتابی نیست که بگم قراره بهتون اطلاعات زیادی بده،صرفا ایده کار آهسته رو میگه و شما باید توی زندگیتون عملیش کنین و ببینین چقدر نتیجه خواهد داد؟
Profile Image for Emily Carlin.
430 reviews36 followers
Read
April 5, 2024
Anyone who is a so-called “knowledge worker� knows that you can’t just stick more hours into your brain/body and expect to get our more work on the other side. You probably also know that three hours of focused effort is almost always more #productive than six hours of hazy attention.

The awkward thing, though, is that no one has any clue how to measure email job productivity. So we can’t really say for sure. In Slow Productivity, Newport argues that this is knowledge work’s rotten core. We continue to structure our days based on the rhythms of industrial work despite literally no evidence that the 40 hour week (of “hard-won policy to limit physical fatigue from factory work� origins) translates into the very different context of contemporary office life.

And since there’s no reliable way to measure actual productivity, we engage instead in “pseudo productivity,� which Newport defines as “the use of visible activity as the primary means of approximating actual productive effort.� Since no one can tell how productive anyone else is, the easiest way to appear as such is to respond quickly to Slack messages, join every meeting you’re invited to, stay late, publicly juggle multiple projects and responsibilities, etc. etc. Newport takes it as a given that this frenetic approach produces low-quality work and is also kinda soul-damaging.

Newport offers three principles to resist the cheap thrills of pseudo-productivity: do fewer things, work at a natural pace, and obsess over quality. He calls the framework “slow productivity,� after the Slow Food/Slow Cities/other Slow X movements of the eighties and nineties. Newport: “As I read more about [the founder of the Slow Food movement], I discovered that Slow Food is about more than meals, it’s an instantiation of two deep, innovative ideas that can be applied to many different attempts to build a reform movement in response to the excesses of modernity.�

While the book does offer genuinely useful strategies for individual productivity � I’ve already benefited from using some of them � absolutely NOTHING in it resembles anything like the seeds of a “movement,� if we define that as individuals coming together to achieve a social or political end. It’s almost impressive to watch how athletically Newport has to strive to avoid the blindingly obvious political conclusions of his points. Simone Biles of mental gymnastics.

Consider Newport’s argument for bringing “seasonality� to knowledge work. He suggests that it is “unnatural� for humans to work at a consistent pace day in and day out. And since we don’t have the external structure of literal seasons that structured agricultural work, he thinks we should just impose our own:

What if, for example, you decided to “quiet quit� a single season each year: Maybe July or August, or that distracted period between Thanksgiving and the New Year? You wouldn’t make a big deal about this decision. You would just, for lack of a better word, quietly implement it before returning without fanfare to a more normal pace…An advanced tactic here is to take on a highly visible but low-impact project during this season that you can use to temporarily deflect new work that comes your way.


I find this unbearably depressing. How bleak to create a personal season! I’d say that the number one coolest thing about seasons is that everyone in the same place experiences them together. And the “advanced tactic� of being duplicitous about your own little season � even darker and more alienating. The rhythms of life hit different when you’re producing them for yourself and experiencing them alone. When the Soviet Union staggered people’s weekends in order to keep factories going at all times, people were miserable.. “it is no holiday if you have to have it alone�. What if people put their energy into organizing for federally mandated paid vacation days for everyone instead of figuring out ways to trick their employer/colleagues into not noticing when they are taking their own slow season? Ugh!!!!!!!!

Despite how uninspired I find individual seasonality, I have to concede that it would probably be net-positive for people who have enough autonomy to pull it off. And I guess that’s this book’s whole deal. Useful for individuals who have the freedom to take its advice, soul-crushingly unimaginative as any kind of vision for the future.
Profile Image for Ben.
2,724 reviews220 followers
March 14, 2024
Slow Productivity

If you are a fan of academic-level productivity, this book is for you.

Being an avid listener of Cal's wonderful podcast, Deep Questions with Cal Newport, I had been learning about the writing process and content of this book for a while - and I had a lot of excitement for it.

That being said, I found this book a lot more academic than some of his earlier work (namely , which remains as my favorite book of his). This book does quite nicely follow the same type of writing style and research that .

This book delves deeply into some big thinkers of our time (and especially the past) and what made them able to crank out many books, speeches, or careers in such a time.
Surrounded with big thoughts and deep meanings, this book is quite a read!

I found it a little dryer at times than some of his books, but all-in-all it is a great and important book on focus and how to be careful about where we spend that focus, and time.

Check it out if this sounds up your alley!

3.8/5
Profile Image for Chris Boutté.
Author8 books267 followers
March 14, 2024
Like many others, I’m a massive fan of Cal Newport. I read all of his books, even if I think he goes a bit overboard with some of his “deep work� philosophy. He still has a lot of great ideas and thoughts about doing good work. With that said, this book is extremely niche and may not appeal to a wide range of readers like some of his other books. This book is specifically for an about knowledge workers like writers, philosophers, and people who have the privilege of getting paid to think.

As per usual, Cal makes extremely strong arguments. This book is all about slowing down and creating the space necessary to think through projects to perform our best work. He shares a lot of stories from famous knowledge workers and creates some principles so we can do better work.

Even if you’re not a full-time knowledge worker, you can probably benefit from this book. I’m only a part-time knowledge worker with my writing, and I gained some value from this book. But for the majority of the population, I could imagine them just getting annoyed by this book. Newport is a pretty progressive thinker, but the people this book appeals to is mainly those of us who are privileged enough to get paid for writing, thinking, teaching, and other forms of knowledge work.

A lot of academics read my book reviews, so for most of you, this is probably a good read. But if you’re working a normal office job with little to no control over your day-to-day tasks, you can probably skip this one. Well, you can give a copy to your boss and hope they change how things are done or potentially get fired.
Profile Image for Ramón Nogueras Pérez.
679 reviews388 followers
March 12, 2024
Es muy interesante la evolución personal que ha tenido este autor. Aunque su línea es consistente (elegir aquello que es importante y eliminar distracciones, desarrollar la concentración y la capacidad de hacer cosas desafiantes), ha pasado de estar mucho más cerca de la productividad por y para señores, fan del libre mercado y todo eso, a ser plenamente consciente de la importancia de los cuidados, la carga mental que recae mucho más sobre las mujeres e, incluso, una crítica al capitalismo actual que te hace un par de veces un Marx tenía razón.

En este libro se centra en criticar el ritmo de trabajo del trabajador intelectual y la falsa definición de productividad en la que vivimos, para desarrollar una serie de sistemas para hacer menos y mejor. No esperaba una defensa del quiet quitting pero aquí está. Un gran libro, aunque quizá podría haber profundizado un poco más, que es por lo que lleva 4* en vez de 5. Muy bien.
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