challenging dark emotional informative reflective fast-paced

I felt as though this book lacked a focal message. While the information discussed was of high quality, it was difficult to identify what was the authors primary purpose of the book.
challenging emotional informative reflective fast-paced

3.5
challenging hopeful informative reflective tense fast-paced
informative reflective medium-paced
informative reflective medium-paced

very opinionated for a book advertised as evidenced based; moreover, had to stop the book because … why are we saying we must apologize to sexual assault bystanders because we as humans always believe the truth first ??? comparing our inability to catch a lie in a social experiment versus being confronted by evidence of pedophilia is vastly different

i stopped the book

I found this book fascinating! If you like Freakonomics, you'll probably like this book as well. I love how he examined his questions from the angle of many different news stories and took a deep dive into different view points. The audiobook was incredibly well done - great narrator (Malcolm Gladwell himself), podcast-style production, musical interludes, and different voices for different stories. If you're an audiobook person, LISTEN to this. I had the book in print as well and noticed he provides a lot of footnotes. I may flip back through the book to see some of his additional points, as I don't think the footnotes were included in the audio.

Like all of Gladwell’s books, a fun and interesting read. Full of little anecdotes that are more than suspect and make you wonder what he’s leaving out to make these anecdotes so interesting. Like all pop psychology, it’s neatly packaged and easy to consume.

The most interesting concept in the whole book was that of coupling theory and the impact that time and place has on suicide and also on policing.

Other than that, I’m not sure the thesis of this book really came together into something meaningful and cohesive.