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"Competing in the Age of AI" Featured on Bloomberg's The Best Books of 2020 List

Originally published in Bloomberg. Below is an excerpt from the article:

Considering the challenges presented by 2020, many of the books business leaders recommend this year aren't technically business books at all—or from this year, for that matter: John Barry's 2004 history of an earlier pandemic, The Great Influenza, was cited by both Axel Hefer, managing director of Trivago, and David Solomon, chairman and chief executive officer of Goldman Sachs, who called it “important to try and help put the pandemic into context.”

Even among books published in the last 12 months, an attempt to find historical analogies to present-day issues runs through the selections. Erik Larson's epic retelling of Winston Churchill's handling of the 1940 Blitz, The Splendid and the Vile, was a popular choice. “The book speaks to fearless leadership in the darkest hour,” says Jonathan Gray, president and chief operating officer of Blackstone Group. “A powerful lesson for the challenges of 2020.”

Not all the selection are as serious. Larry Gagosian, the blue-chip art gallerist, used Sam Wasson's history of the movie Chinatown to find new meaning in producer Robert Evans's famous quote that the path to success was to “bet on talent.” And Mary Mack, CEO of consumer and small business banking at Wells Fargo, described Glennon Doyle's memoir Untamed as “an authentic and empowering kick in the tail.” Here are the year's 52 best books.

Read the entire list here.