Imagine a town like any other. It has a city center with some shops, residential areas, and decent public infrastructure. The only thing that makes this town unique? Everyone can only read the same 10 books. Be it at the library, online, or at home, citizens will only ever have access to 10 different titles.
It seems like a small restriction, but is it? What if these books all described dystopian cities in the future and named only challenges of organizing humans living in the same place? Most of the townfolk would constantly walk around sad and depressed, even if their lives were relatively comfortable. If the books talked about mindfulness and kindness, the vibe in most public places would be calm, and people would help each other wherever they could. Optimistic books would drive a culture of optimism, angry ones a bickering population, and so on. In any case, this tiny limitation would likely have severe consequences for how the people living in this town feel on an everyday basis.
Perhaps even more gravely, however, whatever the particular selection of books, it would keep the population trapped: trapped in the same frame of mind with the same intellectual input and no creative variety. So no matter the mood, sooner or later, the evolution of this town would come to a standstill. Whether it’s 10 great books or 10 mediocre ones, they’re not enough. The citizens of the town will starve in the idea department—unless they get more books!
When recently updating a list of 12 of my favorite nonfiction books, most of which most people will never have heard of, I ran through this thought experiment to explain why, for me, the more obscure titles have been the most rewarding. There’s nothing wrong with popular bestsellers, and I like those, too. But they’re often filled with common-sense advice and usually make less of an impression on me. When you can transfer a 150-year-old idea to a modern issue, however, sparks really start flying through your brain.
Reading widely is good for our own learning, but it helps others, too. It’s interesting to see what people think when reading the same book, but when everyone reads a different book and then we come together to discuss, that’s when ideas diffuse, merge, and morph into something better than any one of us could have come up with on their own.
There are a million good reasons to read. We read to feel, to forget, and to remember. We read for fun, for joy, and for excitement. And we read to learn, to lead, and to satisfy our natural curiosity. Whatever your reason on any given day, every now and then, pick books that lie beyond the comfort of the familiar. Pick books with an air of mystery around them, books you’re not sure you will understand but which will have an impact on you nonetheless.
Haruki Murakami famously wrote that “if you only read the books that everyone else is reading, you can only think what everyone else is thinking.” Don’t move to the town with 10 books. Keep your mind sharp and alight with creativity. If only every so often, read what no one else is reading.