2013; 295 pages. Full Title: David
and Goliath: Underdogs, Misfits, and the Art of Battling Giants. New Author? : Yes. Genres : Applied Psychology; Sociology;
Non-Fiction. Overall Rating : 9*/10.
David and Goliath. Everyone has heard the tale. It has inspired generations upon generations
of readers. Big, bad Goliath trots out and
challenges the Israelites to a one-on-one battle with any champion they
choose. He’s fully armored and is
carrying a huge sword. Out steps puny
little David with only a slingshot and five smooth stones.
David plunks Goliath with his first shot, hitting him right in the forehead and stunning him. David then goes over to the giant, picks up his sword and chops off the giant’s head. From this we learn to trust in the higher powers, never get discouraged, and bravely do battle against all odds. Malcolm Gladwell has studied the details of the David and Goliath tale, and admits that there are important lessons to be learned.
But he feels the ones we’ve
been taught for generations upon generations are completely wrong.
What’s To Like...
Malcolm Gladwell divides David and Goliath into three parts, each
containing three chapters, namely:
Part 1 : The Advantages of Disadvantages (Chapters 1-3)
Topics: Girls High School basketball; Classroom size; Choosing a
college.
Part 2 : The Theory of Desirable Difficulty (Chapters 4-6)
Topics: Dyslexia; the London Blitz; the Civil Right Movement.
Part 3 : The Limits of Power (Chapters 7-9)
Topics: Northern Ireland; California’s
‘Three Strike Law’; Vichy France.
Each chapter’s title is
that of a person, none of whom I had heard of, whose life embodies the themes
of that section. Gladwell then takes
their “lessons learned” and applies them to other, usually more famous,
persons and historical events. Some of
those tangential topics will surprise you.
For instance, in Chapter 5, the theme of the London Blitz segues into
the fight against Leukemia.
There is also an Introduction, in which Gladwell meticulously
examines the David/Goliath affair tale, even suggesting that the latter was
afflicted with something called “Acromegaly” (say
what?!), which leveled the playing field.
The book closes with an Afterword,
which focuses on America’s Vietnam debacle.
I was impressed by the
author’s writing skills. Let’s face it,
a story centering on Girls’ High School Basketball sounds like a yawner, ditto
for detailing the search for a cure to Leukemia. But Gladwell somehow turns them into
fascinating subjects. Other interesting
sidelights include Lawrence of Arabia,
a cameo appearance by Julius Erving,
the neuroscience of dyslexia, and the
statistical importance of “inverted U-curves”.
Ratings…
Amazon: 4.4*/5, based on 14,018 ratings
and 3,706 reviews.
Goodreads: 3.97*/5,
based on 188,881
ratings and 11,990 reviews.
Excerpts...
Suppose you were to total up all the wars
over the past two hundred years that occurred between very large and very small
countries. Let’s say that one side has
to be at least ten times larger in population and armed might than the
other. How often do you think the bigger
side wins? Most of us would put that
number at close to 100 percent. A
tenfold difference in a lot. But
the actual answer may surprise you. When
the political scientist Ivan Arreguin did the calculation a few years ago, what
he came up with was 71.5 percent. Just
under a third of the time, the weaker country wins. (pg. 21)
Birmingham was the most racially divided
city in America. It was known as
“Johannesburg of the South.” When a
busload of civil rights activists were on their way to Birmingham, the local
police stood by while Klansmen forced their bus to the side of the road and set
it afire. Black people who tried to move
into white neighborhoods had their homes dynamited by the city’s local Ku Klux
Klansmen so often that Birmingham’s other nickname was Bombingham. (pg. 168)
The smarter your
peers, the dumber you feel; the dumber you feel, the more likely you are to
drop out of science. (pg.
85)
There’s a sprinkling of
profanity—I noted 21 instances in the entire of book—in David and Goliath, including four f-bombs and a
half-dozen cases of the "n-word" racial epithet. Most of those occurred in direct quotes of various
newsmakers.
Wikipedia mentions that the
critical response to David and Goliath was mostly negative. The criticisms generally accuse Gladwell of skewing the data
to fit his arguments. However, that Wikipedia segment closes with a
positive review, and also notes that David and Goliath was a bestseller,
reaching #4 on a NY Times chart (“Hardcover Non-Fiction”) and #5 on a USA Today chart (“Best-Selling Books”).
Personally, I think the
Malcolm Gladwell does a great job of presenting alternate views on various
strategies to use when you’re the underdog, the misfit, or the weaker
force. His conclusions are open to
debate, but hey, that’s the purpose of this book. The fact that Gladwell suggests that David
beat Goliath because of the giant having an eyesight-affecting medical
condition is of course speculative. Then
again, that whole Philistine/Israelite encounter itself is unprovable.
9 Stars. My favorite chapters were #6, #7, and the Afterword, all of which focus on real life struggles in American history, some of which I lived through. Your favorites may vary.