‘What Every CEO Must Know’: 37 Leadership Secrets for Confident, Decisive CEOs

‘What Every CEO Must Know’ is the new book by Bill Miller. Photo: Barnes & Noble

📘 Book Spotlight

What Every CEO Must Know: 37 Secrets to Lead with Confidence and Power

By Bill Miller

What’s the #1 Reason CEOs Fail?

Blind spots they never saw coming.

Most CEOs don’t fail because they lack intelligence, ambition, or drive. They fail because they miss the warning signs. Blind spots quietly erode trust, derail critical decisions, and ultimately sink companies. (Barnes & Noble, 2026)

In What Every CEO Must Know: 37 Secrets to Lead with Confidence and Power, Bill Miller reveals proven leadership strategies drawn from over 20 real-world founder and first-time CEO stories. The book offers practical guidance every CEO needs to lead with confidence, clarity, and resilience, especially when the stakes are high.

Leadership Insights from Decades of Experience

Award-winning author and trusted CEO advisor Bill Miller draws on more than 30 years of experience helping leaders navigate their toughest challenges. His approach is practical, direct, and rooted in real executive decision-making, not theory.

What You’ll Learn

This book shows CEOs how to:

  • Spot and eliminate blind spots before they sabotage credibility and trust
  • Make faster, sharper decisions, even with incomplete data
  • Lead with clarity, not cleverness, so teams can execute flawlessly
  • Turn mistakes into momentum using proven recovery strategies

Practical Tools You Can Use Immediately

Each chapter includes actionable frameworks, playbooks, and checklists, including:

  • The CEO Decision Grid
  • The 90-Day Growth Engine Challenge
  • The 8-Step Hiring Framework

These tools help leaders cut through uncertainty and move forward with confidence.

Who This Book Is For

Perfect for:

  • Startup founders
  • First-time CEOs
  • Seasoned executives seeking clarity and operational excellence

If you want to lead with confidence, decisiveness, and impact, this book belongs on your desk.

👉 Get your copy of What Every CEO Must Know today and start leading with confidence, clarity, and power.


About the Author

Bill Miller is an executive advisor, consultant, speaker, and award-winning author who helps first-time CEOs, founders, and struggling leaders lead with confidence, clarity, resilience, and power.

A former vice president and general manager, Bill has led Marketing, Product Management, Business Development, Strategic Partnerships, Development, and Operations over a 35-year career. His experience spans early-stage startups to multi-billion-dollar multinational companies, giving him rare perspective on what truly drives successful leadership.


Healing the Past to Manifest Your Future: A Review of ‘What’s True About You’

‘What’s True About You’ is the new book by Katherine Woodward Thomas. Photo: Amazon

What’s True About You by Katherine Woodward Thomas

Book Review & Overview

Katherine Woodward Thomas’ new book, What’s True About You: 7 Steps to Move Beyond Your Painful Past and Manifest Your Brightest Future, represents the leading edge of personal development, bridging the gap between trauma recovery and consciously creating a life you love.


Overview

In What’s True About You, licensed therapist and New York Times bestselling author Katherine Woodward Thomas reveals a revolutionary way to leave a painful past behind and grow into the abundant and fulfilling future you desire. (FSB Associates, 2026)

Through a radically effective, life-altering seven-step process, Thomas helps readers identify and release the false beliefs formed through past pain. These beliefs often operate beneath the surface, shaping how we see ourselves, our relationships, and what we believe is possible. By dismantling them, we are empowered to live and love as our true selves—the version we’ve always sensed we could, and should, be.

Rather than allowing the past to define or limit us, Thomas offers a refreshingly inspiring protocol for changing who we are today, opening the door to a brighter and more expansive future.


What’s Inside

The Seven Steps:

  1. Claim a Positive, Possible Future
  2. Name Your Source Fracture Story
  3. Wake Up to the True You
  4. See Yourself as Source
  5. Identify New Ways of Relating
  6. Embrace a Growth Mindset
  7. Make New Choices, Take New Actions

Part Two: The True You Breakthrough Blueprint
This section includes 22 core belief breakdowns designed to help readers pinpoint their specific fracture story, along with clear steps to finally break free from it.


Highlights

True You Premises

Premise #4: You Are the Source of Your Own Experience
Thomas emphasizes that while past experiences may not be our fault, we are fully responsible for the choices we make in the present. True healing begins when we stop blaming others and take ownership of our inner world:

“The breakthrough happens when you become willing to take 100 percent responsibility for yourself as the source of your experience.”

Step 6: Embrace a Growth Mindset

This step focuses on developing skills that support emotional and relational growth, such as communicating needs, expressing feelings honestly, and setting healthy boundaries.


Review

Katherine Woodward Thomas offers a compassionate yet practical roadmap for anyone ready to stop letting their past define their future. Her seven-step process helps readers identify and release deeply ingrained beliefs shaped by trauma, disappointment, and emotional pain.

The book balances emotional depth with actionable guidance. Thomas doesn’t rush readers toward positivity or manifestation without first inviting them to do the necessary inner healing. Through reflective exercises, real-life examples, and gentle but direct language, she shows how awareness can become a powerful gateway to transformation.

One of its greatest strengths is its emphasis on identity. Instead of focusing solely on changing circumstances, Thomas encourages readers to change who they are being in the present moment. As false narratives fall away, a more authentic and expansive self emerges, capable of deeper love, clarity, and fulfillment.

Ultimately, What’s True About You is both a healing guide and a hopeful invitation to reclaim your authentic self and consciously create a future rooted in truth, possibility, and self-compassion. It is highly recommended for fans of motivational and personal growth books, as well as anyone seeking meaningful inner transformation.

“Yet recognizing the impact that past trauma has had on us is just one leg of the journey. It’s not the destination itself. The destination we’re aspiring to is the ability to create our lives outside of the story we made up about ourselves in response to whatever happened to us.”

Rating: 4 out of 5.

About the Author

Katherine Woodward Thomas, M.A., MFT, is a licensed marriage and family therapist, New York Times bestselling author, and a pioneer in transformational psychology. For over two decades, she has developed groundbreaking methods that help people move beyond healing the past and into consciously creating the future they desire.

Her books, Calling in “The One” and Conscious Uncoupling, have sold more than 600,000 copies worldwide and sparked cultural conversations around love, relationships, and conscious endings. Her work has been featured in The New York Times, Time Magazine, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and The Today Show, reaching millions across the globe.


*Thank you to FSB Associates for the gifted copy for review consideration. I haven’t been compensated for this review and all views and opinions expressed are my own.

‘AI and I’: A Blueprint for Human Leadership in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

AI and I is the new book by Eduardo M. Arroyo. Photo: Amazon

📘 New Book Spotlight

AI and I: Merging the Horizon of Human Ingenuity and Artificial Intelligence

by Eduardo M. Arroyo

When intelligence becomes abundant, the human mind becomes the point of differentiation. (Amazon, 2026)


Are you using AI—or is AI using you?

We are standing at the edge of the greatest technological shift since the steam engine. The cost of intelligence – writing, coding, reasoning – has dropped to near zero. For many, this is terrifying. If the machine can do the work, what is left for us?

In AI and I, systems engineer and strategic consultant Eduardo M. Arroyo offers a provocative answer:

Everything.

This is not a technical manual for prompt engineering. It is a manifesto for human sovereignty.

A guide for leaders, creatives, and professionals who refuse to be replaced by an algorithm and instead choose to become the Architects of the new era.


Move Beyond the “Oracle Trap”

Too many users treat AI like a magic 8-ball, asking it for answers and outsourcing their judgment. The result? Intellectual atrophy.

Arroyo introduces Co-Engineering: a method where you stop leaning back (abdicating thought) and start leaning on, using AI as a cognitive exoskeleton, not a crutch.


What’s Inside the Book

  • The FIRRST Mindset
    A battle-tested framework—Foresight, Innovation, Reasonable Resilience, Strategy, and Teamwork, designed to navigate the VUCA world without burning out.
  • The “Decision Engine” vs. the Chatbot
    How to stop treating AI as a conversation partner and start treating it as a high-velocity motor for your intent.
  • The Copyright Victory (Case Study TX 9-455-371)
    The true story of how Arroyo secured a copyright registration for an AI-assisted work using the “Limitation of Claim” strategy, proving that you own the structure, even if the machine lays the bricks.
  • The Neurobiology of Flow
    How to use AI to bypass low-value struggle and trigger high-performance states where creativity and productivity soar.
  • The Ecosystem of 2026
    Why the future isn’t just about chatbots but about managing a digital workforce of Agents, Sensors, and Robots.

The Evolution of the “I”

Arroyo argues that we are witnessing the birth of Homo Sapiens Technologicus.

By engaging in High-Value Struggle with these systems, we aren’t just getting faster, we are expanding our cognitive capacity.

The machine has data, but it lacks scars.
It has speed, but it lacks context.
It has intelligence, but it lacks Intent.

That remains yours.


A Blueprint for the Next Decade

AI and I is your roadmap for what comes next.

Stop worrying about the robot taking your job.
Start building the future where you lead the robot.

AI does not define who you are.
It reveals it.


About the Author

Eduardo M. Arroyo is a trailblazing strategist, consultant, and innovator in strategic planning and execution. His extensive professional background provides a rigorous foundation for the methodologies and principles explored in AI and I.

Arroyo’s academic journey reflects excellence and discipline. He earned a Bachelor’s degree in Engineering Management, with a minor in Industrial Psychology, followed by a Master of Business Administration in Strategic Planning—completed within four calendar years—at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York.

Jan-Philipp Sendker Returns with ‘Akiko’s Quiet Happiness’

‘Akikos’ Quiet Happiness’ is a moving new Japan trilogy novel. Photo: Other Press

Akiko’s Quiet Happiness

The Japan Trilogy, Vol. 1
by Jan-Philipp Sendker
Translated by Daniel Bowles

The first book in a new series by the beloved author of The Art of Hearing Heartbeats trilogy is now out. Jan-Philipp Sendker returns with Akiko’s Quiet Happiness, the opening novel in The Japan Trilogy, a tender, introspective story about grief, identity, and the courage it takes to love. (Other Press, 2025)

About the Novel

Still grieving the death of her mother, 29-year-old Akiko lives alone in Tokyo, withdrawn and emotionally isolated. Her quiet, carefully contained life is interrupted one evening when she unexpectedly runs into Kento, her first love from school.

Kento now lives as a hikikomori, leading a reclusive life and only venturing outside at night. As the two former classmates reconnect, their fragile bond begins to open doors neither of them expected.

At the same time, Akiko uncovers unsettling evidence that her mother had been lying to her about their family. The discovery shakes her sense of self and forces her to confront a painful truth: she doesn’t really know who she is.

With Kento’s support, Akiko embarks on a journey into her own past, one that leads her in surprising directions and toward questions she has never dared to ask before:

  • How do I want to live?
  • And do I have the courage to love?

Perfect for fans of Satoshi Yagisawa’s Days at the Morisaki Bookshop, Akiko’s Quiet Happiness is a poignant story of family, identity, and belonging.


About the Author

Jan-Philipp Sendker, born in Hamburg in 1960, was the American correspondent for Stern from 1990 to 1995 and its Asian correspondent from 1995 to 1999. In 2000, he published Cracks in the Wall, a nonfiction book about China.

His first novel, The Art of Hearing Heartbeats, became an international bestseller. Sendker now lives in Potsdam with his family.


About the Translator

Daniel Bowles is Associate Professor of German Studies at Boston College. His translation of Imperium won the Goethe-Institut’s Helen & Kurt Wolff Translator’s Prize in 2016.

What It Means to Matter and Why It’s Essential for a Meaningful Life

Mattering is the new book by Jennifer Wallace. Photo: Penguin Random House

We live in a world more connected than ever, yet more people feel invisible, replaceable, and disconnected from purpose than at any other time in recent history.

📚 New Book Spotlight

Mattering: The Secret to a Life of Deep Connection and Purpose

by Jennifer Breheny Wallace

From award-winning journalist and bestselling author Jennifer Wallace comes Mattering, a timely and transformative book that confronts the loneliness, burnout, and loss of purpose so many people are experiencing today. (Penguin Random House, 2025)

📅 Release date: Tuesday, January 27
📘 Status: Available now for pre-order


Why Mattering Matters

In this groundbreaking work, Wallace makes a powerful and urgent case: mattering—the feeling that we are valued and that we have an opportunity to add value—is a core human need, as essential to our well-being as food and water.

Yet in today’s world, this fundamental need is increasingly unmet, with serious consequences. As mental and social health crises continue to surge, we often point to social media, the pace of modern life, or polarizing politics as the cause. Wallace argues that beneath these forces lies a deeper issue, what she calls “an erosion of mattering.”


Stories, Science, and the Cost of Feeling Invisible

With her signature warmth and insight, Wallace weaves together compelling research and deeply moving stories of mattering lost and regained. She introduces readers to:

  • Burned-out employees
  • Overwhelmed caregivers
  • People navigating grief
  • Individuals facing destabilizing life transitions

Through these stories, Mattering shows how lives are transformed when people are reminded, often in small but intentional ways, that they are valued and that their presence and contributions truly count.


The “Mattering Core”

At the heart of the book is what Wallace calls the mattering core, made up of four essential elements:

  • Recognizing your impact
  • Being relied on (but not too much)
  • Feeling prioritized
  • Being truly known and invested in

Strengthening this core helps us reconnect with purpose, deepen our relationships, and face uncertainty with greater resilience and clarity.


Who This Book Is For

Perfect for readers of Brené Brown, David Brooks, and Adam Grant, Mattering is a rare, culture-shifting book that offers a diagnosis and a remedy. With a clear roadmap and actionable takeaways, Wallace shows how to:

  • Unlock mattering within ourselves
  • Build cultures of mattering in our homes
  • Create healthier, more connected workplaces
  • Strengthen communities that support belonging

Mattering is a call to action and a blueprint for living a meaningful life and for creating the world we so urgently need.


About the Author

Jennifer Wallace is an award-winning journalist and author of the New York Times bestselling book Never Enough: When Achievement Culture Becomes Toxic—and What We Can Do About It, named an Amazon Best Book of the Year.

Her work has appeared in The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post. A graduate of Harvard College, Wallace began her journalism career in television at 60 Minutes.



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Zülfü Livaneli Returns with ‘Leyla’s House’

Leyla’s House is Zülfü Livaneli’s, one of Turkey’s great modern writers, musicians and activists, new novel. Photo: Other Press

Leyla’s House: A Novel by Zülfü Livaneli

Release Date: Tuesday, January 20, 2026
Publisher: Other Press

Tradition, modernity, displacement, and human connection collide in internationally bestselling author Zülfü Livaneli’s latest novel, Leyla’s House. Richly layered and emotionally resonant, the book explores old and new money, the legacy of the Ottoman Empire, and the complexities of modern Turkey. It’s available for pre-order now. (Other Press, 2026)

A Story of Loss, Survival, and Unexpected Friendship

Evicted from her Istanbul mansion, an elderly aristocrat forms surprising new connections across class and culture in this colorful, nuanced novel.

The last living member of a great Ottoman family, the refined yet sheltered Leyla finds herself homeless and vulnerable when her house is sold by the bank to a business tycoon and his ambitious wife. Forced out of her historic mansion on the banks of the Bosphorus, Leyla is rescued by Yusuf, the son of her family’s former gardener, now a journalist, and taken into his care.

Leyla follows Yusuf to a modern, cosmopolitan district of Istanbul, where she encounters a vibrant world of artists and outcasts, including Yusuf’s partner Roxy (real name Rukiye), a hip-hop singer. Despite initial hostility, a genuine friendship slowly develops between these two women from radically different worlds.

A Hidden History Comes to Light

When Leyla’s former home is emptied of its furniture, a startling family secret emerges. A discovered photograph reveals the old woman’s uncanny resemblance to a British officer, raising an unsettling question: could Leyla be the product of an illegitimate union between an Ottoman woman and an Englishman?

With a strong sense of romance and social insight, Leyla’s House captures a society in flux, where former Ottoman aristocrats, the nouveau riche, and Turks returning from Europe all coexist, collide, and redefine what belonging means.


About the Author

Zülfü Livaneli is Turkey’s best-selling author and a prominent political activist. Widely regarded as one of the most important Turkish cultural figures of our time, he is known for novels that interweave diverse social and historical perspectives. His acclaimed works include Bliss, Serenade for Nadia, Disquiet, The Last Island, The Fisherman and His Son, On the Back of the Tiger, and My Brother’s Story.

His books have been translated into thirty-seven languages, won numerous international literary prizes, and adapted into films, stage plays, and operas.


About the Translators

Brendan Freely

Born in Princeton in 1959, Brendan Freely studied psychology at Yale University. His translations include Two Girls by Perihan Mağden, The Gaze by Elif Şafak, and—co-translated with Yelda Türedi—Like a Sword Wound by Ahmet Altan.

Yelda Türedi

Born in Mersin, Turkey, in 1970, Yelda Türedi studied chemical engineering at Boğaziçi University. She has co-translated Ahmet Altan’s Like a Sword Wound and Love in the Days of Rebellion.


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Of Shadows and Lost Souls: Love and Loneliness in The Jinja of Blood

The Jinja of Blood: Of Shadows and Lost Souls is the exciting new fantasy novel by Vivian Bell. Photo: Amazon

The Jinja of Blood: Of Shadows and Lost Souls (Book 1)

By Vivian Bell

An ancient jinja is home to the Wind and Ice clans, vampires who spend eternity fighting loneliness and boredom. In modern-day Japan, the New Bloodline must navigate everyday life, love, and increasingly ferocious yokai.

Shun Holynorth, a vampire, lives in the frost of eternity, while Haruki Akayama, a mortal, exists within the fragility of human time. Their meeting becomes the crack through which both light and darkness seep.


Story Overview

The novel opens with Shun admiring the sun’s final rays at sunset. Even after centuries, sunsets still mesmerize him, though they stir an ancient unrest within his soul. Shun belongs to the New Bloodline, children born of vampires and immortals. As the youngest, he’s seen as delicate, earning him the nickname the Cub. Adam and Ryuu are assigned to protect him as he begins university at Aizawa Academy, where vampires and humans study side by side.

Haruki Akayama and Yoshi Yamamoto are among the human students attending Aizawa Academy. Haruki is a 20-year-old billionaire with no immediate direction in life, aside from his determination to find his mother, who disappeared during his childhood. He’s dating Sam, unaware that Sam is a vampire.

As the group begins school, friendships form and secrets surface. Shared struggles and personal drama draw them closer together, revealing unexpected similarities. Beneath their everyday lives, however, a lurking danger emerges, only briefly introduced here, as this is the first book in the series.


Review

The Jinja of Blood: Of Shadows and Lost Souls blends ancient myth with modern unease. Set within an ancient shrine, it explores what happens when immortality collides with change. The New Bloodline must balance mundane university life with the growing threat of increasingly dangerous yokai, creating a compelling tension between the ordinary and the supernatural.

Shun and Haruki’s connection acts as a bridge, allowing light, darkness, longing, and fear to seep into each other’s worlds. Bell writes their relationship with emotional sensitivity, making it feel earned rather than merely symbolic.

As the opening volume of The Jinja of Blood, the novel sets the tone for a saga focused less on spectacle and more on belonging, friendship, and love in all its complexities. While the central romance between two young men places the book firmly within queer fantasy, the broader cast adds depth and diversity.

The vampires and immortals are portrayed as beings seeking normalcy rather than reveling in blood and gore. Their longing for ordinary lives makes them relatable, despite their centuries-long existence.

The narrative flows smoothly, supported by vivid, poetic language:

“The leaves, no longer resisting, surrendered to the wind’s invitation and danced over gardens and rooftops, skimming aerials and skyscrapers.”

Because the story is set in Japan, Japanese terms appear throughout. While this occasionally slows the pacing, the included glossary is helpful. The incorporation of Japanese folklore, such as the story of Hachiko, the faithful dog who waited for his long dead owner at Shibuya Station for ten years, adds cultural richness.


Final Thoughts

Overall, The Jinja of Blood: Of Shadows and Lost Souls is a strong and atmospheric beginning to a dark urban fantasy saga. It explores themes of friendship, identity, coming of age, and love. Though categorized as LGBTQ+ fiction due to its central romance, the story’s emotional core and diverse cast give it broad appeal.

Fans of fantasy, vampire lore, and Japanese culture will find this an engaging and promising start to what is sure to be an exciting series.

“Yoshi was the only anchor that allowed him to maintain a connection to reality. Without him, he would have capsized in the tidal waves of his own soul.”

Rating: 4.5 out of 5.

About the Author

Vivian Bell is a shadow behind shrine doors, writing queer gothic tales of vampires, jinja, and cursed bloodlines. The Jinja of Blood is her debut dark fantasy, set between university corridors and yokai-haunted districts in modern-day Tokyo.


*Thank you to Vivian Bell for the gifted copy for review consideration. I haven’t been compensated for this review and all views and opinions expressed are my own.

The Future is Unreliable: The Emotions by Jean-Philippe Toussaint

The Emotions is the new novel by Jean-Philippe Toussaint. Photo: Other Press

New Book Spotlight: The Emotions by Jean-Philippe Toussaint

Do we want to know what the next few days or weeks have in store for us? Do we want to know if a new romantic or sexual encounter lies just ahead, or how close death really is? (Other Press, 2025)

The Emotions by Jean-Philippe Toussaint, one of Europe’s most celebrated contemporary writers, is a quiet yet unsettling novel that explores these questions through grief, memory, and uncertainty. Translated from the French by Mark Polizzotti, this introspective work examines how the future is imagined, misread, and often undone by the past.

Overview: What Is The Emotions About?

Set against the bureaucratic machinery of the European Union, The Emotions follows Jean Deprez, a European civil servant specializing in strategic foresight. After the death of his father, Jean begins to revisit his past while obsessively anticipating what lies ahead. He is professionally trained to predict outcomes, yet increasingly incapable of doing so in his personal life.

As political and personal upheavals unfold, including Brexit, the election of Trump, the dissolution of a relationship, and a night spent with a stranger, Jean confronts the limits of prediction and the instability of memory.

Fiction That Disrupts Reality

Toussaint’s novel functions as an experiment in how fiction destabilizes our sense of reality. Jean foresees events that never occur, fails to imagine those that will devastate him, and often does not fully grasp what he is experiencing in the present moment. Even his recollections of the past remain unreliable, filtered through grief and self-doubt.

This deliberate uncertainty transforms The Emotions into a meditation on time, both the time that has passed and the time we imagine is still to come.

Themes: Love, Politics, Masculinity, and Memory

The Emotions is an intimate exploration of mourning and emotional disorientation. Toussaint weaves together:

  • Personal grief and the death of a parent
  • The fragility of romantic relationships
  • Political instability in contemporary Europe
  • Masculinity and emotional restraint
  • The failure of rational systems to account for human feeling

The result is a subtle, contemporary novel that lingers long after the final page.

Why You Should Read The Emotions

Fans of European literary fiction in translation will find much to admire here. Readers who enjoyed Kairos by Jenny Erpenbeck or Grey Bees by Andrey Kurkov will appreciate Toussaint’s restrained prose, philosophical depth, and emotional precision.

The Emotions is ideal for readers drawn to introspective novels that examine grief, memory, and the illusion of control in modern life.

About the Author: Jean-Philippe Toussaint

Jean-Philippe Toussaint is a Belgian novelist, photographer, and filmmaker. He is the author of eighteen books, translated into more than twenty languages, and has received numerous literary awards, including the Prix Médicis (2005) for Fuir (Running Away) and the Prix Décembre (2009) for La Vérité sur Marie (The Truth About Marie).

In 2012, Toussaint created a multimedia exhibition at the Louvre Museum combining photography, video, installation art, and performance to convey literary works without written text.

About the Translator: Mark Polizzotti

Mark Polizzotti is an award-winning translator of more than fifty books from French, including works by Gustave Flaubert, Patrick Modiano, Marguerite Duras, André Breton, and Raymond Roussel. His translation of Kibogo by Scholastique Mukasonga was shortlisted for the National Book Award (2022), and his translation of Éric Vuillard’s The War of the Poor was shortlisted for the International Booker Prize (2021).

Polizzotti is also the author of eleven books, including Revolution of the Mind: The Life of André Breton and Sympathy for the Traitor: A Translation Manifesto.

The Leadership Skill That Shapes Every Business Decision (And a Book That Explains It)

Begin at the End is the new book on decision making and problem solving by Jeremy Sable. Photo: Amazon

Best Leadership and Business Books for Smarter Decision-Making

Books on leadership and business offer timeless lessons for anyone seeking to grow professionally and personally. The best leadership books explore how effective leaders communicate vision, make thoughtful decisions, and build workplace cultures rooted in trust and accountability.

Strong business books go beyond theory. They bridge strategy and execution, showing how values-driven leadership can drive sustainable business success. Readers gain practical insight into navigating change, managing teams, and balancing strategy with empathy. More than manuals for profit, leadership and decision-making books encourage self-reflection, resilience, and ethical thinking, reminding us that strong businesses are built by leaders who understand people as deeply as they understand performance.


📘 Book Recommendation: A Must-Read Leadership and Decision-Making Book

Begin at the End: The Modern Day Guide to Decision-Making

By Jeremy Sable

Begin at the End is a modern leadership and decision-making book for people who feel stuck, overthink important choices, or want a clearer way to navigate careers, relationships, finances, and life’s inevitable tradeoffs. Rather than promising perfect answers, the book focuses on choosing a direction with confidence and moving forward without regret.

This book is especially valuable for business leaders, professionals, and entrepreneurs seeking better decision-making frameworks in an increasingly complex world.


Decision Overload in the Modern Workplace

We are living in the middle of the greatest decision overload in human history and most people underestimate how much it impacts their performance, focus, and well-being.

Every day brings an avalanche of choices: endless information, constant notifications, shifting priorities, and pressure to move faster than the human brain was designed to operate. In today’s business environment, this overload leaves many professionals feeling scattered, burned out, or unsure whether their decisions are leading anywhere meaningful.

Begin at the End offers a practical solution for decision-making in high-pressure environments.


A Practical Framework for Better Business Decisions

Drawing from more than a decade of mission-critical consulting, Jeremy Sable explains why much of today’s decision-making advice is outdated. He introduces a modern system that helps leaders, professionals, and teams make smarter, faster, and more confident decisions.

Instead of reacting to available options, readers learn how to anchor every decision to a clearly defined outcome. This outcome-first approach improves clarity, focus, execution, and creativity, skills essential for leadership, business growth, and long-term success.


Key Takeaways from Begin at the End

In this leadership and decision-making book, readers will learn how to:

  • Apply Outcome-First Thinking to bring clarity to every decision
  • Use AI as a strategic decision-making tool, not a distraction
  • Generate better options under pressure and tight deadlines
  • Avoid false either/or thinking that limits leadership potential
  • Build feedback loops that turn decisions into long-term momentum
  • Reduce decision fatigue and make clarity a daily habit

This is not theoretical advice. It’s a real-world playbook for business leaders, professionals, and anyone responsible for making high-stakes decisions.


Why This Book Matters for Leaders and Professionals

If you’ve ever thought, “There has to be a better way to make decisions at work and in life,” this book delivers that solution. Begin at the End provides a practical clarity system that helps leaders align decisions with purpose, values, and long-term outcomes.

For anyone interested in leadership development, business strategy, or personal growth, this book is a valuable addition to your reading list.


About the Author: Jeremy Sable

Jeremy Sable helps people make better decisions when the stakes are real and the answers aren’t obvious. Raised in the suburbs of Atlanta, he studied engineering at Virginia Tech before beginning his career in government consulting in Washington, DC, an environment where leaders regularly make decisions with incomplete information and real consequences.

His work blends consulting and engineering frameworks with personal experience and real-world constraints. Jeremy believes most people aren’t bad at decision-making, they’re overwhelmed, overinformed, and rarely taught how to decide effectively.

The Dream of the Jaguar: A Lush Saga of Family and Destiny

‘The Dream of the Jaguar’ by Miguel Bonnefoy. Photo: Other Press

New Book Spotlight: The Dream of the Jaguar by Miguel Bonnefoy

Miguel Bonnefoy’s prize-winning novel The Dream of the Jaguar is a sweeping and enchanting family saga. Echoing the lush storytelling of One Hundred Years of Solitude and the emotional depth of Isabel Allende’s work, this novel explores colonialism, cultural identity, and the enduring ties of heritage. Through unforgettable characters, Bonnefoy illuminates the vibrant, complicated history of Venezuela. (Other Press, 2025)

A Story Born on the Steps of a Church

The novel opens when a beggar in Maracaibo, Venezuela, discovers a newborn on the steps of a church. She cannot foresee the extraordinary destiny awaiting the child she takes in.

Raised in poverty, Antonio’s life begins as a cigarette seller and porter, later a servant in a brothel, yet his relentless energy and charisma ultimately lead him to become one of the most celebrated surgeons in his country.

A Lineage Shaped by Love, Ambition, and Country

Antonio’s life intertwines with that of Ana Maria, who becomes the first female doctor in the region. Their daughter, named Venezuela, dreams not of her homeland but of Paris, yet the novel reminds us that no matter how far we travel, our roots remain.

It is through the notebook of Cristobal, the final link in this extraordinary lineage, that the family’s full, astonishing story unfolds.

A Lush, Multi-Generational Epic

Inspired by Bonnefoy’s own ancestry, The Dream of the Jaguar paints a vivid portrait of a family whose fate is inseparable from that of Venezuela itself, a vibrant, emotional saga of identity, ambition, and history.


About the Author

Miguel Bonnefoy, born in France in 1986 to a Venezuelan mother and Chilean father, is an acclaimed novelist whose previous works, Octavio’s Journey and Black Sugar, each sold more than thirty thousand copies in France and have been translated worldwide.

He received the Prix du Jeune Écrivain in 2013, and his novel Heritage earned widespread praise, becoming a finalist for the Prix Femina, the Grand Prix de l’Académie française, and the Goncourt Prize.


About the Translator

Ruth Diver holds a PhD in French and comparative literature from the University of Paris 8 and the University of Auckland. Her translation work has earned multiple honors, including two 2018 French Voices Awards and Asymptote’s Close Approximations fiction prize. She brings exceptional sensitivity and clarity to Bonnefoy’s text.