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View AllSorry! Messy: How to be Creative and Resilient in a Tidy-minded World Tim Harford is sold out.
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Why you should not miss this book:
• The new book from the author of The Undercover Economist shows us how we can lead messier lives - and why we should.
• Over one million copies of The Undercover Economist have been sold worldwide.
Praise for Tim Harford
• "Every Tim Harford book is a cause for celebration"- Malcolm Gladwell
• "One of the best writers who also happens to be an economist"- Stephen Dubner
• "Ranging expertly across business, politics and the arts, Tim Harford makes a compelling case for the creative benefits of disorganization, improvisation and confusion. His liberating message: you'll be more successful if you stop struggling so hard to plan or control your success. Messy is a deeply researched, endlessly eye-opening adventure in the life-changing magic of not tidying up”-- Oliver Burkeman
ABOUT THE BOOK
The urge to tidiness seems to be rooted deep in the human psyche. Many of us feel threatened by anything that is vague, unplanned, scattered around or hard to describe. We find comfort in having a script to rely on, a system to follow, in being able to categorise and file away. We all benefit from tidy organisation - up to a point. A large library needs a reference system. Global trade needs the shipping container. Scientific collaboration needs measurement units. But the forces of tidiness have marched too far. Corporate middle managers and government bureaucrats have long tended to insist that everything must have a label, a number and a logical place in a logical system. Now that they are armed with computers and serial numbers, there is little to hold this tidy-mindedness in check. It's even spilling into our personal lives, as we corral our children into sanitised play areas or entrust our quest for love to the soulless algorithms of dating websites. Order is imposed when chaos would be more productive. Or if not chaos, then . . . messiness.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Tim Harford is a senior columnist for the Financial Times and the presenter of Radio 4's More or Less. He was the winner of the Bastiat Prize for economic journalism in 2006, and More or Less was commended for excellence in journalism by the Royal Statistical Society in 2010, 11 & 12.
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