Good Reads

It's OK That You're Not OK
Megan Devine

I include this book in 'communication' because it is by and large about how to work through communicating with your circles about loss and grief, as well as a guide to how they might approach you more gently. It's not related to I.T. like the rest of the books that you see here, but I found it so valuable that I felt I had to share it. The author does a terrific job of validating grief, explaining why you shouldn't feel ashamed of it or rushed to 'fix' it, and providing good advice on how to push through and live with loss that will never fully go away. Really worth a read... ideally even BEFORE you suffer the kind of loss that necessitates it.

Talking from 9 to 5: Women and Men at Work
Deborah Tannen

Written in 1994, this is an eye-opening discussion of some common differences between how men and women are raised to communicate, and how this impacts work life. Full of both first- and second-hand examples, each chapter discusses issues like the glass ceiling, sense of authority, negotiation tactics, and other issues in the career world from the perspective of typical communicative differences between men and women, without further perpetuating broad stereotypes about what either gender 'should' do. A progressive read, the book nonetheless steers away from a political agenda to present a genuinely objective account of differences between how men and women are taught to talk, and how both men and women can benefit in the workplace from learning more about these typical differences.

Real-Life Responsive Web Design
Vitaly Friedman et al

A comprehensive dive into Responsive Web Design, including everything from workflow and design patterns to tools for getting the job done. From designing SVG graphics for responsive design to content analysis to leveraging media queries and layout strategies to display your content in any visual environment, this book introduces resources and techniques that will help you develop a flexible and adaptive responsive design.

Responsive Web Design
Ethan Marcotte

This book is great, and I'll tell you why. It boils Responsive Design down to exactly three major areas, cleaning up all the clutter that comes along with the term when people talk about it and all the strategies surrounding achieving it. The author then proceeds to give you really solid code examples of how to implement the strategies suggested without bogging you down with too much code in a book that is supposed to be primarily about strategy and not about re-teaching you CSS.

The Lean UX Manifesto: Principle-Driven Design
Anthony Viviano

This is a short but great read. It starts out by relaying how people finished the sentence "You're not practicing lean UX if...", and springboards from those statements into a set of principles for lean user experience design, general strategies for following them, and examples of how to apply them during to your own design processes.

Agile Project Management for speedy results!
John Carroll

From one of my favorite series for diving into any topic comes an easy-to-read introduction to Agile Project Management from a variety of perspectives, including Scrum, Extreme Programming, Lean Development, and more. Probably not the best book for those of us with agile experience, but a great read for anyone who's heard the term and wants to better understand what's involved in going agile.

Design is a Job
Mike Monteiro

Hands down the best motivational resource that I've come across for designers that need to get their rears in gear to do the work they know they can, earn the money the know they deserve, and win friends and influence people along the way. Mike had me with one of his opening sentences: "This book has a spine, and by the time you're done reading it, so will you." He reminds us that design is a job, and not just a casual favor, and that we should be confident in our work, and approach it professionally.

Elements of User Experience: User-Centered Design for the Web and Beyond
Jesse James Garrett

Garrett outlines 5 layers of User Experience design, leading us from strategy to surface, while discussing the duality of information content and functional feature consideration at each level. He discusses the interplay both within and between each of these levels of design, presenting a very well-organized overview of UX as well as some fresh perspective on the purpose and methods of the process.

Lean UX: Applying Lean Principles to Improve User Experience
Jeff Gothelf
Josh Seiden

Perhaps really more about project management than UX, this book was easy to digest, and presented UX Design in the context of agile project management using Scrum. Agile principles such as outcomes over output, freedom to fail, and releasing early and often were integrated into developing a streamlined and low-waste process for user experience design.

Content Strategy for the Web
Kristina Halvorson
Melissa Rach

Seemingly more heavily geared towards Information Architects and Editors dealing with large amounts of content, this book is still useful to application developers, and in fact addresses the similarities between information and function as content.

Just Enough Research
Erika Hall

The promotional site sums it up pretty well: "A brief cookbook of research methods. Learn how to discover your competitive advantages, spot your own blind spots and biases, understand and harness your findings, and why you should never, ever hold a focus group." It's a really nice handbook for maximizing UX research efforts, regardless of the size of your operation, although the examples in the book tend to lean towards an agency working for a fairly sizable organization.

Don't Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability
Steve Krug

Don't let the fact that this is the second edition of a book from the turn of the century turn you off of it. It's filled with all kinds of useful tidbits of information and suggestions, ranging from the obvious that you never knew to think of to some truly insightful commentary on the nature of UX work. My personal favorite from a section discussing accessibility: "How many opportunities do we have to drastically improve people's lives just by doing our job a little better?" It's not just a classic. It's a witty, entertaining, and very well-informed read.

The Art of Deception: Controlling the Human Element of Security

From Amazon: The world's most infamous hacker offers an insider's view of the low-tech threats to high-tech security. Kevin Mitnick's exploits as a cyber-desperado and fugitive form one of the most exhaustive FBI manhunts in history and have spawned dozens of articles, books, films, and documentaries. Since his release from federal prison in 1998, Mitnick has turned his life around and established himself as one of the most sought-after computer security experts worldwide. Now, in "The Art of Deception", the world's most notorious hacker gives new meaning to the old adage, "It takes a thief to catch a thief."