Book #7: Imagine: How Creativity Works
100 Non-Fiction Books Challenge
Book 7 in a series of 100 non-fiction books for 2025
Book Overview
- Genre: Psychology
- Author: Jonah Lehrer
- Summary: This book delves into the science behind creativity, offering insights and answers to common questions about where good ideas come from.
Key Takeaways
So What Did I Learn?
- Creativity thrives on contrast: Structured thinking combined with chaotic brainstorming leads to breakthroughs.
- Breakthroughs often follow giving up: The subconscious continues working on problems even when we think we have quit.
- Cities breed creativity: Crowded, chaotic environments foster creative ideas due to diverse people, problems, and perspectives.
- Failure is a warm-up act: Many successful creatives fail numerous times before achieving gold. Embrace flops with flair.
Favorite Bits
- Bob Dylan’s inspiration: Like a Rolling Stone was written after he stormed off the road and locked himself in a house. Drama can spark creativity.
- Lazy hacks as genius: The creators of Swiffer developed it from watching someone clean with a paper towel taped to a broomstick.
- Solo brainstorming: Lehrer suggests individuals brainstorm alone before refining ideas with others. Embrace anti-social productivity.
Why It Took Me to Read
Honestly, I was in a reading slump. This book was a slow burn due to its dense content and my brain’s nap and Netflix cravings. However, once I engaged, I couldn’t stop underlining and nodding, feeling smarter while also allowing myself to space out and call it "deep creative thinking."