I liked Davidâs previous book... but this one is <b>even better.</b> His key premise is one I haven't found elsewhere: that <b>conversational and social skills aren't just innate traitsâthey can be learned and improved upon</b>... Itâs more than a guide to better conversations; itâs <b>a blueprint for a more connected and humane way of living.</b>
- Bill Gates, 5 Great Things To Read and Watch this summer
<b>Original and useful</b>⌠Brooks is a chatty, likeable guide
The TLS
A hands-on guide to making meaningful human connections
Kirkus Reviews
It really is <b>a manual for our times</b> - and <b>everyone should read it</b>
- Matthew D'Ancona,
He writes brilliantly⌠charming and enthusiastic⌠[Brooks] offers easily digestible advice to give the reader constructive and practical tools for genuinely listening and having better interpersonal conversations
Church Times
David Brooks's superb new book
The New European
<b>I raced through the book,</b> which is <b>well-structured and engagingly written</b>, <b>and afterwards found myself making a greater effort in conversations.</b> At the school gates, I swapped my formulaic how-are-yous for questions that invite a more genuine response, sometimes simply: âHowâs your day been?â I became more alert to my bad habit of âtoppingâ â when someone confides in you and you top it with a sob story of your own. I made tiny changes, things that friends would be unlikely to notice â and yet <b>the difference was transformative</b>
- Sophie McBain, The New Statesman
<i>How to Know A Person</i> offers a series of well-wrought stories and punchy reflections on relationship-building
Church Times