Here are some books I've read from semi-recently which felt like they had "about a blog post's worth of useful information" (probably an exaggeration, but still):
Oftentimes such books will repeat their core points over and over, or include a lot of detail which feels irrelevant/overly technical and I will soon forget. In my experience, it's surprisingly common for books written for a general audience to include technical details and descriptions which are only meaningful for a specialist. Even though the book is hundreds of pages long, and there's plenty of room, the author still doesn't provide the necessary background knowledge to interpret the technical details they're including.
>Most books I read have a lot of information, if they didn't I would stop reading.
https://www.amazon.com/Iron-Steam-Money-Industrial-Revolutio...
https://www.amazon.com/Rents-How-Marketing-Causes-Inequality...
https://www.amazon.com/Chaos-Making-Science-James-Gleick/dp/...
Oftentimes such books will repeat their core points over and over, or include a lot of detail which feels irrelevant/overly technical and I will soon forget. In my experience, it's surprisingly common for books written for a general audience to include technical details and descriptions which are only meaningful for a specialist. Even though the book is hundreds of pages long, and there's plenty of room, the author still doesn't provide the necessary background knowledge to interpret the technical details they're including.
>Most books I read have a lot of information, if they didn't I would stop reading.
Any tips on finding such books?