Building an antilibrary: the power of unread books
Tsundoku (積ん読) is a beautiful Japanese word describing the habit of acquiring books but letting them pile up without reading them. I used to feel guilty about this tendency, and would strive to only buy new books once I had finished the ones I owned. However, the concept of the antilibrary has completely changed my mindset when it comes to unread books. Unread books can be as powerful as the ones we have read, if we choose to consider them in the right light.

Cybersecurity Myths and Misconceptions
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The Phoenix Project
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Project Zero Trust
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Hyperfocus: How to Be More Productive in a World of Distraction
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The Art of Attack: Attacker Mindset for Security Professionals
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The Staff Engineer's Path
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Secure By Design
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JavaScript from Beginner to Professional
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Succeeding with Agile
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Go in Action
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Mastering Regular Expressions
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Jenkins: The Definitive Guide
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Python Crash Course, 3Rd Edition
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Grokking Deep Learning
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Crafting an Information Security Playbook
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Hacking Kubernetes: Threat-Driven Analysis and Defense
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Threat Modeling: Designing for Security
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Microservices Security in Action
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BDD in Action
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Specification by Example
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Red Hat® Certified Technician & Engineer
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The Definitive Guide to Django
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The Cucumber Book
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Security Risk Management
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The Product is Docs
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Kubernetes in Action
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Architecture Patterns with Python
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Two Scoops of Django
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DevOps for Dummies
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Building Successful Communities of Practice
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Learn You a Haskell for Great Good!
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