Malcolm Gladwell writes in David and Goliath, about advantages and disadvantages. He tells stories of people who faced harsh disadvantages and how they end up turning them into advantages. Gladwell argues that those who face harsh disadvantages actually have the upper hand because the “underdogs” have the drive to succeed. Instead of always setting the standard of success, make your own higher standard.
Gladwell’s theory of the “underdogs,” or disadvantaged people, teaches me that I should never underestimate people. I will no longer fall into the norm, but be outside of the box. Gladwell uses his example of the “Little Pond.” His argument in this example is that being in …show more content…
I believe that it’s better to shoot higher and risk falling short then set a low bar. The people who drop out of school because they are scared to fail will fail. If you get accepted into an Ivy League college you should take that chance. Getting B’s at Stanford is better than making all A’s at an average school.
“One person pretends to be rich, yet has nothing; another pretends to be poor, yet has great wealth.” While I don't agree with Malcolm on everything, I do agree with this verse. This verse fits in so perfectly with what Malcolm is saying. The people who have less or see life like they have less, will end up having more. These kind of people work harder than those who have an easy life and don’t have anything to motivate them to do better.
I would and would not recommend this book to people. This book isn’t that interesting because of all the graphs and theories thrown at you. I do like that the book teaches a life lesson with every chapter. For me, the book was hard to get into because I like more action and mystery kinds of books. David and Goliath is a good book for people that like nonfiction and getting something out of what they