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This new volume is a sort of belated sequel to Gladwell’s first book, “The Tipping Point” (2000), which popularized its title phrase to describe the moment when a new and emerging behavior ...
Malcolm Gladwell's latest book is a follow-up to the 2000 novel, 'The Tipping Point' Malcolm Gladwell's upcoming book, Revenge of the Tipping Point: Overstories, Superspreaders, and The Rise of ...
The author revisits his 2000 bestseller "The Tipping Point," to examine the flip side of that earlier book's lessons about studying social change. Among the topics he covers: Cheetah reproduction.
Malcolm Gladwell's "Revenge of the Tipping Point" revisits and expands on his classic concepts from 2000, exploring social epidemics and their modern implications, including the COVID-19 pandemic.
When Malcolm Gladwell released The Tipping Point in 2000, the book became a huge bestseller–and Gladwell became a star. Nearly a quarter-century later, the journalist and podcaster revisits that ...
In “Revenge of the Tipping Point: Overstories, Superspreaders, and the Rise of Social Engineering,” Gladwell is rehashing and rebuilding on the concepts that he first wrote about in 2000.
Malcolm Gladwell could have written a fresh book. Instead, he created a brand extension of his 2000 hit, “The Tipping Point.” The result, “Revenge of the Tipping Point,” is a genre bender ...
It’s fair to say that “The Tipping Point” was the tipping point for Malcolm Gladwell’s career. In 2000, the book catapulted Gladwell, then a New Yorker staff writer, to literary superstardom.
ISAACSON: Your book, “The Tipping Point,” which came out about 25 years ago, spent eight years on the bestseller list. I mean, that’s huge. Why did you decide to revisit it now?
In “Revenge of the Tipping Point: Overstories, Superspreaders, and the Rise of Social Engineering,” Gladwell is rehashing and rebuilding on the concepts that he first wrote about in 2000.
Some 25 years after the publication of Gladwell's groundbreaking first book, "The Tipping Point," the author returns to the subject of social epidemics -- this time, ...