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The Art of War
by Sun Tzu
Editorial review
Two and a half millennia after it was written, this short text is still required reading on competitive strategy. Read it once for the obvious aphorisms, and again later for the structural argument: that the highest skill is to win without fighting at all.
AI-generated summary
A classical Chinese military treatise traditionally attributed to the general Sun Tzu, organized into thirteen short chapters covering planning, terrain, deception, leadership, and the use of force as a tool of last resort.
Key takeaways
- 1
Know yourself and know your enemy; in a hundred battles you will not be in danger.
- 2
The best victory is the one achieved without battle.
- 3
All warfare is based on deception — including the deception you tell yourself.
- 4
Speed and adaptation matter more than mass.
The right reader
Founders, negotiators, and anyone in a competitive arena. Pair with modern strategy texts like Rumelt's 'Good Strategy / Bad Strategy.'
What it touches
How it reads
Aphoristic, ancient, applicable.
Reading difficulty: Accessible
