Acknowledgments
I’m happy to say that Outliers conforms to its own thesis. It was very much a collective effort. I was
inspired, as I seem to always be, by the work of Richard Nisbett. It was reading the Culture of Honor
that set in motion a lot of the thinking that led to this book. Thank you, Professor Nisbett.
As always, I prevailed upon my friends to critique various drafts of the manuscript. Happily, they
complied, and Outliers is infinitely better as a result. Many thanks to Jacob Weisberg, Terry Martin,
Robert McCrum, Sarah Lyall, Charles Randolph, Tali Farhadian, Zoe Rosenfeld, and Bruce Headlam.
Stacey Kalish and Sarah Kessler did yeoman’s work in research and fact-checking. Suzy Hansen
performed her usual editorial magic. David Remnick graciously gave me time off from my duties at
The New Yorker to complete this book. Thank you, as always, David. Henry Finder, my editor at The
New Yorker, saved me from myself and reminded me how to think, as he always does. I have worked
with Henry for so long that I now have what I like to call the “internal Finder,” which is a self-
correcting voice inside my head that gives me the benefit of Henry’s wisdom even when he is not
there. Both Finders—internal and external—were invaluable.
Bill Phillips and I have been two for two so far, and I’m very grateful I was able to enlist his
Midas touch once more. Thank you, Bill. Here’s hoping we go three for three. Will Goodlad and
Stefan McGrath at Penguin in England, and Michael Pietsch and—especially—Geoff Shandler at
Little, Brown saw this manuscript through, from start to finish. Thanks to the rest of the team at Little,
Brown as well: Heather Fain and Heather Rizzo and Junie Dahn. My fellow Canadian Pamela
Marshall is a word wizard. I cannot imagine publishing a book without her.
Two final words of appreciation. Tina Bennett, my agent, has been with me from the very
beginning. She is insightful and thoughtful and encouraging and unfailingly wise, and when I think of
what she has done for me, I feel as lucky as a hockey player born on January 1.
I owe thanks most of all, though, to my parents, Graham and Joyce. This is a book about the
meaning of work, and I learned that work can be meaningful from my father. Everything he does—
from his most complex academic mathematics to digging in the garden—he tackles with joy and
resolve and enthusiasm. My earliest memories of my father are of seeing him work at his desk and
realizing that he was happy. I did not know it then, but that was one of the most precious gifts a father
can give his child. My mother, for her part, taught me how to express myself; she taught me that there
is beauty in saying something clearly and simply. She read every word of this book and tried to hold
me to that standard. My grandmother Daisy, to whom Outliers is dedicated, gave my mother the gift of
opportunity. My mother has done the same for me.
About the Author
Malcolm Gladwell has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 1996. He is the author of The
Tipping Point, Blink, Outliers, and What the Dog Saw. Prior to joining The New Yorker, he was a
reporter at the Washington Post. Gladwell was born in England and grew up in rural Ontario. He
now lives in New York.
gladwell.com
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