The best book I read this month made me very angry. That strong response is why Cal Newport’s Slow Productivity: The Lost Art of Accomplishment Without Burnout I chose the book as my best read of June 2026.
To be clear, my anger is not directed at the book or its author. It’s anger at how the system exploits and harms workers, treating them like machines instead of human beings.
Newport argues that knowledge workers burn out from the relentless pace they are expected to work at and the amount of work they are expected to do. He points to the rise of what he calls “pseudo-productivity,” or the appearance of busyness, which often interferes with true productivity. Workers are expected to look busy all the time, when in reality, human beings need slow times and down times not just for their health but also to produce their best work. This feeds into another of Newport’s arguments: that the focus has shifted from quality of work to quantity.
Newport offers a plan to counter all of this:
Do fewer things.
Work at a natural pace.
Obsess over quality.
It’s a good plan but not always realistic. Many knowledge workers do not have the power or authority to implement it, in whole or in part. To his credit, Newport does acknowledge this. Still, his book made me want to burn everything down so we could start all over again. Knowledge workers of the world, unite!