What are the books that shaped us as programmers?

This is the question I posed on our Slack’s #random channel, and it quickly turned into encouragement to write an actual list. This isn’t necessarily limited to the dry technical books you’re used to -- it can include related historical nonfiction, sci-fi that inspired us, or seemingly unrelated non-fiction like Thinking in Bets or Tao te Ching. It’s whatever inspired us to hack and create more. With that, I’d like to present our full-time dev team’s lists! 🎉

Austin’s List

In this list, I tried to include a good mix of hard tech + soft tech + historical non-fiction + apparently irrelevant non-fiction + similarly irrelevant fiction. It did shape me as a programmer, though.
All of this inspired me to hack. I specifically owe a great debt to Steven Levy and his book Hackers -- that book provided so many heroes. Likewise, books like Neuromancer, with protagonists like Case, and especially Molly, gave a cool context to something that was externally considered unbearably dry and boring.
In short, the point of this list is to highlight the importance of books that weren’t so technically detailed in the development of a hacker’s brain. But I ramble -- read on, hackers, and discover!

Dane’s List

I don't read nearly as much as Austin so my list is a bit more modest. I tend to focus more on design, psychology, and data. As a developer, I really want to understand why users do what they do. I've always found the how part of the equation to be a little frustrating but very solvable with a few Google searches. The why part of the equation requires deeper reading and experience.

Storm’s List

The books that shaped me as a developer rarely have anything to do with programming (there are only five listed below), as most of what I learn comes from online content and tutorials.
My list mostly contains “work-life methodology” books that have helped me form ideas on how to manage my time and focus, and are cross-industry. My fiction reading is a leisurely activity, so I wouldn’t say they’ve shaped me as a programmer in any way.
For that reason, what follows is only non-fiction and consists largely of analytical and business approaches as well as UX.