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Women are taking over the world be it in the sphere of business, sports or politics. Women, and men all over the world look up to greats such as Hillary Clinton, Meg Whitman, Indra Nooyi and Sheryl Sandberg.
BloombergQuint takes a look at the the reading list of these great women to give you an insight to their likes, dislikes and intellect.
Hilary Clinton made history by becoming the first American woman to win the Democratic presidential nomination, just two weeks ago. Clinton likes reading fiction, especially crime and mystery novels in her spare time. Here is a list of her favourite books according to interviews she did with the New York Times and the Washington Post.
The Pulitzer prize winner, the story is about a 13-year-old New Yorker who survives an accident which kills his mother.
Set in the 19th century, the Elizabeth Gilbert novel, follows the story of Anna Whittaker, a botanist who sets out to study evolution around the same time as Charles Darwin undertakes his study on the subject.
One of the longest novels ever published in a single volume in the English language, A Suitable Boy is a love story set in 1950s India.
The book is a memoir by British ceramicist Edmund de Waal about a family who lost everything when the Nazis ‘aryanised’ their property.
During her speech at the Democratic National Convention, Chelsea Clinton mentioned that her mother always make time to read to Chelsea’s daughter. Within a day of her speech, the sales of the three books Chelsea mentioned, rocketed exponentially.
Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg, founder of the Lean In campaign, and author of the book Lean In has devoted a lot of time to women’s issues. Here’s a list of some her favourite books, according to an interview she did with the New York Times:
In 2014, Sandberg launched a campaign to ban the word “bossy” to encourage young women to seek more leadership roles.
Written by her college roommate, the book is a research piece illuminating each phase of the queen’s tumultuous life
Sheryl is currently working on her second book, Option B with author and professor Adam Grant.
Indian-born, naturalised American Indra Nooyi is the current CEO of PepsiCo.
Citing this book as one that inspired her, Nooyi in an interview with Fortune said:
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