December quarterly update


In the past, I've sent monthly updates, but I haven't been publishing enough in the past several months for that. So you're getting a quarterly update instead for now. This quarter, I posted only 1 book summary and 1 blog post:

Book summaries

  • Essentialism by Greg McKeown (23 mins). ​This can be a useful read, if you're feeling a bit overwhelmed and hoping to get your priorities straight heading into 2026. You've probably heard much of the advice before, but I still find I need the reminder every now and again.

Blog posts

  • 2025 Round-up (4 mins). Each year I do a round-up with my 3 favourite books and a brief update on how the site's been doing.

Thanks for subscribing! I wish you all the best for 2026.

Best,
To Summarise

ToSummarise.com

I summarise non-fiction books with more detail and critical analysis than you'll find elsewhere. Join my newsletter to get new summaries delivered straight to your inbox!

Read more from ToSummarise.com

My latest summary for Chokepoints: American Power in the Age of Economic Warfare explains how the US started using its financial and technological power to achieve foreign policy goals. While it doesn’t discuss use of physical chokepoints like the current Strait of Hormuz blockade, Fishman gives us rich insight into how economic warfare decisions (including those that led to the 2015 Iran nuclear deal) were made. As usual, the key takeaways are below, and you can find the full summary by...

Hope 2026 has gotten off a good start for you. I'm still publishing on a slower schedule, with 2 book summaries and 2 blog posts this quarter: Book summaries Seeing Like A State by James C Scott (33 mins). Scott explains how states simplify and standardise complex societies to make them “legible” to distant rulers and, in doing so, reshape those societies. Why Nations Fail by Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson (27 mins). The book argues that institutions, rather than geography or culture, are...

It's been a while since my last summary and newsletter. Since I'm not publishing as often, I'm only sending out the newsletter quarterly for the time being (instead of monthly) - just an FYI. Anyway, I've published a new summary: Why Nations Fail by Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson. They won a Nobel Prize in 2024 for their work arguing that institutions are key to understanding why some nations succeed and others fail. As usual, the key takeaways are below, and you can find the full summary...