BookMentionsBookMentions
Cover unavailable
Life Is in the Transitions
2 recommendations

Life Is in the Transitions

Mastering Change at Any Age

by Bruce Feiler

Adam Grant
Recommended by Adam Grant

Recommended by Adam Grant

Check price on Amazon

Proof-backed recommendation

Amazon availability

Should I read this?

Recommended by 2 sources and appears in Most Recommended Books, Personal Development, and Nonfiction.

From the New York Times bestselling author of The Secrets of Happy Families and Council of Dads, a pioneering study of the disruptions upending contemporary life and a bold guide for how to navigate life’s growing number of transitions with more meaning, balance, and joy. Bruce Feiler has long been writing about the stories that give our lives mean...

Looking for Kindle, hardcover, paperback, or audiobook editions?

Check formats, pricing, and current availability directly.

Check availability on Amazon

Why recommended

Recommended by 2 sources and appears in Most Recommended Books, Personal Development, and Nonfiction.

Recommended by notable people

People and public figures who have recommended this book.

Recommendation Signals

Recommendation proof is sourced from public posts, interviews, reading lists, and cited references.

Adam Grant

Adam Grant

Organizational psychologist; Wharton professor

The changes in our lives are fraught with uncertainty but brimming with opportunity. As a journalist whose trade is collecting and sharing stories, Bruce provides the tools to rewrite your own.

Appears In

Accidental Presidents
Try This Instead

Not sure if this is the right fit?

Consider Accidental Presidents by Jared Cohen. Recommended by 10 sources.

Accidental Presidents offers eight narrative portraits of men who succeeded to the U.S. presidency without election, using anecdote-rich scenes and readable context to show how personality and circumstance interact with office power. It’s strongest as a set of self-contained stories that make succession stakes concrete for non-specialist readers; it does not prioritize dense archival argument or exhaustive methodology, so expect some interpretive generalizations and repeated themes across cases. Use it for fast historical orientation rather than scholarly deep-dives.

Similar books

How recommendation signals are reviewed

Each recommendation is collected from a public source — interviews, articles, or curated lists — and linked to its original URL. Books with many verifiable recommendations from respected people rank higher.

Life Is in the Transitions

View on Amazon →