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| Meta Title | Book review on "Atomic Habits" by James Clear - Andy Grunwald |
| Meta Description | A book review on Atomic Habits: An Easy and Proven Way to Build Good Habits and Break Bad Ones by James Clear. |
| Meta Canonical | null |
| Boilerpipe Text | tl;dr
: Good book about moving towards your goals with (very) small steps.
Various insights into real-life stories, new perspectives, and practical tips on destroying bad or establishing new habits.
Recommended if you like
James articles
and his style.
The book is full of this: Go, buy, and read it -
Atomic Habits by James Clear
.
Why did I read this book?
I found James Clear via
Issue #333 of the Software Lead Weekly
Newsletter with his article on
The 3 Stages of Failure in Life and Work (And How to Fix Them)
.
His other
articles
also caught my interest.
I always had a high interest in productivity, time management, and getting better as yesterday.
I like to learn, to know the context and why we are doing it what we are doing.
Good habits can help you with all of this.
Maybe there are some new tricks in this book I never heard of?
What do I like about this book?
Content
What James presents is enjoyable, actionable, and easy to follow.
He provides a simple and proven four-step framework on how to establish new habits.
Underlined with thousands of good examples from real life.
By doing this, he doesn’t hide the complex reality and mentions areas like how hard it is to stick to your habits and how he overcomes this.
It will provide you new perspectives.
Maybe if you
really
wanted it, you’d actually do it. But the truth is, our real motivation is to be lazy and to do what is convenient. And despite what the latest productivity best seller will tell you, this is a smart strategy, not a dumb one
James Clear in
Atomic Habits: An Easy and Proven Way to Build Good Habits and Break Bad Ones
James is not perfect
He has spent
some
time diving into the theory of habits, but he still keeps realistic.
James is mentioning that
it is inevitable that life will interrupt you [and your habits] at some point
.
It emphasizes the feeling that this is normal and human.
I like it.
Reality
I especially like how James points out the hard truth of our lives:
Habits can get automatic and boring at some time
;
If you really want something, you do it. Otherwise, you don’t want it enough
;
We still need to act on it
.
He doesn’t try to hide it.
Your actions reveal how badly you want something
. If you keep saying something is a priority but you never act on it, then you don’t really want it. It’s time to have an honest conversation with yourself. Your actions reveal your true motivations.
James Clear in
Atomic Habits: An Easy and Proven Way to Build Good Habits and Break Bad Ones
Side Stories
A lot of chapters start with small real-life Stories. Like how people have benefitted from little habits (how
Jerry Seinfeld
has trained writing jokes) or to underline a particular behavior (like
the influence of group pressure by Solomon Asch
).
It is fun to read them.
They don’t come along like typical “success stories”, but more in a style that you can relate to.
Awareness
James emphasizes the small things in your life and the world.
He highlights small steps.
He shifts your attention to “
the obvious
, writes about this, and lets you think for a while.
It is about the small steps (1% better or
micro habits
) and the long run.
Not the big shot for the short term.
”Academic” notes
At the end of the book, there are 25 pages of references incl. Links, books, and
doi’s
.
These enable you to dive deeper into every area mentioned as in an academic report.
[Establishing a habit] is a continuous process. There is no finish line. There is no permanent solution.
James Clear in
Atomic Habits: An Easy and Proven Way to Build Good Habits and Break Bad Ones
Chapter Summaries
Every chapter ends with a few key sentences.
When you have finished this chapter, what should you keep in your mind?
I find those helpful and pleasant to look at later (e.g., in a reference style).
What can make this book better in the next edition?
Bonus chapters
There are bonus chapters mentioned about
how to apply the ideas from the book to business
or
parenting
.
Sadly they are only available online.
Especially when you read this book at a location where you don’t want the internet.
I would love to see those included in the book, even if this would raise the price.
Would I recommend reading this book?
Rather yes
.
I enjoyed this book and had a good time reading it.
James is pointing out several new perspectives to look at things that
seem
to be simple, but in reality, they are not.
I am motivated to change my style while trying to establish new habits, stop bad ones, and apply a few presented techniques.
However, I think this book is not for everyone.
You need to be interested in the area of improving yourself; otherwise, you might not stick to complete this ~270 pages book.
If you are not sure about this for yourself, start with
James Interview at
CBS This Morning
or
the articles on his website
.
I recommend this book to everyone who …
has an interest in getting better each day
wants to reach a goal but don’t know how to start
loves getting context on why humans are behaving like they do when it comes to habits
Is there more to read?
Yes, of course:
Interview with James Clear at
CBS This Morning
with
Why habits are the “compound interest” of self-improvement
Articles
by James Clear on his website
Flow State
The article
trivago Flow Lab: The Science of Productivity
by Sören, Kirill, and Philipp
The book
Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity
by David Allen |
| Markdown | [» andygrunwald](https://andygrunwald.com/)
- [✍️ Blog](https://andygrunwald.com/blog/ "Blog of Andy Grunwald")
- [👨‍🔬 About](https://andygrunwald.com/about/ "About Andy Grunwald")
- [🏗️ Work with me](https://andygrunwald.com/work-with-me/ "Work with Andy Grunwald")
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[» andygrunwald](https://andygrunwald.com/)
- [✍️ Blog](https://andygrunwald.com/blog/ "Blog of Andy Grunwald")
- [👨‍🔬 About](https://andygrunwald.com/about/ "About Andy Grunwald")
- [🏗️ Work with me](https://andygrunwald.com/work-with-me/ "Work with Andy Grunwald")
- [🎙️ Engineering Kiosk Podcast](https://engineeringkiosk.dev/ "Engineering Kiosk Podcast")
© 2026 All rights reserved.
# Book review on "Atomic Habits" by James Clear
Tuesday, 2 July 2019
Books
**tl;dr**: Good book about moving towards your goals with (very) small steps. Various insights into real-life stories, new perspectives, and practical tips on destroying bad or establishing new habits. Recommended if you like [James articles](https://jamesclear.com/articles "Articles by James Clear") and his style. The book is full of this: Go, buy, and read it - [Atomic Habits by James Clear](https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/1847941834/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1638&creative=6742&linkCode=as2&creativeASIN=1847941834&linkId=655500f09dc93b189f346505fad8f425).

## Why did I read this book?
I found James Clear via [Issue \#333 of the Software Lead Weekly](https://softwareleadweekly.com/issues/333 "Issue #333 of the Software Lead Weekly") Newsletter with his article on [The 3 Stages of Failure in Life and Work (And How to Fix Them)](https://jamesclear.com/3-stages-of-failure "The 3 Stages of Failure in Life and Work (And How to Fix Them) by James Clear"). His other [articles](https://jamesclear.com/articles "Articles by James Clear") also caught my interest.
I always had a high interest in productivity, time management, and getting better as yesterday. I like to learn, to know the context and why we are doing it what we are doing. Good habits can help you with all of this. Maybe there are some new tricks in this book I never heard of?
## What do I like about this book?
### Content
What James presents is enjoyable, actionable, and easy to follow. He provides a simple and proven four-step framework on how to establish new habits. Underlined with thousands of good examples from real life. By doing this, he doesn’t hide the complex reality and mentions areas like how hard it is to stick to your habits and how he overcomes this. It will provide you new perspectives.
Maybe if you **really** wanted it, you’d actually do it. But the truth is, our real motivation is to be lazy and to do what is convenient. And despite what the latest productivity best seller will tell you, this is a smart strategy, not a dumb one
James Clear in *Atomic Habits: An Easy and Proven Way to Build Good Habits and Break Bad Ones*
### James is not perfect
He has spent *some* time diving into the theory of habits, but he still keeps realistic. James is mentioning that *it is inevitable that life will interrupt you \[and your habits\] at some point*. It emphasizes the feeling that this is normal and human. I like it.
### Reality
I especially like how James points out the hard truth of our lives: *Habits can get automatic and boring at some time*; *If you really want something, you do it. Otherwise, you don’t want it enough*; *We still need to act on it*. He doesn’t try to hide it.
**Your actions reveal how badly you want something**. If you keep saying something is a priority but you never act on it, then you don’t really want it. It’s time to have an honest conversation with yourself. Your actions reveal your true motivations.
James Clear in *Atomic Habits: An Easy and Proven Way to Build Good Habits and Break Bad Ones*
### Side Stories
A lot of chapters start with small real-life Stories. Like how people have benefitted from little habits (how [Jerry Seinfeld](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Seinfeld "Jerry Seinfeld at Wikipedia") has trained writing jokes) or to underline a particular behavior (like [the influence of group pressure by Solomon Asch](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solomon_Asch "Solomon Asch at Wikipedia")). It is fun to read them. They don’t come along like typical “success stories”, but more in a style that you can relate to.
### Awareness
James emphasizes the small things in your life and the world. He highlights small steps. He shifts your attention to “*the obvious*, writes about this, and lets you think for a while. It is about the small steps (1% better or *micro habits*) and the long run. Not the big shot for the short term.
### ”Academic” notes
At the end of the book, there are 25 pages of references incl. Links, books, and [doi’s](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_object_identifier "Digital Object Identifier at Wikipedia"). These enable you to dive deeper into every area mentioned as in an academic report.
\[Establishing a habit\] is a continuous process. There is no finish line. There is no permanent solution.
James Clear in *Atomic Habits: An Easy and Proven Way to Build Good Habits and Break Bad Ones*
### Chapter Summaries
Every chapter ends with a few key sentences. When you have finished this chapter, what should you keep in your mind? I find those helpful and pleasant to look at later (e.g., in a reference style).
## What can make this book better in the next edition?
### Bonus chapters
There are bonus chapters mentioned about [how to apply the ideas from the book to business](https://jamesclear.com/atomic-habits/business "How to apply the ideas from the book to business from James Clear") or [parenting](https://jamesclear.com/atomic-habits/parenting "Tips on applying habits for parenting by James Clear"). Sadly they are only available online. Especially when you read this book at a location where you don’t want the internet. I would love to see those included in the book, even if this would raise the price.
## Would I recommend reading this book?
**Rather yes**.
I enjoyed this book and had a good time reading it. James is pointing out several new perspectives to look at things that *seem* to be simple, but in reality, they are not. I am motivated to change my style while trying to establish new habits, stop bad ones, and apply a few presented techniques.
However, I think this book is not for everyone. You need to be interested in the area of improving yourself; otherwise, you might not stick to complete this ~270 pages book. If you are not sure about this for yourself, start with [James Interview at *CBS This Morning*](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i1Xm_MA2NwA "James Clear Interview at CBS This Morning") or [the articles on his website](https://jamesclear.com/articles "Articles by James Clear").
I recommend this book to everyone who …
- has an interest in getting better each day
- wants to reach a goal but don’t know how to start
- loves getting context on why humans are behaving like they do when it comes to habits
## Is there more to read?
Yes, of course:
- Interview with James Clear at *CBS This Morning* with [Why habits are the “compound interest” of self-improvement](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i1Xm_MA2NwA "Interview with James Clear at CBS This Morning")
- Articles [by James Clear on his website](https://jamesclear.com/articles "Articles by James Clear")
- [Flow State](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flow_\(psychology\) "Flow state at Wikipedia")
- The article [trivago Flow Lab: The Science of Productivity](https://life.trivago.com/happenings/trivago-flow-lab-science-productivity.html "The Science of Productivity at trivago Flow Lab") by Sören, Kirill, and Philipp
- The book [Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity](https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/0349423148/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&creative=6742&linkCode=as2&creativeASIN=0349423148&linkId=7f8a8df0a289934006cc8845d24c37e9) by David Allen
***
[» andygrunwald](https://andygrunwald.com/)
- [✍️ Blog](https://andygrunwald.com/blog/ "Blog of Andy Grunwald")
- [👨‍🔬 About](https://andygrunwald.com/about/ "About Andy Grunwald")
- [🏗️ Work with me](https://andygrunwald.com/work-with-me/ "Work with Andy Grunwald")
- [🎙️ Engineering Kiosk Podcast](https://engineeringkiosk.dev/ "Engineering Kiosk Podcast")
All rights reserved © Andy Grunwald 2026 |
| Readable Markdown | **tl;dr**: Good book about moving towards your goals with (very) small steps. Various insights into real-life stories, new perspectives, and practical tips on destroying bad or establishing new habits. Recommended if you like [James articles](https://jamesclear.com/articles "Articles by James Clear") and his style. The book is full of this: Go, buy, and read it - [Atomic Habits by James Clear](https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/1847941834/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1638&creative=6742&linkCode=as2&creativeASIN=1847941834&linkId=655500f09dc93b189f346505fad8f425).

## Why did I read this book?
I found James Clear via [Issue \#333 of the Software Lead Weekly](https://softwareleadweekly.com/issues/333 "Issue #333 of the Software Lead Weekly") Newsletter with his article on [The 3 Stages of Failure in Life and Work (And How to Fix Them)](https://jamesclear.com/3-stages-of-failure "The 3 Stages of Failure in Life and Work (And How to Fix Them) by James Clear"). His other [articles](https://jamesclear.com/articles "Articles by James Clear") also caught my interest.
I always had a high interest in productivity, time management, and getting better as yesterday. I like to learn, to know the context and why we are doing it what we are doing. Good habits can help you with all of this. Maybe there are some new tricks in this book I never heard of?
## What do I like about this book?
### Content
What James presents is enjoyable, actionable, and easy to follow. He provides a simple and proven four-step framework on how to establish new habits. Underlined with thousands of good examples from real life. By doing this, he doesn’t hide the complex reality and mentions areas like how hard it is to stick to your habits and how he overcomes this. It will provide you new perspectives.
Maybe if you **really** wanted it, you’d actually do it. But the truth is, our real motivation is to be lazy and to do what is convenient. And despite what the latest productivity best seller will tell you, this is a smart strategy, not a dumb one
James Clear in *Atomic Habits: An Easy and Proven Way to Build Good Habits and Break Bad Ones*
### James is not perfect
He has spent *some* time diving into the theory of habits, but he still keeps realistic. James is mentioning that *it is inevitable that life will interrupt you \[and your habits\] at some point*. It emphasizes the feeling that this is normal and human. I like it.
### Reality
I especially like how James points out the hard truth of our lives: *Habits can get automatic and boring at some time*; *If you really want something, you do it. Otherwise, you don’t want it enough*; *We still need to act on it*. He doesn’t try to hide it.
**Your actions reveal how badly you want something**. If you keep saying something is a priority but you never act on it, then you don’t really want it. It’s time to have an honest conversation with yourself. Your actions reveal your true motivations.
James Clear in *Atomic Habits: An Easy and Proven Way to Build Good Habits and Break Bad Ones*
### Side Stories
A lot of chapters start with small real-life Stories. Like how people have benefitted from little habits (how [Jerry Seinfeld](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Seinfeld "Jerry Seinfeld at Wikipedia") has trained writing jokes) or to underline a particular behavior (like [the influence of group pressure by Solomon Asch](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solomon_Asch "Solomon Asch at Wikipedia")). It is fun to read them. They don’t come along like typical “success stories”, but more in a style that you can relate to.
### Awareness
James emphasizes the small things in your life and the world. He highlights small steps. He shifts your attention to “*the obvious*, writes about this, and lets you think for a while. It is about the small steps (1% better or *micro habits*) and the long run. Not the big shot for the short term.
### ”Academic” notes
At the end of the book, there are 25 pages of references incl. Links, books, and [doi’s](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_object_identifier "Digital Object Identifier at Wikipedia"). These enable you to dive deeper into every area mentioned as in an academic report.
\[Establishing a habit\] is a continuous process. There is no finish line. There is no permanent solution.
James Clear in *Atomic Habits: An Easy and Proven Way to Build Good Habits and Break Bad Ones*
### Chapter Summaries
Every chapter ends with a few key sentences. When you have finished this chapter, what should you keep in your mind? I find those helpful and pleasant to look at later (e.g., in a reference style).
## What can make this book better in the next edition?
### Bonus chapters
There are bonus chapters mentioned about [how to apply the ideas from the book to business](https://jamesclear.com/atomic-habits/business "How to apply the ideas from the book to business from James Clear") or [parenting](https://jamesclear.com/atomic-habits/parenting "Tips on applying habits for parenting by James Clear"). Sadly they are only available online. Especially when you read this book at a location where you don’t want the internet. I would love to see those included in the book, even if this would raise the price.
## Would I recommend reading this book?
**Rather yes**.
I enjoyed this book and had a good time reading it. James is pointing out several new perspectives to look at things that *seem* to be simple, but in reality, they are not. I am motivated to change my style while trying to establish new habits, stop bad ones, and apply a few presented techniques.
However, I think this book is not for everyone. You need to be interested in the area of improving yourself; otherwise, you might not stick to complete this ~270 pages book. If you are not sure about this for yourself, start with [James Interview at *CBS This Morning*](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i1Xm_MA2NwA "James Clear Interview at CBS This Morning") or [the articles on his website](https://jamesclear.com/articles "Articles by James Clear").
I recommend this book to everyone who …
- has an interest in getting better each day
- wants to reach a goal but don’t know how to start
- loves getting context on why humans are behaving like they do when it comes to habits
## Is there more to read?
Yes, of course:
- Interview with James Clear at *CBS This Morning* with [Why habits are the “compound interest” of self-improvement](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i1Xm_MA2NwA "Interview with James Clear at CBS This Morning")
- Articles [by James Clear on his website](https://jamesclear.com/articles "Articles by James Clear")
- [Flow State](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flow_\(psychology\) "Flow state at Wikipedia")
- The article [trivago Flow Lab: The Science of Productivity](https://life.trivago.com/happenings/trivago-flow-lab-science-productivity.html "The Science of Productivity at trivago Flow Lab") by Sören, Kirill, and Philipp
- The book [Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity](https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/0349423148/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&creative=6742&linkCode=as2&creativeASIN=0349423148&linkId=7f8a8df0a289934006cc8845d24c37e9) by David Allen |
| Shard | 174 (laksa) |
| Root Hash | 1423813212649465574 |
| Unparsed URL | com,andygrunwald!/blog/book-review-on-atomic-habits-by-james-clear/ s443 |