Most books about doing a PhD tell you how to write a literature review, format a thesis, or manage your supervisor. David Tuffley's Doing a PhD does something far more audacious — and far more useful. It tells you whether you have what it takes to complete the journey at all, and what to do if you don't.
Drawing on decades of experience as an academic at Griffith University, Tuffley opens with a provocation borrowed from mythologist Joseph the PhD is not merely a qualification. It is a hero's journey — an ancient, psychologically encoded pattern of transformation that every candidate, knowingly or not, must navigate. From the first stirring of intellectual restlessness, through the trials of uncertainty and isolation, to the hard-won return bearing new knowledge, the PhD mirrors a pattern as old as Beowulf and as recent as Star Wars. Understanding this doesn't just inspire — it prepares.
What distinguishes successful PhD students from those who quietly disappear? Tuffley examines the landmark research of Friedenberg and Roth, whose mid-twentieth-century findings about graduate student psychology remain as clinically accurate today as when they were first published. The answers are discomfiting in their honesty. Successful candidates favour scholarly detachment over emotional investment in outcomes. They thrive in competitive intellectual environments rather than retreating from them. They find intrinsic reward in the solitary act of discovery itself, not in the validation of others. They tolerate uncertainty — sometimes for years — without flinching.
The book doesn't stop at diagnosis. It moves into the deeper architecture of the creative, research-oriented mind, drawing on Howard Gardner's celebrated framework of multiple intelligences to map the cognitive terrain that doctoral work demands. Logical and spatial intelligence, linguistic fluency, metaphorical thinking, the capacity to hold contradictory truths in productive tension — Tuffley explores each in depth, and crucially, he provides practical exercises for developing what you lack. Nothing, he insists, is beyond cultivation in a determined mind.
There are chapters on the qualities that distinguish the insatiable curiosity, a willingness to write daily, resilience under sustained pressure, independence from external reward, an openness to unexpected directions. There are equally frank portraits of the unsuccessful — those who crave social warmth over scholarly solitude, who need constant supervision, who cannot locate within themselves the autonomous engine that doctoral research demands. Reading these portraits is an act of honest self-assessment, and Tuffley invites you into it without cruelty or false comfort.
Along the way, the book draws on Lao Tzu, Niels Bohr, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Søren Kierkegaard, and Albert Rothenberg — a gathering of minds that reflects the book's own it is simultaneously practical and philosophical, rigorous and deeply humane.
The practical appendices complete the how to manage the advisor relationship, how to formulate a research question that will hold, how to approach the literature review without losing your way.
This is not the book that will help you format your bibliography. It is the book that will tell you, before you invest years of your life and considerable money, whether the PhD journey is genuinely yours to make — and if it is, how to walk it with your eyes open.
For anyone standing at the threshold, uncertain whether to step through, this is the book to read first.
I wish this book was available when I started my doctoral journey two years ago. I feel that it provides a nice overview of what to expect when on the doctoral pursuit. Since it is a short read, I would even encourage friends and family that are seeking to support someone pursuing a doctorate to read this so that they have a better understanding of what the individual is going through.