Tiago Forte (@fortelabs) is one of the experts in what I call modern productivity. Some others I put in this category are David Allen (@GTDguy, probably the pioneer of this era, with his Getting Things Done book), Taylor Pearson (@TaylorPearsonMe), Graham Allcott (author of Ninja Productivity), Shane Parrish (@farnamstreet), and Eric Barker (@bakadesuyo).
A quick explanation of what I call "modern productivity". Some people's entire conception of time management stops at what they call Covey's Urgent-Important 2X2 grid (properly attributed as the Eisenhower matrix) but traditional 20th century time management books (and I have read a dozen of them) did not have the benefit of recent neuroscience and behavioral research nor did they have the context of the always-connected, FOMO-inducing social media and devices that have taken over our lives and minds. The above-mentioned gurus mine recent research to provide profound perspectives and practical hacks in areas such as habit installation, work-life-passion integration, and creative workflow management in all areas of our lives.
The volume being reviewed is a Kindle collection of essays by Tiago that he wrote as blog posts. It outlines his view on modern workplace and individual aspirations, posts explaining his initial and original take on organizing workflows, habits, happiness, his experience with the secular meditation practice in a Vipassana retreat, and specific aspects of using Evernote (one of the top productivity apps) and tags.
It is a good introduction to modern productivity and many of us would like the non-preachy, curious experimenter style of writing that Tiago has. A while ago I tweeted that he is on his way to become a much more famous productivity guru. Recently (mid-2018) his second volume of premium blog posts got published (titled, Extend Your Mind) on Kindle and a book is in the making, too.