I really didn’t enjoy this book. I thought it sounded interesting, so picked it up, but found it a struggle, mainly because of the style in which it is written.
The tone is analytic, and rather black and white. “Develop these skills and you will have a beautiful mind,” whereby is listed ways to agree, disagree, be interesting, creative, a good listener etc. This all sounds fine but De Bono’s idea of a beautiful mind is quite simplistic and defined. I found this left little room for nuance, personal anecdotes or spontaneity. He presents clear guidelines, with specific examples of how to engage beautifully in conversation, by preparing facts, interesting topics, by dealing with particular situations in a particular way. This, to me, might not always come across as beautiful, but instead rather regimented and even smug.
I don’t think I learned much from this book about how to foster a beautiful mind. What I did learn were some interesting facts that he shares as examples as how to contribute to conversation, eg that Gemini’s are most likely to have car accidents, and that divorce is usually initiated by women! I’m not sure this was the point of the book though.
Certainly it was a clear book, well researched and has some value. However, I think the idea could have been unpicked in a more organic fashion that would mirror real life instead of being so stringently analytic and definite.