A book for loners, perhaps... [View all]
From a review of a new book about introverts:Why it's OK to be an introvert.
"According to the informal test found early in the pages of Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking I am an introvert:
Id rather talk to single good friend than several acquaintances;
I wish all of my communication was in writing;
Im not driven by ideas of wealth and fame;
and I dont like small talk.
Sometimes, I even prefer books to people.
This does not bode well for me. According to Susan Cain, author of Quiet we live in a time when introversion is somewhere between a disappointment and a pathology.
Anyone who has been to a public school in the past twenty years (if not more) will probably agree.
The ideal person in our culture is extroverted; comfortable in front of crowds, and gregarious. Any deviation from extroversion is a sickness, and we should make it our lifes project to eradicate these traits from ourselves.
But Cain offers a reprieve to all oppressed introverts: not only is it OK to be introverted, sometimes its even advantageous.
Many of the most important cultural and technological advances in our culture have come from introverted people, from Newtons theories to stories of E.M. Forster.
Introverts are more careful; they have concentration necessary to develop expertise in a subject and they are more creative than extroverts.
Pure extroversion, on the other hand, is not necessarily an unmitigated good.
The financial crisis is an example of what can happen when the risk taking extroverts take control. For years traders who took the biggest risks and who were more adept at selling themselves and their ideas prevailed until finally the worst fears of the cautious introverts came to be. Extroverted behavior can be dangerous and even at times downright dishonest."
http://www.metro.us/newyork/life/article/1096823--why-it-s-ok-to-be-an-introvert