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Aibrary Reading List

[Aibrary] Generate a curated, themed reading list with multiple books organized in a logical reading order. Use when the user wants a systematic book list on...

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Description


name: aibrary-reading-list description: "[Aibrary] Generate a curated, themed reading list with multiple books organized in a logical reading order. Use when the user wants a systematic book list on a topic, asks for a book list or reading list, wants to deeply explore a domain through multiple books, or needs to build expertise in an area. Different from aibrary-book-recommend (single book) and aibrary-book-search (finding specific books)."

Reading List — Aibrary

Curated, themed reading lists that build expertise systematically. Powered by Aibrary's knowledge curation methodology.

Input

The user specifies:

  • Theme/domain — the area they want to explore (required)
  • Difficulty preference — beginner, intermediate, advanced, or mixed (optional, default: mixed)
  • Number of books — how many they want (optional, default: 7-10)
  • Constraints — time period, language, specific focus within the domain (optional)

Workflow

  1. Define the scope: Clarify what the theme covers and what's out of scope. If the theme is too broad, suggest 2-3 focused sub-themes for the user to choose from.

  2. Select books: Choose books that collectively cover the theme comprehensively:

    • Include foundational works that establish core concepts
    • Include modern works that reflect current thinking
    • Include contrasting perspectives to encourage critical thinking
    • Ensure no significant aspect of the theme is left uncovered
  3. Organize the reading order: Arrange books in a logical progression:

    • Foundation first: Conceptual and introductory works
    • Build depth: More specialized and advanced works
    • Synthesize: Works that connect ideas across the theme
    • Mark books as "Essential" (must-read) or "Recommended" (nice to have)
  4. Add connective tissue: Explain how each book connects to the next and what the reader gains at each stage.

  5. Respond in the user's language: Match the language of the user's input.

Output Format

# Reading List: [Theme Name]

[1-2 sentence overview of what this reading list covers and who it's for]

**Total books**: [Count] | **Estimated total reading time**: [Hours] | **Difficulty**: [Level range]

---

## Stage 1: Foundation
*[What the reader gains from this stage]*

### 1. [Book Title] ⭐ Essential
**Author**: [Name] | **Year**: [Year]
[One sentence on what this book contributes to the theme]

### 2. [Book Title]
**Author**: [Name] | **Year**: [Year]
[One sentence on what this book contributes to the theme]

**Stage 1 → Stage 2 bridge**: [How the foundation prepares the reader for deeper exploration]

---

## Stage 2: Depth
*[What the reader gains from this stage]*

### 3. [Book Title] ⭐ Essential
...

---

## Stage 3: Synthesis
*[What the reader gains from this stage]*

...

---

## Quick-Start Option
*If you only have time for 3 books, read these*:
1. [Book] — [Why]
2. [Book] — [Why]
3. [Book] — [Why]

Example Output

User input: "Give me a reading list about systems thinking"


Reading List: Systems Thinking

A progressive journey from understanding systems basics to applying systems thinking in complex real-world scenarios. Ideal for leaders, engineers, and anyone who wants to see the bigger picture.

Total books: 8 | Estimated total reading time: ~50 hours | Difficulty: Beginner → Advanced


Stage 1: Foundation

Build your mental models for understanding systems

1. Thinking in Systems ⭐ Essential

Author: Donella Meadows | Year: 2008 The definitive introduction to systems thinking — clear, accessible, and surprisingly practical for a book about feedback loops.

2. The Fifth Discipline

Author: Peter Senge | Year: 2006 (revised) Bridges systems thinking into organizational learning — essential for applying systems ideas in team and business contexts.

Stage 1 → Stage 2 bridge: With the fundamentals in place, you're ready to see how systems thinking applies to specific domains and complex challenges.


Quick-Start Option

If you only have time for 3 books, read these:

  1. Thinking in Systems — The essential foundation
  2. The Fifth Discipline — Systems thinking in practice
  3. Seeing the Forest for the Trees — Visual systems mapping

Guidelines

  • A reading list tells a story — books should build on each other, not just be a collection
  • Always include a "Quick-Start Option" for time-constrained readers
  • Mark essential vs. recommended books clearly
  • Include bridge explanations between stages
  • Balance classics with modern works
  • If the theme is too broad, proactively narrow it or offer sub-theme options

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Compatible Platforms

Pricing

Free

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