Pediatric Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolism

Column headings (use these as the first row in your sheet)

Most people buy the latest edition, flip through the 960 pages of dense text, recognize about 20 titles they already love, and put it back on the coffee table to collect dust. The task is too massive. The list is too static.

In an age of curated Instagram feeds and algorithmic Netflix queues, the act of choosing a book can feel paradoxically overwhelming. Faced with millions of titles, the modern reader often suffers not from a lack of options, but from a paralysis of choice. Into this void steps a seemingly simple tool: the “1001 Books to Read Before You Die spreadsheet.” Derived from Peter Boxall’s iconic list, this digital artifact is far more than a checklist. It is a cartographic map of the human imagination, a personal challenge to intellectual complacency, and a testament to how technology can revive, rather than replace, the art of deep reading.

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1001 books to read before you die spreadsheet