Hartmut Esslinger

Product/Industrial Designer / United States / De Tao Group/Studio Esslinger

Hartmut Esslinger’s Book List

Decisions—decisions . . . Here are “my” books. Actually I have two walls of books, one here in San Francisco and another in Germany.

In addition to the fiction on my list, I read a lot of history—currently American: politics, design, and biographies.

5 books
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

Very poetic and naturally a bit over-quoted by mindless people. I had to study it in French and its simplicity fascinates.

Ernest Hemingway

I would also include Hemingway’s short stories, such as “The Snows of Kilimanjaro” and “The Short and Happy Life of Francis Macomber.”

Ryunosuke Akutagawa

I was 13 when I read “Rashomon” for the first time. I even made a chart showing how the different facts could match up so differently from each person’s point of view. Then I saw the movie by Akira Kurasawa. And finally I learned in Japan that Ryunosuke Akutagawa had been both a genius and a mentally ill man, ultimately taking his own life.

John Steinbeck

Having lived for 15 years next to Steinbeck’s house in Los Gatos, California, this book is a “natural” for me. Driving from Salinas to Monterey in heavy fog makes the story come alive. The movie with James Dean helps, too. The book also resonates as I grew up on a farm in a tiny village.

Thornton Wilder

Crazy story—computing whether a life will be valuable in God’s judgment. Beautiful language.

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