Nikhil Kamath, co-founder of Zerodha and one of India’s youngest self-made billionaires, says one of his biggest life lessons came not from business but from reading. After reading The Denial of Death by Ernest Becker, he began viewing time as the most valuable resource. Kamath’s recommended books, covering psychology, money, philosophy, biology and society, highlight how continuous learning and curiosity can shape decision-making, success and personal growth beyond formal education. Nikhil Kamath, co-founder of Zerodha and one of India’s youngest self-made billionaires, says one of his biggest life lessons came not from business but from reading. After reading The Denial of Death by Ernest Becker, he began viewing time as the most valuable resource. Kamath’s recommended books, covering psychology, money, philosophy, biology and society, highlight how continuous learning and curiosity can shape decision-making, success and personal growth beyond formal education.
Trending
- ‘Sack him…’: Ben Stokes’ post sparks fresh debate as ICC probes ECB over footage
- UAE approves new law: Damaging heritage sites could cost up to Rs 26 crore fine, jail
- Germany records over 5,100 heat deaths as Europe reels under record-breaking summer
- Temperatures set to peak at 36C during UK heatwave, health warnings issued
- Japanese Soldier’s Jungle Surrender: Onoda obeys orders for 29 years; his pardon ignites debate
- Maharashtra UCC: CM Fadnavis forms 7-member panel; draft law likely in winter session
- Rashid Khan breaks down as Afghanistan bids emotional farewell to Shapoor Zadran
- Mother who blamed vaccines for twins’ deaths now accused of murdering them