The book: Who’s Your City?: How the Creative Economy Is Making Where You Live the Most Important Decision of Your Life
Author: Richard Florida
Genre: Economics
The economist Richard Florida of Creative Class fame has written a seriously readworthy book about the importance of where you live. Basically, Florida demonstrates that your decision of which city or region to live in has a tremendous impact on the rest of your life, from your career to your life satisfaction and who you marry.
The idea that place is important is not new. For instance, economists have long since realised that cities, amongst other functions, also act like market mechanisms for dating. Who you meet determines who you eventually marry, so obviously your choice to live in New York will increase the chances that you marry, say, a banker or a neurotic artist. What sets Florida apart is his solidly grounded research into the subject of place; every major claim is backed up by reams of data. Mercifully, the data aspect is not overdone in the book – it reads considerably better than his first, famous book, The Rise of the Creative Class.
In the latter part of the book, Florida also provides information to help the reader make informed choices about where to live. Also, another interesting finding from Who’s your city is that Florida mapped out where people of different personality types have chosen to live (as measured on the classic Big Five personality model). In an entirely unsurprising turn of events, pretty much all of the neurotic people seems to live in Manhattan.
Highly recommended.







