Where to Start with Charles Wheelan
Charles Wheelan is a rare writer who can make statistics feel like a page-turner. A senior lecturer at Dartmouth College, former correspondent for The Economist, and author of the bestselling “Naked” series, he has a talent for stripping intimidating subjects down to their essential logic and explaining them with wit and well-chosen stories. His books have become staples in classrooms and on nightstands alike, proving that quantitative subjects do not need to be painful.
Start here
Naked Statistics
Charles Wheelan · 302 pages · 2013 · Easy
Themes: statistics, probability, data literacy, regression analysis, statistical reasoning
The book that rescues statistics from its reputation as the most dreaded subject in school. Wheelan covers probability, regression, the central limit theorem, and inference using real stories instead of formulas, proving that statistical thinking is not just useful but genuinely interesting.
Why Start Here
“Naked Statistics” is the most accessible entry point to Wheelan’s work. His earlier “Naked Economics” did the same for economics, but this book tackles the subject that more directly affects how you read the news, evaluate research, and make decisions at work. Wheelan uses examples like the Netflix recommendation algorithm, the O.J. Simpson trial, and the Schlitz beer blind taste test to illuminate concepts that textbooks bury in notation.
The genius is in what Wheelan leaves out. He does not teach you how to calculate a standard deviation; he teaches you what it means and why you should care. This approach makes the book perfect for business professionals who need statistical literacy without becoming statisticians.
What to Expect
A breezy, entertaining read organized around core statistical concepts. Wheelan’s writing is funny without being flippant, and each chapter builds naturally on the last. No math prerequisites. You will come away understanding the statistical claims that fill business reports, news articles, and research papers, and you will know which ones to trust.