Complete Bibliography & Further Reading
The science behind failure recovery and growth mindset
NavigateFailure is built on decades of rigorous research in growth mindset, failure recovery, resilience science, and self-compassion. This page provides a comprehensive bibliography of the academic works, books, and research papers that inform the product's 7 failure situations and 26 wisdom modules. Each source is available through Amazon with direct purchase links.
The foundational research upon which NavigateFailure's approach is built:
2006 • Random House
The groundbreaking work that introduced growth mindset to the world. Dweck, a professor of psychology at Stanford University, demonstrates how our beliefs about ability determine whether we grow from failure or are diminished by it. This single concept has transformed education, business, and personal development.
2023 • Atria Books
Harvard Business School professor Edmondson distinguishes between intelligent failures (experiments in new territory), complex failures (systems with many variables), and preventable failures (deviations from best practices). Each type requires different responses and yields different learning.
Essential texts on treating yourself kindly during failure and building bounce-back capacity:
2011 • William Morrow
Neff's research demonstrates that self-compassion—treating yourself with the same kindness you'd offer a friend—improves failure recovery far more than self-criticism. The book provides practices for developing self-kindness, common humanity awareness, and mindful acceptance.
2017 • Knopf
Written after Sandberg's husband's sudden death, this book combines personal narrative with research on recovering from setbacks. Grant, an organizational psychologist, provides the scientific framework for understanding and building resilience.
2002 • Harmony Books
Based on research at the University of Pennsylvania's Positive Psychology Center, this book identifies seven learnable skills that increase resilience—the ability to bounce back from setbacks and even grow stronger from them.
2012 • Random House
Taleb introduces the concept of antifragility—systems that don't just survive stress but actually get stronger from it. This reframes failure not as something to merely recover from, but as a potential source of growth and improvement.
Applied wisdom on learning from failure and trying again:
2000 • Thomas Nelson
Leadership expert Maxwell examines how successful people think about and respond to failure. The key insight: the difference between average people and achieving people is their perception of and response to failure.
2013 • TarcherPerigee
Stanford researchers argue that the key to success is taking action, making mistakes quickly, and learning from them—rather than trying to plan the perfect approach. Particularly relevant for those afraid to try again.
2014 • Viking
Journalist McArdle examines failure across domains—personal, business, and societal—arguing that America's tolerance for failure has been key to its innovation and that we need to develop better personal and cultural approaches to setbacks.
2015 • Portfolio
Comparing aviation (which learns systematically from failure) with healthcare (which often doesn't), Syed explores why some individuals and organizations learn from mistakes while others repeat them. Essential reading for the "Learn-From-Failure" modules.
Research on persistence through repeated setbacks:
2016 • Scribner
Duckworth's research shows that grit—the combination of passion and perseverance for long-term goals—predicts success better than talent or IQ. The book explores how grit can be developed and why it matters for navigating repeated failures.
1990 • Vintage Books
The father of positive psychology shows how "explanatory style"—how we explain failures to ourselves—determines whether we bounce back or give up. Pessimistic explanations (personal, permanent, pervasive) lead to helplessness; optimistic ones enable recovery.
Peer-reviewed research underlying NavigateFailure's evidence-based approach:
Blackwell, L. S., Trzesniewski, K. H., & Dweck, C. S. (2007). Child Development, 78(1), 246-263.
Landmark study demonstrating that students who believe intelligence is malleable (growth mindset) show increasing grades, while those with fixed mindsets show declining grades—especially during challenging transitions.
Leary, M. R., Tate, E. B., Adams, C. E., Allen, A. B., & Hancock, J. (2007). Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 92(5), 887-904.
Research showing that self-compassion buffers against negative reactions to failure, embarrassment, and other unpleasant self-relevant events—without reducing accountability or motivation.
Edmondson, A. C. (1999). Administrative Science Quarterly, 44(2), 350-383.
Foundational research on how psychological safety—the belief that it's safe to take interpersonal risks—enables learning from failure in team settings. Teams that can discuss mistakes openly learn faster.
Lyubomirsky, S., King, L., & Diener, E. (2005). Psychological Bulletin, 131(6), 803-855.
Meta-analysis showing that positive emotions don't just follow success—they help cause it by building psychological resources. Relevant for understanding why maintaining hope during failure matters.
Tedeschi, R. G., & Calhoun, L. G. (2004). Psychological Inquiry, 15(1), 1-18.
Research demonstrating that significant life crises can produce positive change—including improved relationships, new possibilities, personal strength, spiritual development, and appreciation for life.
Duckworth, A. L., Peterson, C., Matthews, M. D., & Kelly, D. R. (2007). Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 92(6), 1087-1101.
The original research paper introducing grit as a predictor of success, showing that perseverance through setbacks matters more than talent for achieving long-term goals.
Google Scholar is a free academic search engine that indexes peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, and conference proceedings from universities and research institutions worldwide.
Unlike regular Google, Scholar focuses exclusively on academic and scholarly sources—the original research that books like those above are based on.
Use Google Scholar when you want to:
Note: Some papers require institutional access or purchase, but many are freely available as PDFs.
Transform evidence-based failure recovery research into daily inspiration with NavigateFailure's 26 modules and 2,600+ curated quotes.