Blog Books on User Experience and User Interface Design

Jeremy Tunnell at

Having spent the majority of 2011 in intense self-study to finish my transition from developer/project manager to UX engineer, I thought it would be useful for others out there to share my reading list and some brief thoughts.

Steve Krug- Don’t make me think

The best book for a quick introduction to user experience is this first one. You’ll find that Steve Krug (along with Jakob Nielsen) is the guy who writes all the forwards for all of the other books.

Donald Norman – The design of everyday things

I would recommend that you read this book first. It has nothing to do with websites, but it’s a wonderful introduction to the design process and thinking about usability

Nielsen and Tahir – Homepage usability-50 websites deconstructed

Nielsen and Tahir are also pretty big. This book is old, but it’s basically a picture book and is a quick and easy read. Most of the principles still apply, but get this one at the library.

Jakob Nielsen – Prioritizing Web usability

Nielsen also wrote this great overview book that touches on all the different parts of UX. It’s quite a bit more in depth, but well worth reading.

John Cato – User centered web design

This book is a very detailed look at the user centered design process. It’s almost too detailed, because rarely does one go through the entire process in the real world. However, it’s useful to get a detailed look at every step so that if you’re abbreviating the process, you know what’s missing.

Louis Rosenfeld – Information architecture for the World Wide Web

If you’re interested in information architecture, this book is about as detailed as I have found. It’s pretty dense reading, but it covers not only traditional IA, but also searching and card sorting (which is kind of like user testing for IA).

Jenifer Tidwell – Designing Interfaces

This is a reference book, which basically contains a bunch of design patterns. It’s well worth reading, and it warrants a few pages of notes (I ended up with six). However, once you’ve internalized these patterns, the book doesn’t get a lot of use. If you have read through some of the intro books, this is a great book to look through just to start building a mental map of use cases and best practices.

William Lidwell – Universal principles of design

An in-depth introduction to visual design principles, structured in an interesting way. The author creates a list of essential design principles (for example, affordances, cognitive dissonance, color theory, etc.), and dedicates about two pages to each principle. This is a must read book for those of us who came to user experience from an engineering background instead of design school.

That’s about 4 months worth of reading right there, if you’re reading for comprehension and not just skimming.

I also follow quite a few people/organizations on Twitter. Two useful ones I’ve found are Smashing Mag, Usabilla, and UXmag.

Good luck!

Add Comment