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By Self Help Books Guide Team

How to Read Minds Review: Is Empathy Actually Learnable?


Empathy gets talked about like it’s a personality trait. You’re either the friend who cries during commercials or you’re not. HR departments screen for it. Leadership coaches rank it as the number-one skill for 2025 and 2026. And yet almost nobody treats it as something you can practice, like a deadlift or a language.

Aimee Cliff thinks that’s the problem. Her March 2026 book How to Read Minds argues that empathy isn’t a fixed trait — it’s a set of five learnable skills, each with specific exercises you can practice. The title is clickbait-adjacent (no, you won’t literally read minds), but the framework underneath is more rigorous than you’d expect from the cover.

The book showed up on multiple March “must-read” lists despite almost no marketing push. Word of mouth. That usually means the content is doing the work.

Quick Verdict

AspectRating
Practical Usefulness★★★★☆
Evidence Quality★★★★☆
Originality★★★★★
Writing Quality★★★★☆
Worth the Time★★★★☆

Best for: People who’ve been told they “lack empathy” and want a concrete practice, not a guilt trip. Skip if: You already have strong interpersonal instincts and want advanced emotional intelligence theory. This is foundational, not graduate-level. Pages: ~310 (about 5.5 hours reading time) Actually useful content: 65%

What It’s Actually About

Cliff’s central argument: the popular understanding of empathy is broken. We treat it as a single thing (you either “have” it or you don’t) when it’s actually five distinct skills that can be developed independently. She calls them pillars, and each gets its own section of the book with background research, case studies, and exercises.

The book doesn’t shy away from the neurodiversity conversation, and this is where it gets genuinely interesting. Cliff argues that the so-called “empathy deficit” in autism diagnoses is a two-way street: a social misunderstanding between neurotypical and neurodivergent people, not a one-sided lack. She cites the “double empathy problem” research (Damian Milton’s work from 2012, now gaining traction in clinical settings), which shows that neurotypical people are just as bad at reading neurodivergent people as the reverse. The deficit isn’t in one group. It’s in the gap.

That reframing alone makes the book worth discussing.

The Core Framework: Five Pillars of Empathy

Here’s what Cliff identifies as the five learnable skills:

  1. Active listening — not the corporate training version where you nod and paraphrase back. Cliff means listening without preparing your response, which is harder than it sounds and has specific drills.
  2. Curiosity, meaning genuine interest in someone else’s internal experience. She distinguishes this from interrogation or nosiness, which most people conflate.
  3. Vulnerability — willingness to be seen, which Cliff frames as a prerequisite for understanding others. You can’t read someone accurately if you’re performing an invulnerable version of yourself.
  4. Perspective-taking — the cognitive effort of modeling someone else’s situation. Not “I’d feel X in your shoes” (that’s projection), but “given who you are and what you’ve experienced, what might this feel like for you?”
  5. Presence — being fully in the interaction rather than half-attending. She connects this to the attentional research on mind-wandering during conversation (spoiler: people drift about 30-50% of the time when someone else is talking).

The framework isn’t revolutionary on paper. Individually, these concepts appear in therapy literature, leadership books, communication training. What Cliff does is assemble them into a single practice and treat each one as a skill with a learning curve, not a virtue you should already possess.

What Works

The Neurodiversity Reframe

This is the book’s standout contribution and the section that’s generating the most conversation. Most empathy books — and most clinical frameworks — assume a default neurotype and then evaluate empathy against that standard. Cliff’s argument is that this creates a rigged test.

She points to Milton’s double empathy problem and subsequent studies showing that autistic people demonstrate strong empathy with other autistic people, and neurotypical people demonstrate strong empathy with other neurotypical people. The “deficit” appears only when you measure across neurotypes using one group’s communication norms as the yardstick.

I’ve worked with people on the spectrum who are sharply attuned to others in their own way but get labeled as “low empathy” because they don’t perform the expected facial expressions. Cliff gives language to that mismatch. It’s one of those arguments that seems obvious once you hear it but challenges a lot of entrenched assumptions.

The Curiosity Chapter

Chapter 5, on curiosity as an empathy skill, is the most practically useful section. Cliff distinguishes between three types of curiosity in interpersonal contexts: extractive (asking questions to get information for your own use), performative (asking questions to signal interest), and connective (asking because you genuinely want to understand someone’s experience).

The exercises here are specific. She has you record conversations (with permission) and listen back for how often you redirect the topic to yourself versus following the other person’s thread. Uncomfortable data. I did this with two phone calls and caught myself redirecting within 30 seconds both times. Awareness is the first step, and the recording exercise delivers awareness fast.

The Evidence Base

Cliff grounds her framework in social cognition research rather than anecdote. She cites work from Tania Singer’s lab on empathy training neuroplasticity, the ReSource Project longitudinal study on compassion and perspective-taking, and Sara Konrath’s research on declining empathy in college students over four decades. When she makes a claim, there’s usually a study behind it, and she names the researchers and the study design.

This matters because the empathy space is drowning in feel-good books that tell you to “be more compassionate” without explaining how or citing anything. Cliff’s approach is closer to what Lyubomirsky and Reis did with How to Feel Loved — take real research and make it applicable.

What Doesn’t Work

The Vulnerability Section Is Underdeveloped

Pillar three (vulnerability) gets the shortest treatment, which is a problem because it’s arguably the hardest skill in the set. Cliff leans on BrenĂ© Brown’s existing work here and doesn’t add enough of her own. If you’ve read Brown — and at this point, who hasn’t — you’ll find chapter 7 redundant. (Our review of Brown’s Strong Ground covers the vulnerability angle in more depth.)

The exercises for vulnerability amount to “share something real in your next conversation.” That’s vague compared to the specificity of the curiosity drills or the listening exercises. You can tell Cliff had more to say about the cognitive and perceptual pillars than the emotional ones.

The Workplace Material Feels Bolted On

The final two chapters apply the framework to professional settings — meetings, feedback conversations, leadership. It’s the part that’ll make this book show up in corporate book clubs, and it reads like it was written with that audience in mind. The case studies shift from rich personal narratives to generic “a manager at a tech company” scenarios.

Given that empathy is consistently ranked as the top leadership skill in workplace surveys (DDI’s Global Leadership Forecast has tracked this trend since 2021), there’s a real book to be written on empathy as a professional practice. This isn’t quite it. The professional chapters feel like a pitch to training departments, not an organic extension of the framework.

The Title Is a Liability

How to Read Minds sounds like a pop-psychology trick book. It’s going to attract readers expecting body-language hacks and cold-reading techniques. What they’ll get is a research-grounded framework for developing interpersonal understanding. That’s better than what the title promises, but the mismatch will frustrate some readers and turn away others who’d benefit from it.

The Evidence Question

Stronger than most books in this category. Cliff cites longitudinal studies, neuroimaging research on empathy circuits, cross-cultural studies on emotional recognition, and clinical data from perspective-taking interventions. She distinguishes between studies that show empathy can change (neuroplasticity evidence) and studies that show specific training does change it (intervention trials). That distinction matters, and most pop-psych authors blur it.

The weakest evidence link: Cliff’s specific five-pillar model hasn’t been studied as a combined intervention. Each pillar has independent research support, but whether practicing all five together produces better outcomes than any single approach is an untested claim. She’s transparent about this in the endnotes (page 287), which is more honest than most.

Implementation Reality

I’ve been working with three of the five pillars for about two weeks. Not enough time for a definitive verdict, but enough to notice things.

Active listening drills: Harder than expected. The exercise where you listen to someone for three minutes without any verbal response (no “mmhmm,” no “right,” nothing) is genuinely challenging. It exposes how much of listening is actually waiting to talk. I’ve done it four times. Each time, the other person eventually said something more honest than they would have if I’d been responding normally.

Curiosity tracking: The conversation recording exercise stung. Useful sting, though.

Presence practice: Cliff’s “attention anchor” technique (choose one sensory detail about the person you’re talking to and return to it when your mind wanders) is simple and it works. I’ve been using it in meetings. I notice more.

Vulnerability and perspective-taking: Haven’t implemented these seriously yet. Two weeks isn’t enough for the harder pillars.

vs. Emotional Intelligence 2.0 by Bradberry & Greaves

This is the existing go-to for people who want to “improve” empathy, so the comparison is inevitable.

How to Read MindsEmotional Intelligence 2.0
Core ideaEmpathy is five distinct learnable skillsEQ is four quadrants you can score and improve
Evidence qualityStrong: social cognition research, named studiesModerate: proprietary assessment, selective citations
Neurodiversity awarenessCentral to the argumentNot addressed
Practical toolsSpecific drills per pillarGeneral strategies per quadrant
Best forDeep empathy development with a social justice lensQuick EQ overview with a professional focus

If you want a fast professional framework, Bradberry and Greaves is still efficient. If you want to actually understand how empathy works and develop it as a genuine practice, Cliff goes deeper.

Who Should Read This

  • People who’ve been told they “lack empathy” and aren’t sure what to do about it. Cliff’s pillar model turns a vague character judgment into five specific skills with practice routines.
  • Parents, therapists, or educators working with neurodivergent people. The double empathy reframe is valuable clinical and relational context. If you’re looking for books that approach human capability as developable rather than fixed, our Hidden Potential review covers Adam Grant’s take on the same principle.
  • Leaders who keep hearing “empathy matters” but don’t know where to start. The first three pillars (listening, curiosity, vulnerability) map directly onto management skills, even though the book isn’t primarily a leadership book. For career-adjacent reading, our Open to Work review covers the professional skills side.
  • Anyone interested in the neurodiversity conversation who wants something grounded in research rather than Twitter discourse.

Who Should Skip This

  • People already deep into nonviolent communication or active listening practice. You’ll find pillars one and two redundant. Skim them and start at chapter 5.
  • Readers looking for body language or micro-expression techniques. The title misleads. This is about understanding, not decoding.
  • Anyone in crisis who needs empathy from others, not to develop it themselves. If you’re lonely or feeling unseen, How to Feel Loved addresses that more directly. Different problem.
  • People allergic to any mention of social justice framing. The neurodiversity chapters are grounded in research, but they do challenge mainstream clinical assumptions. If that’s not your thing, you’ll find those chapters irritating.

Where This Fits in 2026

The empathy-as-skill argument lands at an interesting moment. Workplace surveys keep naming empathy as the top leadership need. Meanwhile, social isolation data keeps climbing and online discourse keeps getting more polarized. There’s a gap between how much people value empathy and how much they practice it.

Cliff’s contribution is treating that gap as a skills problem rather than a moral one. You don’t need to become a better person. You need to practice five specific things. That reframe is the book’s real strength.

It also fits a broader 2026 trend we’ve tracked — books grounded in research rather than personal branding. Our spring 2026 roundup flagged this shift. Readers are getting more skeptical of guru-driven self-help and gravitating toward authors who show their evidence.

The Bottom Line

How to Read Minds is the best book on empathy I’ve read in the last two years. That’s a qualified compliment — the competition is mostly recycled EQ content and feel-good platitudes. Cliff clears a low bar by a wide margin.

The five-pillar framework is practical and specific where most empathy books are vague. The neurodiversity reframe is genuinely original and long overdue. The evidence base is solid. The vulnerability and workplace chapters are the weak points, but they don’t undermine the core material.

If empathy is something you want to get better at (not just think about), this gives you a practice. Not a perfect one — the framework is untested as a unit, and two of the five pillars need more development. But the three strong pillars (listening, curiosity, presence) come with exercises specific enough to start this week.

The honest test: read it, try the curiosity exercises for two weeks, and see if your conversations change. If they do, work through the rest. If they don’t, you haven’t lost much. That’s a better proposition than most books in this space offer.


Read in March 2026. Two weeks into implementation — active listening and curiosity drills are sticky. Vulnerability practice starts next month. The neurodiversity chapter is the one I keep recommending to people.