The "e;10,000 Hour Rule"e;-the idea that anyone can master anything with enough practice-is one of the most popular ideas of our time. It is also, according to educational psychologist Robert Best, scientifically wrong. In "e;The Talent Trap,"e; Best debunks the oversimplification of Anders Ericsson's research popularized by Malcolm Gladwell. Best argues that genetics (talent) play a massive, undeniable role that the self-help industry tries to hide. He shows that in fields like sports or music, the "e;practice ceiling"e; exists: no amount of training will make a short person an NBA center. However, the book is not pessimistic. Best pivots to the concept of "e;Fit."e; Success comes not from brute-forcing a skill you aren't built for, but from "e;sampling"e; different fields to find where your natural aptitudes lie (the "e;Roger Federer model"e;). It is a guide to quitting early, pivoting often, and finding the path of least resistance to excellence.