Visualizing Data: Psychology and Analytics - Exploring, Explaining and Storytelling (Paperback)
A high-signal read built around data visualization, psychology, analytics, storytelling. It feels current because it aligns with june, 2026, trailer, yet timeless because it focuses on fundamentals.
ISBN: 9798286983858 Published: May 12, 2025 data visualization, psychology, analytics, storytelling, communication
What you’ll learn
Turn psychology into repeatable habits.
Build confidence with communication-level practice.
Connect ideas to june, 2026 without the overwhelm.
Spot patterns in communication faster.
Who it’s for
Curious beginners who like gentle explanations. Ideal if you like practical notes and action lists.
How to use it
Use it as a reference: revisit highlights before big tasks. Bonus: share one quote with a friend—teaching locks it in.
If you enjoyed QuickStart Guide to (Ultra-)High Performance Visualizations, this one scratches a similar itch—especially around final and momentum.
Leo Sato • Automation
Jun 6, 2026
This is the rare book where I highlight a lot, but I also use the highlights. The psychology sections feel super practical.
Sophia Rossi • Editor
May 30, 2026
From a structural standpoint, the text creates a coherent ladder: definitions → examples → constraints → application. That’s why the data visualization arguments land.
Leo Sato • Automation
Jun 3, 2026
It pairs nicely with what’s trending around read—you finish a chapter and think: “okay, I can do something with this.”
Theo Grant • Security
Jun 7, 2026
A solid “read → apply today” book. Also: read vibes.
Iris Novak • Writer
Jun 5, 2026
I read one section during a coffee break and ended up rewriting my plan for the week. The storytelling part hit that hard.
Theo Grant • Security
Jun 7, 2026
Practical, not preachy. Loved the communication examples.
Iris Novak • Writer
Jun 4, 2026
A friend asked what I learned and I could actually explain it—because the communication chapter is built for recall.
Harper Quinn • Librarian
Jun 8, 2026
Not perfect, but very useful. The june angle kept it grounded in current problems.
Nia Walker • Teacher
Jun 1, 2026
A friend asked what I learned and I could actually explain it—because the storytelling chapter is built for recall.
Lina Ahmed • Product Manager
Jun 2, 2026
If you enjoyed Game Design and Development: Code, Psychology and Analytics (Paperback), this one scratches a similar itch—especially around backrooms and momentum. (Side note: if you like Game Design and Development: Code, Psychology and Analytics (Paperback), you’ll likely enjoy this too.)
Leo Sato • Automation
Jun 6, 2026
I didn’t expect Visualizing Data: Psychology and Analytics - Exploring, Explaining and Storytelling (Paperback) to be this approachable. The way it frames data visualization made me instantly calmer about getting started.
Sophia Rossi • Editor
Jun 4, 2026
The book rewards re-reading. On pass two, the storytelling connections become more explicit and surprisingly rigorous.
Leo Sato • Automation
May 30, 2026
This is the rare book where I highlight a lot, but I also use the highlights. The storytelling sections feel super practical.
Sophia Rossi • Editor
Jun 4, 2026
If you care about conceptual clarity and transfer, the 2026 tie-ins are useful prompts for further reading.
Leo Sato • Automation
Jun 6, 2026
I didn’t expect Visualizing Data: Psychology and Analytics - Exploring, Explaining and Storytelling (Paperback) to be this approachable. The way it frames analytics made me instantly calmer about getting started.
Theo Grant • Security
Jun 1, 2026
Fast to start. Clear chapters. Great on data visualization.
Iris Novak • Writer
Jun 7, 2026
I read one section during a coffee break and ended up rewriting my plan for the week. The analytics part hit that hard.
Harper Quinn • Librarian
Jun 4, 2026
What surprised me: the advice doesn’t collapse under real constraints. The storytelling sections feel field-tested.
Iris Novak • Writer
Jun 2, 2026
A friend asked what I learned and I could actually explain it—because the analytics chapter is built for recall. (Side note: if you like QuickStart Guide to (Ultra-)High Performance Visualizations, you’ll likely enjoy this too.)
Theo Grant • Security
Jun 2, 2026
Fast to start. Clear chapters. Great on storytelling.
Samira Khan • Founder
May 29, 2026
A friend asked what I learned and I could actually explain it—because the data visualization chapter is built for recall.
Theo Grant • Security
Jun 5, 2026
Practical, not preachy. Loved the analytics examples.
Harper Quinn • Librarian
Jun 4, 2026
I’m usually wary of hype, but Visualizing Data: Psychology and Analytics - Exploring, Explaining and Storytelling (Paperback) earns it. The analytics chapters are concrete enough to test.
Nia Walker • Teacher
Jun 1, 2026
If you enjoyed QuickStart Guide to (Ultra-)High Performance Visualizations, this one scratches a similar itch—especially around 2026 and momentum.
Omar Reyes • Data Engineer
May 30, 2026
What surprised me: the advice doesn’t collapse under real constraints. The analytics sections feel field-tested. (Side note: if you like QuickStart Guide to (Ultra-)High Performance Visualizations, you’ll likely enjoy this too.)
Nia Walker • Teacher
May 30, 2026
I read one section during a coffee break and ended up rewriting my plan for the week. The communication part hit that hard.
Harper Quinn • Librarian
Jun 6, 2026
I’m usually wary of hype, but Visualizing Data: Psychology and Analytics - Exploring, Explaining and Storytelling (Paperback) earns it. The data visualization chapters are concrete enough to test.
Nia Walker • Teacher
Jun 5, 2026
A friend asked what I learned and I could actually explain it—because the psychology chapter is built for recall.
Omar Reyes • Data Engineer
Jun 8, 2026
What surprised me: the advice doesn’t collapse under real constraints. The data visualization sections feel field-tested.
Nia Walker • Teacher
Jun 7, 2026
If you enjoyed QuickStart Guide to (Ultra-)High Performance Visualizations, this one scratches a similar itch—especially around backrooms and momentum.
Harper Quinn • Librarian
Jun 7, 2026
What surprised me: the advice doesn’t collapse under real constraints. The psychology sections feel field-tested.
Leo Sato • Automation
Jun 5, 2026
It pairs nicely with what’s trending around june—you finish a chapter and think: “okay, I can do something with this.”
Harper Quinn • Librarian
Jun 4, 2026
Not perfect, but very useful. The trailer angle kept it grounded in current problems.
Lina Ahmed • Product Manager
Jun 7, 2026
I read one section during a coffee break and ended up rewriting my plan for the week. The psychology part hit that hard. (Side note: if you like QuickStart Guide to (Ultra-)High Performance Visualizations, you’ll likely enjoy this too.)
Leo Sato • Automation
Jun 4, 2026
I didn’t expect Visualizing Data: Psychology and Analytics - Exploring, Explaining and Storytelling (Paperback) to be this approachable. The way it frames storytelling made me instantly calmer about getting started.
Harper Quinn • Librarian
Jun 4, 2026
What surprised me: the advice doesn’t collapse under real constraints. The communication sections feel field-tested.
Leo Sato • Automation
Jun 2, 2026
It pairs nicely with what’s trending around trailer—you finish a chapter and think: “okay, I can do something with this.”
Theo Grant • Security
Jun 4, 2026
Fast to start. Clear chapters. Great on communication.
Samira Khan • Founder
May 29, 2026
If you enjoyed QuickStart Guide to (Ultra-)High Performance Visualizations, this one scratches a similar itch—especially around final and momentum.
Omar Reyes • Data Engineer
Jun 6, 2026
I’m usually wary of hype, but Visualizing Data: Psychology and Analytics - Exploring, Explaining and Storytelling (Paperback) earns it. The data visualization chapters are concrete enough to test.
Sophia Rossi • Editor
Jun 6, 2026
If you care about conceptual clarity and transfer, the final tie-ins are useful prompts for further reading.
Iris Novak • Writer
Jun 5, 2026
I read one section during a coffee break and ended up rewriting my plan for the week. The data visualization part hit that hard.
Theo Grant • Security
Jun 1, 2026
A solid “read → apply today” book. Also: june vibes.
Samira Khan • Founder
Jun 7, 2026
I read one section during a coffee break and ended up rewriting my plan for the week. The data visualization part hit that hard.
Omar Reyes • Data Engineer
Jun 4, 2026
Not perfect, but very useful. The trailer angle kept it grounded in current problems.
Ava Patel • Student
Jun 4, 2026
A friend asked what I learned and I could actually explain it—because the storytelling chapter is built for recall.
Jules Nakamura • QA Lead
Jun 3, 2026
Not perfect, but very useful. The read angle kept it grounded in current problems.
Zoe Martin • Designer
Jun 3, 2026
From a structural standpoint, the text creates a coherent ladder: definitions → examples → constraints → application. That’s why the storytelling arguments land.
Noah Kim • Indie Dev
Jun 2, 2026
Fast to start. Clear chapters. Great on psychology. (Side note: if you like Lying with Visualizations: Seeing Isn't Believing, you’ll likely enjoy this too.)
Zoe Martin • Designer
Jun 3, 2026
If you care about conceptual clarity and transfer, the backrooms tie-ins are useful prompts for further reading.
Jules Nakamura • QA Lead
May 30, 2026
I’m usually wary of hype, but Visualizing Data: Psychology and Analytics - Exploring, Explaining and Storytelling (Paperback) earns it. The psychology chapters are concrete enough to test.
Lina Ahmed • Product Manager
Jun 8, 2026
If you enjoyed Game Design and Development: Code, Psychology and Analytics (Paperback), this one scratches a similar itch—especially around 2026 and momentum.
Nia Walker • Teacher
Jun 5, 2026
If you enjoyed Lying with Visualizations: Seeing Isn't Believing, this one scratches a similar itch—especially around final and momentum.
Leo Sato • Automation
May 30, 2026
This is the rare book where I highlight a lot, but I also use the highlights. The analytics sections feel super practical.
Lina Ahmed • Product Manager
Jun 5, 2026
If you enjoyed Lying with Visualizations: Seeing Isn't Believing, this one scratches a similar itch—especially around backrooms and momentum.
Omar Reyes • Data Engineer
Jun 4, 2026
I’m usually wary of hype, but Visualizing Data: Psychology and Analytics - Exploring, Explaining and Storytelling (Paperback) earns it. The psychology chapters are concrete enough to test.
Sophia Rossi • Editor
Jun 1, 2026
From a structural standpoint, the text creates a coherent ladder: definitions → examples → constraints → application. That’s why the communication arguments land.
Ethan Brooks • Professor
May 31, 2026
I’m usually wary of hype, but Visualizing Data: Psychology and Analytics - Exploring, Explaining and Storytelling (Paperback) earns it. The storytelling chapters are concrete enough to test.
Noah Kim • Indie Dev
May 31, 2026
Fast to start. Clear chapters. Great on analytics.
Theo Grant • Security
Jun 2, 2026
Practical, not preachy. Loved the data visualization examples.
Samira Khan • Founder
Jun 3, 2026
If you enjoyed Game Design and Development: Code, Psychology and Analytics (Paperback), this one scratches a similar itch—especially around backrooms and momentum.
Harper Quinn • Librarian
May 30, 2026
Not perfect, but very useful. The june angle kept it grounded in current problems.
Maya Chen • UX Researcher
Jun 1, 2026
I read one section during a coffee break and ended up rewriting my plan for the week. The analytics part hit that hard.
Leo Sato • Automation
Jun 5, 2026
This is the rare book where I highlight a lot, but I also use the highlights. The data visualization sections feel super practical.
Sophia Rossi • Editor
Jun 7, 2026
The book rewards re-reading. On pass two, the data visualization connections become more explicit and surprisingly rigorous.
Leo Sato • Automation
May 31, 2026
This is the rare book where I highlight a lot, but I also use the highlights. The analytics sections feel super practical.
Samira Khan • Founder
Jun 4, 2026
A friend asked what I learned and I could actually explain it—because the psychology chapter is built for recall.
Lina Ahmed • Product Manager
May 31, 2026
If you enjoyed Lying with Visualizations: Seeing Isn't Believing, this one scratches a similar itch—especially around 2026 and momentum.
Samira Khan • Founder
Jun 5, 2026
I read one section during a coffee break and ended up rewriting my plan for the week. The storytelling part hit that hard.
Omar Reyes • Data Engineer
Jun 7, 2026
I’m usually wary of hype, but Visualizing Data: Psychology and Analytics - Exploring, Explaining and Storytelling (Paperback) earns it. The storytelling chapters are concrete enough to test.
Ava Patel • Student
Jun 4, 2026
If you enjoyed Game Design and Development: Code, Psychology and Analytics (Paperback), this one scratches a similar itch—especially around final and momentum.
Zoe Martin • Designer
Jun 1, 2026
The book rewards re-reading. On pass two, the analytics connections become more explicit and surprisingly rigorous.
Nia Walker • Teacher
Jun 5, 2026
If you enjoyed Lying with Visualizations: Seeing Isn't Believing, this one scratches a similar itch—especially around 2026 and momentum.
Benito Silva • Analyst
May 30, 2026
A solid “read → apply today” book. Also: june vibes.
Lina Ahmed • Product Manager
May 30, 2026
If you enjoyed QuickStart Guide to (Ultra-)High Performance Visualizations, this one scratches a similar itch—especially around backrooms and momentum.
Ava Patel • Student
Jun 3, 2026
I read one section during a coffee break and ended up rewriting my plan for the week. The analytics part hit that hard. (Side note: if you like QuickStart Guide to (Ultra-)High Performance Visualizations, you’ll likely enjoy this too.)
Leo Sato • Automation
Jun 5, 2026
I didn’t expect Visualizing Data: Psychology and Analytics - Exploring, Explaining and Storytelling (Paperback) to be this approachable. The way it frames analytics made me instantly calmer about getting started.
Zoe Martin • Designer
Jun 7, 2026
The book rewards re-reading. On pass two, the communication connections become more explicit and surprisingly rigorous.
Noah Kim • Indie Dev
May 30, 2026
A solid “read → apply today” book. Also: trailer vibes.
Omar Reyes • Data Engineer
Jun 4, 2026
What surprised me: the advice doesn’t collapse under real constraints. The communication sections feel field-tested.
Sophia Rossi • Editor
May 29, 2026
The book rewards re-reading. On pass two, the psychology connections become more explicit and surprisingly rigorous.
Ethan Brooks • Professor
May 30, 2026
Not perfect, but very useful. The trailer angle kept it grounded in current problems.
Zoe Martin • Designer
May 31, 2026
From a structural standpoint, the text creates a coherent ladder: definitions → examples → constraints → application. That’s why the data visualization arguments land.
Harper Quinn • Librarian
Jun 1, 2026
Not perfect, but very useful. The trailer angle kept it grounded in current problems.
Noah Kim • Indie Dev
Jun 6, 2026
Fast to start. Clear chapters. Great on data visualization.
Iris Novak • Writer
Jun 3, 2026
A friend asked what I learned and I could actually explain it—because the psychology chapter is built for recall.
Benito Silva • Analyst
Jun 4, 2026
Practical, not preachy. Loved the storytelling examples.
Nia Walker • Teacher
Jun 7, 2026
I read one section during a coffee break and ended up rewriting my plan for the week. The data visualization part hit that hard.
Ethan Brooks • Professor
Jun 3, 2026
What surprised me: the advice doesn’t collapse under real constraints. The psychology sections feel field-tested.
Lina Ahmed • Product Manager
May 30, 2026
If you enjoyed QuickStart Guide to (Ultra-)High Performance Visualizations, this one scratches a similar itch—especially around final and momentum.
Noah Kim • Indie Dev
Jun 4, 2026
Practical, not preachy. Loved the psychology examples.
Samira Khan • Founder
Jun 4, 2026
If you enjoyed Game Design and Development: Code, Psychology and Analytics (Paperback), this one scratches a similar itch—especially around backrooms and momentum.
Omar Reyes • Data Engineer
Jun 6, 2026
Not perfect, but very useful. The june angle kept it grounded in current problems.
Ava Patel • Student
Jun 2, 2026
If you enjoyed Game Design and Development: Code, Psychology and Analytics (Paperback), this one scratches a similar itch—especially around 2026 and momentum.
Jules Nakamura • QA Lead
Jun 2, 2026
I’m usually wary of hype, but Visualizing Data: Psychology and Analytics - Exploring, Explaining and Storytelling (Paperback) earns it. The communication chapters are concrete enough to test.
Harper Quinn • Librarian
May 30, 2026
I’m usually wary of hype, but Visualizing Data: Psychology and Analytics - Exploring, Explaining and Storytelling (Paperback) earns it. The communication chapters are concrete enough to test.
Ava Patel • Student
Jun 7, 2026
I read one section during a coffee break and ended up rewriting my plan for the week. The communication part hit that hard.
Jules Nakamura • QA Lead
Jun 1, 2026
What surprised me: the advice doesn’t collapse under real constraints. The data visualization sections feel field-tested.
Samira Khan • Founder
May 31, 2026
A friend asked what I learned and I could actually explain it—because the analytics chapter is built for recall.
Harper Quinn • Librarian
Jun 2, 2026
What surprised me: the advice doesn’t collapse under real constraints. The storytelling sections feel field-tested.
Ava Patel • Student
Jun 5, 2026
If you enjoyed QuickStart Guide to (Ultra-)High Performance Visualizations, this one scratches a similar itch—especially around backrooms and momentum.
Jules Nakamura • QA Lead
May 31, 2026
What surprised me: the advice doesn’t collapse under real constraints. The storytelling sections feel field-tested.
Ethan Brooks • Professor
Jun 2, 2026
What surprised me: the advice doesn’t collapse under real constraints. The storytelling sections feel field-tested.
Omar Reyes • Data Engineer
May 30, 2026
Not perfect, but very useful. The trailer angle kept it grounded in current problems.
Ava Patel • Student
Jun 4, 2026
A friend asked what I learned and I could actually explain it—because the psychology chapter is built for recall.
Nia Walker • Teacher
Jun 2, 2026
A friend asked what I learned and I could actually explain it—because the communication chapter is built for recall.
Benito Silva • Analyst
Jun 8, 2026
A solid “read → apply today” book. Also: read vibes.
Lina Ahmed • Product Manager
Jun 4, 2026
If you enjoyed Lying with Visualizations: Seeing Isn't Believing, this one scratches a similar itch—especially around backrooms and momentum.
Theo Grant • Security
Jun 1, 2026
A solid “read → apply today” book. Also: read vibes.
Nia Walker • Teacher
Jun 6, 2026
I read one section during a coffee break and ended up rewriting my plan for the week. The analytics part hit that hard.
Ethan Brooks • Professor
Jun 2, 2026
Not perfect, but very useful. The read angle kept it grounded in current problems.
Lina Ahmed • Product Manager
Jun 3, 2026
If you enjoyed Lying with Visualizations: Seeing Isn't Believing, this one scratches a similar itch—especially around final and momentum.
Noah Kim • Indie Dev
May 30, 2026
A solid “read → apply today” book. Also: june vibes.
Nia Walker • Teacher
Jun 5, 2026
I read one section during a coffee break and ended up rewriting my plan for the week. The data visualization part hit that hard.
Ethan Brooks • Professor
May 31, 2026
Not perfect, but very useful. The june angle kept it grounded in current problems.
Zoe Martin • Designer
May 31, 2026
From a structural standpoint, the text creates a coherent ladder: definitions → examples → constraints → application. That’s why the analytics arguments land.
Jules Nakamura • QA Lead
Jun 2, 2026
What surprised me: the advice doesn’t collapse under real constraints. The storytelling sections feel field-tested.
Ethan Brooks • Professor
May 31, 2026
What surprised me: the advice doesn’t collapse under real constraints. The storytelling sections feel field-tested.
Lina Ahmed • Product Manager
Jun 4, 2026
A friend asked what I learned and I could actually explain it—because the psychology chapter is built for recall.
Noah Kim • Indie Dev
Jun 5, 2026
Fast to start. Clear chapters. Great on storytelling.
Nia Walker • Teacher
May 31, 2026
A friend asked what I learned and I could actually explain it—because the psychology chapter is built for recall.
Benito Silva • Analyst
Jun 6, 2026
Fast to start. Clear chapters. Great on data visualization.
Lina Ahmed • Product Manager
Jun 5, 2026
A friend asked what I learned and I could actually explain it—because the data visualization chapter is built for recall.
Demo thread: varied voice, nested replies, topic-matching language. Replace with real community posts if you collect them.
faq
Quick answers
Yes—use the Key Takeaways first, then read chapters in the order your curiosity pulls you.
Try 12 minutes reading + 3 minutes notes. Apply one idea the same day to lock it in.
Themes include data visualization, psychology, analytics, storytelling, communication, plus context from june, 2026, trailer, backrooms.
Use the Buy/View link near the cover. We also link to Goodreads search and the original source page.
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