I was visiting the MIT bookshop and saw a staple of these books. I regonized that John Maeda is a MIT professor, scanned the table of content and decided to buy the book. I did not know that Prof. Maeda is a designer and therefore I expected an engineer talking about system engineering for complex technical systems.
I like the book title "Simplicity" instead of possible other titles for the same book like "Management of Complexity".
I like the easy to read style of the book - a book about simplicity should not be too complex. I also like the auto-biographic components - the anecdotes of his live.
I also like books which do not tell you how to solve your (complex) problems but let you think by your own and just trigger your own thoughts in your brain. The book is definitively no book which tells you how to do it, but animates your own creativity. It starts more concrete at the beginning and gets more and more abstract towards the end of the book. In Chapter "Law 9: Failure" the author criticises his own book and shows what is not perfect and could be improved.
All in all a very unconventional book, completely different from what I was expecting, but nevertheless I liked to read it (and I liked my own thought during reading it). The book is more a piece of art than a book with classical content.
If I had time for it, the book would animate me to write the engineering book which I expected when I bought it. I am sure you could write an excellent engineering book in the field of management of complexity with the same chapter titles:
Law 1: Reduce
Law 2: Organize
Law 3: Time
Law 4: Learn
Law 5: Differences
Law 6: Context
Law 7: Emotion
Law 8: Trust
Law 9: Failure
Law 10: The one
(In this new engineering book, the chapters 7 and 8 would be the most difficult but maybe most interesting.)