Leadership
 is about what you know and how you apply that 
knowledge.  Some people are born leaders but for the rest who aren't that lucky, here are some of the best books on leadership so you can have an arsenal of great information to build your skills upon.
Resilience is critical to success in leadership
Resilience as the one
 defining skill and behavior that allows some to stand out from the 
rest. In the face of adversity, some are able to pick themselves up and brush themselves off 
and move on, while others are not. Denise Brosseau in her book 
Ready to Be a Thought Leader: How to Increase Your Influence, Impact, and Success
Bridge the communication gap created by leadership
Most successful people have little interest in listening to those 
individuals who cannot add value to a situation or topic but force 
themselves into a conversation just to hear themselves speak. Good 
communicators address both the what and how aspects of messaging so they
 don't fall prey to becoming the smooth talker who leaves people with 
the impression of form over substance. Mike Myatt in his book 
Hacking Leadership: The 11 Gaps Every Business Needs to Close and the Secrets to Closing Them Quickly
Leadership is, at its core, about the mobilization of ideas
Leadership is about setting a direction. It's about creating a 
vision, empowering and inspiring people to want to achieve the vision, 
and enabling them to do so with energy and speed through an effective 
strategy. In its most basic sense, leadership is about mobilizing a 
group of people to jump into a better future. John P. Kotter in his book 
Accelerate: Building Strategic Agility for a Faster-Moving World
Good leaders are highly aware of their own vulnerabilities
The role played by blindspots is to meditate between the poles of 
self-confidence and self-doubt. A leader with too many blindspots can be
 overconfident, even blindly arrogant, and exposed to a range of risks. Robert Bruce Shaw in his book 
Leadership Blindspots: How Successful Leaders Identify and Overcome the Weaknesses That Matter
Leaders equip people for success beyond their own purview
Entrepreneurial leaders foster in people the feeling that they are personally successful--the hallmark of leadership. Derek Lidow in his book 
Startup Leadership: How Savvy Entrepreneurs Turn Their Ideas Into Successful Enterprises
The role of a leader is primarily to care for others
When a leader embraces their responsibility to care for people 
instead of caring for numbers, then people will follow, solve problems 
and see to it that that leader's vision comes to life the right way, a 
stable way and not the expedient way. Simon Sinek in his book 
Leaders Eat Last: Why Some Teams Pull Together and Others Don't
Reflect and lead in the moment without just focusing on problems
Most leaders can barely breathe through the blur of activity, much 
less reflect on and register the best of what is happening in the 
present moment. And on the rare occasions when they do step back to 
assess the situation at hand, they focus on the problems, ignoring the 
opportunities. Kathryn D. Cramer in her book 
Lead Positive: What Highly Effective Leaders See, Say, and Do
Trust in leadership can be distilled down to four basic elements
Trust in others (and their trust in us) depends on four elements: reliability, congruence, acceptance, and openness. Joanna Barsh and Johanne Lavoie in their book 
Centered Leadership: Leading with Purpose, Clarity, and Impact
Body language trumps spoken instruction
Remember, every communication is two conversations, the spoken 
content and the body language. The body language always trumps the 
content when the two are in conflict. So in planning your content and 
failing to think much about your emotions, which drive your body 
language, you're leaving that to chance--the more important of the two 
conversations. Nick Morgan in his book 
Power Cues: The Subtle Science of Leading Groups, Persuading Others, and Maximizing Your Personal Impact
Analyzing success and feedback
To increase your chances of moving toward your ideal self, challenge
 any self-defeating thoughts. Keep in mind your past accomplishments, 
candidly assess what has stopped you from achieving goals, as well as 
your personal beliefs about your abilities. Consider relevant feedback 
from others about what you have achieved and what your potential is. 
This helps increase your sense of hopefulness, which research has shown 
is critical in imagining and realizing the ideal self. Stewart D. Friedman in his book 
Leading the Life You Want: Skills for Integrating Work and Life