100 Best Essays Books of All Time
We've researched and ranked the best essays books in the world, based on recommendations from world experts, sales data, and millions of reader ratings. Learn more
Men Explain Things to Me
Rebecca Solnit | 5.00
Chelsea Handler Goes deep with statistics, personal stories, and others’ accounts of how brutal this world can be for women, the history of how we've been treated, and what it will take to change the conversation: MEN. We need them to be as outraged as we are and join our fight. (Source)
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Me Talk Pretty One Day
David Sedaris | 4.96
Between the World and Me
Ta-Nehisi Coates | 4.94
Barack Obama The president also released a list of his summer favorites back in 2015: All That Is, James Salter The Sixth Extinction, Elizabeth Kolbert The Lowland, Jhumpa Lahiri Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates Washington: A Life, Ron Chernow All the Light We Cannot See, Anthony Doerr (Source)
Jack Dorsey Q: What are the books that had a major influence on you? Or simply the ones you like the most. : Tao te Ching, score takes care of itself, between the world and me, the four agreements, the old man and the sea...I love reading! (Source)
Doug McMillon Here are some of my favorite reads from 2017. Lots of friends and colleagues send me book suggestions and it's impossible to squeeze them all in. I continue to be super curious about how digital and tech are enabling people to transform our lives but I try to read a good mix of books that apply to a variety of areas and stretch my thinking more broadly. (Source)
Slouching Towards Bethlehem
Joan Didion | 4.94
Peter Hessler I like Didion for her writing style and her control over her material, but also for the way in which she captures a historical moment. (Source)
Liz Lambert I love [this book] so much. (Source)
We Should All Be Feminists
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie | 4.92
Bad Feminist
Roxane Gay | 4.88
Irina Nica It’s hard to pick an all-time favorite because, as time goes by and I grow older, my reading list becomes more “mature” and I find myself interested in new things. I probably have a personal favorite book for each stage of my life. Right now I’m absolutely blown away by everything Roxane Gay wrote, especially Bad Feminist. (Source)
Trick Mirror
Reflections on Self-Delusion
Jia Tolentino | 4.86
Lydia Polgreen This book is amazing and you should read it. https://t.co/pcbmYUR4QP (Source)
Maryanne Hobbs @jiatolentino hello Jia :) finding your perspectives in the new book fascinating and so resonant.. thank you 🌹 m/a..x https://t.co/BoNzB1BuDf (Source)
Yashar Ali . @jiatolentino’s fabulous book is one of President Obama’s favorite books of 2019 https://t.co/QHzZsHl2rF (Source)
Consider the Lobster
And Other Essays
David Foster Wallace | 4.85
A Room of One's Own
Virginia Woolf | 4.75
Dress Your Family in Corduroy & Denim
David Sedaris | 4.73
Adam Kay @penceyprepmemes How about David Sedaris, for starters - "Dress your family in corduroy and denim" is an amazing book. (Source)
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The Fire Next Time
James Baldwin | 4.69
Barack Obama Fact or fiction, the president knows that reading keeps the mind sharp. He also delved into these non-fiction reads: Age of Ambition: Chasing Fortune, Evan Osnos Thinking, Fast and Slow, Daniel Kahneman Moral Man And Immoral Society, Reinhold Niebuhr A Kind And Just Parent, William Ayers The Post-American World, Fareed Zakaria Lessons in Disaster, Gordon Goldstein Sapiens: A Brief History of... (Source)
When You Are Engulfed in Flames
David Sedaris | 4.67
David Sedaris | 4.63
David Blaine It’s hilarious. (Source)
The White Album
Joan Didion | 4.62
Dan Richards I feel Joan Didion is the patron saint of a maelstrom of culture and environment of a particular time. She is the great American road-trip writer, to my mind. She has that great widescreen filmic quality to her work. (Source)
Steven Amsterdam With her gaze on California of the late 60s and early 70s, Didion gives us the Black Panthers, Janis Joplin, Nancy Reagan, and the Manson follower Linda Kasabian. (Source)
A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again
Essays and Arguments
David Foster Wallace | 4.61
Tressie McMillan Cottom | 4.60
Melissa Moore The best book I read this year was Thick by Tressie McMillan Cottom. I read it twice and both times found it challenging and revelatory. (Source)
David Sedaris and Hachette Audi | 4.60
Sister Outsider
Essays and Speeches
Audre Lorde, Cheryl Clarke | 4.60
Bianca Belair For #BHM I will be sharing some of my favorite books by Black Authors 26th Book: Sister Outsider By: Audre Lorde My first time reading anything by Audre Lorde. I am now really looking forward to reading more of her poems/writings. What she writes is important & timeless. https://t.co/dUDMcaAAbx (Source)
Let's Explore Diabetes with Owls
David Sedaris | 4.58
Austin Kleon I read this one, then I read his collected diaries, Theft By Finding, and then I read the visual compendium, which might have even been the most interesting of the three books, but I’m listing this one because it’s hilarious, although with the interstitial fiction bits, it’s sort of like one of those classic 90s hip-hop albums where you skip the “skit” tracks. (Source)
Notes from a Loud Woman
Lindy West | 4.56
Matt Mcgorry "Shrill: Notes From a Loud Woman" by Lindy West @TheLindyWest # Lovvvvveeedddd, loved, loved, loved this book!!! West is a truly remarkable writer and her stories are beautifully poignant while dosed with her… https://t.co/nzJtXtOGTn (Source)
Shannon Coulter @JennLHaglund @tomi_adeyemi I love that feeling! Just finished the audiobook version of Shrill by Lindy West after _years_ of meaning to read it and that's the exact feeling it gave me. Give me your book recommendations! (Source)
The Collected Schizophrenias
Esmé Weijun Wang | 4.52
Tiny Beautiful Things
Advice on Love and Life from Dear Sugar
Cheryl Strayed | 4.49
Ryan Holiday It was wonderful to read these two provocative books of essays by two incredibly wise and compassionate women. Cheryl Strayed, also the author of Wild, was the anonymous columnist behind the online column, Dear Sugar and boy, are we better off for it. This is not a random smattering of advice. This book contains some of the most cogent insights on life, pain, loss, love, success, youth that I... (Source)
James Altucher Cheryl had an advice column called “Dear Sugar”. I was reading the column long before Oprah recommended “Wild” by Cheryl and then Wild became a movie and “Tiny Beautiful Things” (the collection of her advice column) became a book. She is so wise and compassionate. A modern saint. I used to do Q&A sessions on Twitter. I’d read her book beforehand to get inspiration about what true advice is. (Source)
We Were Eight Years in Power
An American Tragedy
Ta-Nehisi Coates | 4.47
The Myth of Sisyphus and Other Essays
Albert Camu | 4.47
David Heinemeier Hansson Camus’ philosophical exposition of absurdity, suicide in the face of meaninglessness, and other cherry topics that continue on from his fictional work in novels like The Stranger. It’s surprisingly readable, unlike many other mid 20th century philosophers, yet no less deep or pointy. It’s a great follow-up, as an original text, to that book The Age of Absurdity, I recommended last year. Still... (Source)
Kenan Malik The Myth of Sisyphus is a small work, but Camus’s meditation on faith and fate has personally been hugely important in developing my ideas. Writing in the embers of World War II, Camus confronts in The Myth of Sisyphus both the tragedy of recent history and what he sees as the absurdity of the human condition. There is, he observes, a chasm between the human need for meaning and what he calls... (Source)
The Penguin Essays Of George Orwell
George Orwell, Bernard Crick | 4.46
Peter Kellner George Orwell was not only an extraordinary writer but he also hated any form of cant. Some of his most widely read works such as 1984 and Animal Farm are an assault on the nastier, narrow-minded, dictatorial tendencies of the left, although Orwell was himself on the left. (Source)
The Opposite of Loneliness
Essays and Stories
Marina Keegan, Anne Fadiman | 4.46
Dear Ijeawele, or a Feminist Manifesto in Fifteen Suggestions
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie | 4.45
The Tipping Point
How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference
Malcolm Gladwell | 4.45
Kevin Rose Bunch of really good information in here on how to make ideas go viral. This could be good to apply to any kind of products or ideas you may have. Definitely, check out The Tipping Point, which is one of my favorites. (Source)
Seth Godin Malcolm Gladwell's breakthrough insight was to focus on the micro-relationships between individuals, which helped organizations realize that it's not about the big ads and the huge charity balls... it's about setting the stage for the buzz to start. (Source)
Andy Stern I think that when we talk about making change, it is much more about macro change, like in policy. This book reminds you that at times when you're building big movements, or trying to elect significant decision-makers in politics, sometimes it's the little things that make a difference. Ever since the book was written, we've become very used to the idea of things going viral unexpectedly and then... (Source)
Selected Essays
Mary Oliver | 4.44
We Are Never Meeting in Real Life.
Samantha Irby | 4.44
Complete Essays
Michel de Montaigne, Charles Cotton | 4.42
Ryan Holiday There is plenty to study and see simply by looking inwards — maybe even an alarming amount. (Source)
Alain de Botton I’ve given quite a lot of copies of [this book] to people down the years. (Source)
Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? (And Other Concerns)
Mindy Kaling | 4.42
Angela Kinsey .@mindykaling I am rereading your book and cracking up. I appreciate your chapter on The Office so much more now. But all of it is fantastic. Thanks for starting my day with laughter. You know I loves ya. ❤️ https://t.co/EB99xnyt0p (Source)
Yashar Ali Reminds me of one of my favorite lines from @mindykaling's book (even though I'm an early riser): “There is no sunrise so beautiful that it is worth waking me up to see it.” https://t.co/pS56bmyYjS (Source)
Not That Bad
Dispatches from Rape Culture
Roxane Gay, Brandon Taylor, et al | 4.40
Henry David Thoreau | 4.40
Laura Dassow Walls The book that we love as Walden began in the journal entries that he wrote starting with his first day at the pond. (Source)
Roman Krznaric In 1845 the American naturalist went out to live in the woods of Western Massachusetts. Thoreau was one of the great masters of the art of simple living. (Source)
John Kaag There’s this idea that philosophy can blend into memoir and that, ideally, philosophy, at its best, is to help us through the business of living with people, within communities. This is a point that Thoreau’s Walden gave to me, as a writer, and why I consider it so valuable for today. (Source)
Confessions of a Common Reader
Anne Fadiman | 4.40
I Feel Bad About My Neck
And Other Thoughts on Being a Woman
Nora Ephron | 4.39
Holidays on Ice
David Sedaris | 4.37
An American Lyric
Claudia Rankine | 4.36
Cheryl Strayed A really important book for us to be reading right now. (Source)
Jeremy Noel-Tod Obviously, it’s been admired and acclaimed, but I do feel the general reception of it has underplayed its artfulness. Its technical subtlety and overall arrangement has been neglected, because it has been classified as a kind of documentary work. (Source)
Christopher Hitchens | 4.36
Le Grove @billysubway Hitchens book under your arm. I’m reading Arguably. When he’s at his best, he is a savage. Unbelievable prose. (Source)
Notes of a Native Son
James Baldwin | 4.35
The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales
Oliver Sacks | 4.34
Suzanne O'Sullivan I didn’t choose neurology because of it but the way Oliver Sacks writes about neurology is very compelling. (Source)
Tanya Byron This is a seminal book that anyone who wants to work in mental health should read. It is a charming and gentle and also an honest exposé of what can happen to us when our mental health is compromised for whatever reason. (Source)
Bradley Voytek I can’t imagine one day waking up and not knowing who my wife is, or seeing my wife and thinking that she was replaced by some sort of clone or robot. But that could happen to any of us. (Source)
The Empathy Exams
Leslie Jamison | 4.33
This is the Story of a Happy Marriage
Ann Patchett | 4.31
Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs
A Low Culture Manifesto
Chuck Klosterman | 4.30
Karen Pfaff Manganillo Never have I read a book that I said “this is so perfect, amazing, hilarious, he’s thinking what I’m thinking (in a much more thought out and cool way)”. (Source)
Bird By Bird
Some Instructions on Writing and Life
Anne Lamott | 4.29
Susan Cain I love [this book]. Such a good book. (Source)
Timothy Ferriss Bird by Bird is one of my absolute favorite books, and I gift it to everybody, which I should probably also give to startup founders, quite frankly. A lot of the lessons are the same. But you can get to your destination, even though you can only see 20 feet in front of you. (Source)
Ryan Holiday It was wonderful to read these two provocative books of essays by two incredibly wise and compassionate women. [...] Anne Lamott’s book is ostensibly about the art of writing, but really it too is about life and how to tackle the problems, temptations and opportunities life throws at us. Both will make you think and both made me a better person this year. (Source)
Zadie Smith | 4.29
Barack Obama As 2018 draws to a close, I’m continuing a favorite tradition of mine and sharing my year-end lists. It gives me a moment to pause and reflect on the year through the books I found most thought-provoking, inspiring, or just plain loved. It also gives me a chance to highlight talented authors – some who are household names and others who you may not have heard of before. Here’s my best of 2018... (Source)
What the Dog Saw and Other Adventures
Malcolm Gladwell | 4.28
Sam Freedman @mrianleslie (Also I agree What the Dog Saw is his best book). (Source)
The Witches Are Coming
Lindy West | 4.27
Against Interpretation and Other Essays
Susan Sontag | 4.25
How to Write an Autobiographical Novel
Alexander Chee | 4.25
Eula Biss Alex Chee explores the realm of the real with extraordinarily beautiful essays. Being real here is an ambition, a haunting, an impossibility, and an illusion. What passes for real, his essays suggest, becomes real, just as life becomes art and art, pursued this fully, becomes a life. (Source)
Changing My Mind
Occasional Essays
Zadie Smith | 4.25
Barrel Fever
David Sedaris | 4.24
Chelsea Handler [The author] is fucking hilarious and there's nothing I prefer to do more than laugh. If this book doesn't make you laugh, I'll refund you the money. (Source)
The Fire This Time
A New Generation Speaks About Race
Jesmyn Ward | 4.24
Why Not Me?
Mindy Kaling | 4.24
The View from the Cheap Seats
Selected Nonfiction
Neil Gaiman | 4.24
I Was Told There'd Be Cake
Sloane Crosley | 4.24
The Intelligent Investor
The Classic Text on Value Investing
Benjamin Graham | 4.23
Warren Buffett To invest successfully over a lifetime does not require a stratospheric IQ, unusual business insights, or inside information. What's needed is a sound intellectual framework for making decisions and the ability to keep emotions from corroding that framework. This book precisely and clearly prescribes the proper framework. You must provide the emotional discipline. (Source)
Kevin Rose The foundation for investing. A lot of people have used this as their guide to getting into investment, basic strategies. Actually Warren Buffett cites this as the book that got him into investing and he says that principles he learned here helped him to become a great investor. Highly recommend this book. It’s a great way understand what’s going on and how to evaluate different companies out... (Source)
John Kay The idea is that you look at the underlying value of the company’s activities instead of relying on market gossip. (Source)
Tell Me How It Ends
An Essay in Forty Questions
Valeria Luiselli | 4.23
Tina Fey | 4.22
Sheryl Sandberg I absolutely loved Tina Fey's "Bossypants" and didn't want it to end. It's hilarious as well as important. Not only was I laughing on every page, but I was nodding along, highlighting and dog-earing like crazy. [...] It is so, so good. As a young girl, I was labeled bossy, too, so as a former - O.K., current - bossypants, I am grateful to Tina for being outspoken, unapologetic and hysterically... (Source)
They Can't Kill Us Until They Kill Us
Hanif Abdurraqib, Dr. Eve L. Ewing | 4.22
Saadia Muzaffar Man, this is such an amazing book of essays. Meditations on music and musicians and their moments and meaning-making. @NifMuhammad's mindworks are a gift. Go find it. (thank you @asad_ch!) https://t.co/htSueYYBUT (Source)
This Is Water
Some Thoughts, Delivered on a Significant Occasion, about Living a Compassionate Life
David Foster Wallace | 4.21
John Jeremiah Sullivan | 4.21
Greil Marcus This is a new book by a writer in his mid-thirties, about all kinds of things. A lot of it is about the South, some of it is autobiographical, there is a long and quite wonderful piece about going to a Christian music camp. (Source)
The Mother of All Questions
Rebecca Solnit | 4.20
The Partly Cloudy Patriot
Sarah Vowell, Katherine Streeter | 4.20
Essays of E.B. White
E. B. White | 4.19
Adam Gopnik White, for me, is the great maker of the New Yorker style. Though it seems self-serving for me to say it, I think that style was the next step in the creation of the essay tone. One of the things White does is use a lot of the habits of the American newspaper in his essays. He is a genuinely simple, spare, understated writer. In the presence of White, even writers as inspired as Woolf and... (Source)
A Field Guide to Getting Lost
Rebecca Solnit | 4.19
A Man Without a Country
Kurt Vonnegut | 4.18
No Time to Spare
Thinking About What Matters
Ursula K. Le Guin, Karen Joy Fowler | 4.17
Pilgrim at Tinker Creek
Annie Dillard | 4.16
Laura Dassow Walls She’s enacting Thoreau, but in a 20th-century context: she takes on quantum physics, the latest research on DNA and the nature of life. (Source)
Sara Maitland This book, which won the Pulitzer literature prize when it was released, is the most beautiful book about the wild. (Source)
Maggie Nelson | 4.14
Furiously Happy
A Funny Book About Horrible Things
Jenny Lawson | 4.13
Women & Power
A Manifesto
Mary Beard | 4.13
Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century
Timothy Snyder | 4.12
George Saunders Please read this book. So smart, so timely. (Source)
Tom Holland "There isn’t a page of this magnificent book that does not contain some fascinating detail and the narrative is held together with a novelist’s eye for character and theme." #Dominion https://t.co/FESSNxVDLC (Source)
Maya Wiley Prof. Tim Snyder, author of “In Tyranny” reminded us in that important little book that we must protect our institutions. #DOJ is one of our most important in gov’t for the rule of law. This is our collective house & #Barr should be evicted. https://t.co/PPxM9IMQUm (Source)
Small Wonder
Barbara Kingsolver | 4.11
The Source of Self-Regard
Selected Essays, Speeches, and Meditations
Toni Morrison | 4.11
Hyperbole and a Half
Unfortunate Situations, Flawed Coping Mechanisms, Mayhem, and Other Things That Happened
Allie Brosh | 4.11
Bill Gates While she self-deprecatingly depicts herself in words and art as an odd outsider, we can all relate to her struggles. Rather than laughing at her, you laugh with her. It is no hyperbole to say I love her approach -- looking, listening, and describing with the observational skills of a scientist, the creativity of an artist, and the wit of a comedian. (Source)
Samantha Irby | 4.10
Both Flesh and Not
David Foster Wallace | 4.10
David Papineau People can learn to do amazing things with their bodies, and people start honing and developing these skills as an end in itself, a very natural thing for humans to do. (Source)
So Sad Today
Personal Essays
Melissa Broder | 4.10
Hope in the Dark
Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities
Rebecca Solnit | 4.09
Prem Panicker @sanjayen This is from an essay Solnit wrote to introduce the updated version of her book Hope In The Dark. Anything Solnit is brilliant; at times like these, she is the North Star. (Source)
The Faraway Nearby
How to Be Alone
Jonathan Franzen | 4.08
Regarding the Pain of Others
Susan Sontag | 4.08
The Essays of Warren Buffett
Lessons for Corporate America, Fifth Edition
Lawrence A. Cunningham and Warren E. Buffett | 4.08
One Day We'll All Be Dead and None of This Will Matter
Scaachi Koul | 4.07
Amy Poehler | 4.06
The Souls of Black Folk
W.E.B. Du Bois | 4.05
Barack Obama According to the president’s Facebook page and a 2008 interview with the New York Times, these titles are among his most influential forever favorites: Moby Dick, Herman Melville Self-Reliance, Ralph Waldo Emerson Song Of Solomon, Toni Morrison Parting The Waters, Taylor Branch Gilead, Marylinne Robinson Best and the Brightest, David Halberstam The Federalist, Alexander Hamilton Souls of Black... (Source)
In Praise of Shadows
Jun'ichiro Tanizaki | 4.05
Kyle Chayka Tanizaki is mourning what has been paved over, which is the old Japanese aesthetic of darkness, of softness, of appreciating the imperfect—rather than the cold, glossy surfaces of industrialized modernity that the West had brought to Japan at that moment. For me, that’s really valuable, because it does preserve a different way of looking at the world. (Source)
Ways of Seeing
John Berger | 4.04
Robert Jones He’s a Marxist and says that the role of publicity or branding is to make people marginally dissatisfied with their current way of life. (Source)
David McCammon Ways of Seeing goes beyond photography and will continue to develop your language around images. (Source)
John Harrison (Eton College) You have to understand the Marxist interpretation of art; it is absolutely fundamental to the way that art history departments now study the material. Then you have to critique it, because we’ve moved on from the 1970s and the collapse of Marxism in most of the world shows—amongst other things—that the model was flawed. But it’s still a very good book to read, for a teenager especially. (Source)
Tackling the Texas Essays
Efficient Preparation for the Texas Bar Exam
Catherine Martin Christopher | 4.04
The Book of Delights
Ross Gay | 4.04
Mere Christianity
C. S. Lewis | 4.04
Anoop Anthony "Mere Christianity" is first and foremost a rational book — it is in many ways the opposite of a traditional religious tome. Lewis, who was once an atheist, has been on both sides of the table, and he approaches the notion of God with accessible, clear thinking. The book reveals that experiencing God doesn't have to be a mystical exercise; God can be a concrete and logical conclusion. Lewis was... (Source)
I Remember Nothing
and Other Reflections
Nora Ephron | 4.04
On Photography
Susan Sontag | 4.03
Susan Bordo Sontag was the first to make the claim, which at the time was very controversial, that photography is misleading and seductive because it looks like reality but is in fact highly selective. (Source)
Notes from No Man's Land
American Essays
Eula Biss | 4.03
The Doors of Perception
Heaven and Hell (Thinking Classics)
Aldous Huxley, Robbie McCallum | 4.03
Michelle Rodriguez Aldous Huxley on Technodictators https://t.co/RDyX70lnZz via @YouTube ‘Doors of Perception’ is a great book entry level to hallucinogenics (Source)
Auston Bunsen I also really loved “The doors of perception” by Aldous Huxley. (Source)
Dr. Andrew Weil Came first [in terms of my interests]. (Source)
The Geek Feminist Revolution
Kameron Hurley | 4.02
Wow, No Thank You.
Samantha Irby | 4.01
A Modest Proposal
Jonathan Swift | 4.01
At Large and at Small
Familiar Essays
Anne Fadiman | 4.00
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