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The 25 Greatest Essay Collections of All Time

Today marks the release of Aleksandar Hemon’s excellent book of personal essays, The Book of My Lives , which we loved, and which we’re convinced deserves a place in the literary canon. To that end, we were inspired to put together our list of the greatest essay collections of all time, from the classic to the contemporary, from the personal to the critical. In making our choices, we’ve steered away from posthumous omnibuses (Michel de Montaigne’s Complete Essays , the collected Orwell, etc.) and multi-author compilations, and given what might be undue weight to our favorite writers (as one does). After the jump, our picks for the 25 greatest essay collections of all time. Feel free to disagree with us, praise our intellect, or create an entirely new list in the comments.

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The Book of My Lives , Aleksandar Hemon

Hemon’s memoir in essays is in turns wryly hilarious, intellectually searching, and deeply troubling. It’s the life story of a fascinating, quietly brilliant man, and it reads as such. For fans of chess and ill-advised theme parties and growing up more than once.

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Slouching Towards Bethlehem , Joan Didion

Well, obviously. Didion’s extraordinary book of essays, expertly surveying both her native California in the 1960s and her own internal landscape with clear eyes and one eyebrow raised ever so slightly. This collection, her first, helped establish the idea of journalism as art, and continues to put wind in the sails of many writers after her, hoping to move in that Didion direction.

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Pulphead , John Jeremiah Sullivan

This was one of those books that this writer deemed required reading for all immediate family and friends. Sullivan’s sharply observed essays take us from Christian rock festivals to underground caves to his own home, and introduce us to 19-century geniuses, imagined professors and Axl Rose. Smart, curious, and humane, this is everything an essay collection should be.

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The Boys of My Youth , Jo Ann Beard

Another memoir-in-essays, or perhaps just a collection of personal narratives, Jo Ann Beard’s award-winning volume is a masterpiece. Not only does it include the luminous, emotionally destructive “The Fourth State of the Matter,” which we’ve already implored you to read , but also the incredible “Bulldozing the Baby,” which takes on a smaller tragedy: a three-year-old Beard’s separation from her doll Hal. “The gorgeous thing about Hal,” she tells us, “was that not only was he my friend, he was also my slave. I made the majority of our decisions, including the bathtub one, which in retrospect was the beginning of the end.”

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Consider the Lobster , David Foster Wallace

This one’s another “duh” moment, at least if you’re a fan of the literary essay. One of the most brilliant essayists of all time, Wallace pushes the boundaries (of the form, of our patience, of his own brain) and comes back with a classic collection of writing on everything from John Updike to, well, lobsters. You’ll laugh out loud right before you rethink your whole life. And then repeat.

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Notes of a Native Son , James Baldwin

Baldwin’s most influential work is a witty, passionate portrait of black life and social change in America in the 1940s and early 1950s. His essays, like so many of the greats’, are both incisive social critiques and rigorous investigations into the self, told with a perfect tension between humor and righteous fury.

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Naked , David Sedaris

His essays often read more like short stories than they do social criticism (though there’s a healthy, if perhaps implied, dose of that slippery subject), but no one makes us laugh harder or longer. A genius of the form.

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Against Interpretation , Susan Sontag

This collection, Sontag’s first, is a dazzling feat of intellectualism. Her essays dissect not only art but the way we think about art, imploring us to “reveal the sensuous surface of art without mucking about in it.” It also contains the brilliant “Notes on ‘Camp,'” one of our all-time favorites.

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The Common Reader , Virginia Woolf

Woolf is a literary giant for a reason — she was as incisive and brilliant a critic as she was a novelist. These witty essays, written for the common reader (“He is worse educated, and nature has not gifted him so generously. He reads for his own pleasure rather than to impart knowledge or correct the opinions of others. Above all, he is guided by an instinct to create for himself, out of whatever odds and ends he can come by, some kind of whole- a portrait of a man, a sketch of an age, a theory of the art of writing”), are as illuminating and engrossing as they were when they were written.

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Teaching a Stone to Talk , Annie Dillard

This is Dillard’s only book of essays, but boy is it a blazingly good one. The slender volume, filled with examinations of nature both human and not, is deft of thought and tongue, and well worth anyone’s time. As the Chicago Sun-Times ‘s Edward Abbey gushed, “This little book is haloed and informed throughout by Dillard’s distinctive passion and intensity, a sort of intellectual radiance that reminds me both Thoreau and Emily Dickinson.”

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Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Black Man , Henry Louis Gates Jr.

In this eloquent volume of essays, all but one of which were originally published in the New Yorker , Gates argues against the notion of the singularly representable “black man,” preferring to represent him in a myriad of diverse profiles, from James Baldwin to Colin Powell. Humane, incisive, and satisfyingly journalistic, Gates cobbles together the ultimate portrait of the 20th-century African-American male by refusing to cobble it together, and raises important questions about race and identity even as he entertains.

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Otherwise Known As the Human Condition , Geoff Dyer

This book of essays, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award in the year of its publication, covers 25 years of the uncategorizable, inimitable Geoff Dyer’s work — casually erudite and yet liable to fascinate anyone wandering in the door, witty and breathing and full of truth. As Sam Lipsyte said, “You read Dyer for his caustic wit, of course, his exquisite and perceptive crankiness, and his deep and exciting intellectual connections, but from these enthralling rants and cultural investigations there finally emerges another Dyer, a generous seeker of human feeling and experience, a man perhaps closer than he thinks to what he believes his hero Camus achieved: ‘a heart free of bitterness.'”

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Art and Ardor , Cynthia Ozick

Look, Cynthia Ozick is a genius. One of David Foster Wallace’s favorite writers, and one of ours, Ozick has no less than seven essay collections to her name, and we could have chosen any one of them, each sharper and more perfectly self-conscious than the last. This one, however, includes her stunner “A Drugstore in Winter,” which was chosen by Joyce Carol Oates for The Best American Essays of the Century , so we’ll go with it.

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No More Nice Girls , Ellen Willis

The venerable Ellen Willis was the first pop music critic for The New Yorker , and a rollicking anti-authoritarian, feminist, all-around bad-ass woman who had a hell of a way with words. This collection examines the women’s movement, the plight of the aging radical, race relations, cultural politics, drugs, and Picasso. Among other things.

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The War Against Cliché , Martin Amis

As you know if you’ve ever heard him talk , Martin Amis is not only a notorious grouch but a sharp critical mind, particularly when it comes to literature. That quality is on full display in this collection, which spans nearly 30 years and twice as many subjects, from Vladimir Nabokov (his hero) to chess to writing about sex. Love him or hate him, there’s no denying that he’s a brilliant old grump.

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Cultural Amnesia: Necessary Memories From History and the Arts , Clive James

James’s collection is a strange beast, not like any other essay collection on this list but its own breed. An encyclopedia of modern culture, the book collects 110 new biographical essays, which provide more than enough room for James to flex his formidable intellect and curiosity, as he wanders off on tangents, anecdotes, and cultural criticism. It’s not the only who’s who you need, but it’s a who’s who you need.

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I Feel Bad About My Neck: And Other Thoughts on Being a Woman , Nora Ephron

Oh Nora, we miss you. Again, we could have picked any of her collections here — candid, hilarious, and willing to give it to you straight, she’s like a best friend and mentor in one, only much more interesting than any of either you’ve ever had.

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Arguably , Christopher Hitchens

No matter what you think of his politics (or his rhetorical strategies), there’s no denying that Christopher Hitchens was one of the most brilliant minds — and one of the most brilliant debaters — of the century. In this collection, packed with cultural commentary, literary journalism, and political writing, he is at his liveliest, his funniest, his exactingly wittiest. He’s also just as caustic as ever.

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The Solace of Open Spaces , Gretel Ehrlich

Gretel Ehrlich is a poet, and in this collection, you’ll know it. In 1976, she moved to Wyoming and became a cowherd, and nearly a decade later, she published this lovely, funny set of essays about rural life in the American West.”Keenly observed the world is transformed,” she writes. “The landscape is engorged with detail, every movement on it chillingly sharp. The air between people is charged. Days unfold, bathed in their own music. Nights become hallucinatory; dreams, prescient.”

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The Braindead Megaphone , George Saunders

Saunders may be the man of the moment, but he’s been at work for a long while, and not only on his celebrated short stories. His single collection of essays applies the same humor and deliciously slant view to the real world — which manages to display nearly as much absurdity as one of his trademark stories.

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Against Joie de Vivre , Phillip Lopate

“Over the years,” the title essay begins, “I have developed a distaste for the spectacle of joie de vivre , the knack of knowing how to live.” Lopate goes on to dissect, in pleasantly sardonic terms, the modern dinner party. Smart and thought-provoking throughout (and not as crotchety as all that), this collection is conversational but weighty, something to be discussed at length with friends at your next — oh well, you know.

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Sex and the River Styx , Edward Hoagland

Edward Hoagland, who John Updike deemed “the best essayist of my generation,” has a long and storied career and a fat bibliography, so we hesitate to choose such a recent installment in the writer’s canon. Then again, Garrison Keillor thinks it’s his best yet , so perhaps we’re not far off. Hoagland is a great nature writer (name checked by many as the modern Thoreau) but in truth, he’s just as fascinated by humanity, musing that “human nature is interstitial with nature, and not to be shunned by a naturalist.” Elegant and thoughtful, Hoagland may warn us that he’s heading towards the River Styx, but we’ll hang on to him a while longer.

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Changing My Mind , Zadie Smith

Smith may be best known for her novels (and she should be), but to our eyes she is also emerging as an excellent essayist in her own right, passionate and thoughtful. Plus, any essay collection that talks about Barack Obama via Pygmalion is a winner in our book.

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My Misspent Youth , Meghan Daum

Like so many other writers on this list, Daum dives head first into the culture and comes up with meat in her mouth. Her voice is fresh and her narratives daring, honest and endlessly entertaining.

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The White Album , Joan Didion

Yes, Joan Didion is on this list twice, because Joan Didion is the master of the modern essay, tearing at our assumptions and building our world in brisk, clever strokes. Deal.

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

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Men Explain Things to Me

Rebecca Solnit | 5.00

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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)

See more recommendations for this book...

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Me Talk Pretty One Day

David Sedaris | 4.96

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Between the World and Me

Ta-Nehisi Coates | 4.94

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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)

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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)

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Slouching Towards Bethlehem

Joan Didion | 4.94

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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)

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We Should All Be Feminists

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie | 4.92

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Bad Feminist

Roxane Gay | 4.88

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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)

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Trick Mirror

Reflections on Self-Delusion

Jia Tolentino | 4.86

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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)

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Consider the Lobster

And Other Essays

David Foster Wallace | 4.85

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A Room of One's Own

Virginia Woolf | 4.75

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Dress Your Family in Corduroy & Denim

David Sedaris | 4.73

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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)

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When You Are Engulfed in Flames

David Sedaris | 4.67

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David Sedaris | 4.63

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David Blaine It’s hilarious. (Source)

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The White Album

Joan Didion | 4.62

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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)

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A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again

Essays and Arguments

David Foster Wallace | 4.61

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Tressie McMillan Cottom | 4.60

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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)

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David Sedaris and Hachette Audi | 4.60

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Sister Outsider

Essays and Speeches

Audre Lorde, Cheryl Clarke | 4.60

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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)

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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)

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Notes from a Loud Woman

Lindy West | 4.56

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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)

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The Collected Schizophrenias

Esmé Weijun Wang | 4.52

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Tiny Beautiful Things

Advice on Love and Life from Dear Sugar

Cheryl Strayed | 4.49

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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)

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We Were Eight Years in Power

An American Tragedy

Ta-Nehisi Coates | 4.47

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The Myth of Sisyphus and Other Essays

Albert Camu | 4.47

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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)

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The Penguin Essays Of George Orwell

George Orwell, Bernard Crick | 4.46

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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)

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The Opposite of Loneliness

Essays and Stories

Marina Keegan, Anne Fadiman | 4.46

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Dear Ijeawele, or a Feminist Manifesto in Fifteen Suggestions

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie | 4.45

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The Tipping Point

How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference

Malcolm Gladwell | 4.45

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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)

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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)

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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)

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Selected Essays

Mary Oliver | 4.44

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We Are Never Meeting in Real Life.

Samantha Irby | 4.44

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Complete Essays

Michel de Montaigne, Charles Cotton | 4.42

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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)

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Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? (And Other Concerns)

Mindy Kaling | 4.42

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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)

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Not That Bad

Dispatches from Rape Culture

Roxane Gay, Brandon Taylor, et al | 4.40

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Henry David Thoreau | 4.40

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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)

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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)

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Confessions of a Common Reader

Anne Fadiman | 4.40

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I Feel Bad About My Neck

And Other Thoughts on Being a Woman

Nora Ephron | 4.39

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Holidays on Ice

David Sedaris | 4.37

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An American Lyric

Claudia Rankine | 4.36

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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)

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Christopher Hitchens | 4.36

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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)

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Notes of a Native Son

James Baldwin | 4.35

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The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales

Oliver Sacks | 4.34

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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)

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The Empathy Exams

Leslie Jamison | 4.33

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This is the Story of a Happy Marriage

Ann Patchett | 4.31

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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)

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Bird By Bird

Some Instructions on Writing and Life

Anne Lamott | 4.29

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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)

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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)

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What the Dog Saw and Other Adventures

Malcolm Gladwell | 4.28

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Sam Freedman @mrianleslie (Also I agree What the Dog Saw is his best book). (Source)

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The Witches Are Coming

Lindy West | 4.27

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Against Interpretation and Other Essays

Susan Sontag | 4.25

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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)

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Changing My Mind

Occasional Essays

Zadie Smith | 4.25

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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)

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The Fire This Time

A New Generation Speaks About Race

Jesmyn Ward | 4.24

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Why Not Me?

Mindy Kaling | 4.24

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The View from the Cheap Seats

Selected Nonfiction

Neil Gaiman | 4.24

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I Was Told There'd Be Cake

Sloane Crosley | 4.24

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The Intelligent Investor

The Classic Text on Value Investing

Benjamin Graham | 4.23

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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)

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John Kay The idea is that you look at the underlying value of the company’s activities instead of relying on market gossip. (Source)

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Tell Me How It Ends

An Essay in Forty Questions

Valeria Luiselli | 4.23

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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)

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They Can't Kill Us Until They Kill Us

Hanif Abdurraqib, Dr. Eve L. Ewing | 4.22

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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)

list books in essay

This Is Water

Some Thoughts, Delivered on a Significant Occasion, about Living a Compassionate Life

David Foster Wallace | 4.21

list books in essay

John Jeremiah Sullivan | 4.21

list books in essay

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)

list books in essay

The Mother of All Questions

Rebecca Solnit | 4.20

list books in essay

The Partly Cloudy Patriot

Sarah Vowell, Katherine Streeter | 4.20

list books in essay

Essays of E.B. White

E. B. White | 4.19

list books in essay

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)

list books in essay

A Field Guide to Getting Lost

Rebecca Solnit | 4.19

list books in essay

A Man Without a Country

Kurt Vonnegut | 4.18

list books in essay

No Time to Spare

Thinking About What Matters

Ursula K. Le Guin, Karen Joy Fowler | 4.17

list books in essay

Pilgrim at Tinker Creek

Annie Dillard | 4.16

list books in essay

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)

list books in essay

Maggie Nelson | 4.14

list books in essay

Furiously Happy

A Funny Book About Horrible Things

Jenny Lawson | 4.13

list books in essay

Women & Power

A Manifesto

Mary Beard | 4.13

list books in essay

Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century

Timothy Snyder | 4.12

list books in essay

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)

list books in essay

Small Wonder

Barbara Kingsolver | 4.11

list books in essay

The Source of Self-Regard

Selected Essays, Speeches, and Meditations

Toni Morrison | 4.11

list books in essay

Hyperbole and a Half

Unfortunate Situations, Flawed Coping Mechanisms, Mayhem, and Other Things That Happened

Allie Brosh | 4.11

list books in essay

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)

list books in essay

Samantha Irby | 4.10

list books in essay

Both Flesh and Not

David Foster Wallace | 4.10

list books in essay

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)

list books in essay

So Sad Today

Personal Essays

Melissa Broder | 4.10

list books in essay

Hope in the Dark

Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities

Rebecca Solnit | 4.09

list books in essay

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)

list books in essay

The Faraway Nearby

list books in essay

How to Be Alone

Jonathan Franzen | 4.08

list books in essay

Regarding the Pain of Others

Susan Sontag | 4.08

list books in essay

The Essays of Warren Buffett

Lessons for Corporate America, Fifth Edition

Lawrence A. Cunningham and Warren E. Buffett | 4.08

list books in essay

One Day We'll All Be Dead and None of This Will Matter

Scaachi Koul | 4.07

list books in essay

Amy Poehler | 4.06

list books in essay

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)

list books in essay

In Praise of Shadows

Jun'ichiro Tanizaki | 4.05

list books in essay

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)

list books in essay

Ways of Seeing

John Berger | 4.04

list books in essay

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)

list books in essay

Tackling the Texas Essays

Efficient Preparation for the Texas Bar Exam

Catherine Martin Christopher | 4.04

list books in essay

The Book of Delights

Ross Gay | 4.04

list books in essay

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)

list books in essay

I Remember Nothing

and Other Reflections

Nora Ephron | 4.04

list books in essay

On Photography

Susan Sontag | 4.03

list books in essay

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)

list books in essay

Notes from No Man's Land

American Essays

Eula Biss | 4.03

list books in essay

The Doors of Perception

Heaven and Hell (Thinking Classics)

Aldous Huxley, Robbie McCallum | 4.03

list books in essay

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)

list books in essay

The Geek Feminist Revolution

Kameron Hurley | 4.02

list books in essay

Wow, No Thank You.

Samantha Irby | 4.01

list books in essay

A Modest Proposal

Jonathan Swift | 4.01

list books in essay

At Large and at Small

Familiar Essays

Anne Fadiman | 4.00

  • Search Results

The best essay collections to read now

From advice on friendship and understanding modern life to getting a grasp on coronavirus, these books offer insight on life. 

The best essay collections including Zadie Smith's Intimations, James Baldwin's Notes of a Native Son and Nora Ephron's The Most of Nora Ephron.

What better way to get into the work of a writer than through a collection of their essays? 

These seven collections, from novelists and critics alike, address a myriad of subjects from friendship to how colleges are dealing with sexual assaults on campus to race and racism. 

Trick Mirror by Jia Tolentino (2019)

As a staff writer at The New Yorker , Jia Tolentino has explored everything from a rise in youth vaping to the ongoing cultural reckoning about sexual assault. Her first book Trick Mirror takes some of those pieces for The New Yorker as well as new work to form what is one of the sharpest collections of cultural criticism today.

Using herself and her own coming of age as a lens for many of the essays, Tolentino turns her pen and her eye to everything from her generation’s obsession with extravagant weddings to how college campuses deal with sexual assault.

If you’re looking for an insight into millennial life, then Trick Mirror should be on your to-read list.

In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens by Alice Walker (1983)

Sometimes essays collected from a sprawling period of a successful writer’s life can feel like a hasty addition to a bibliography; a smash-and-grab of notebook flotsam. Not so In Search of Our Mother’s Gardens , from which one can truly understand the sheer range of the Pulitzer Prize winner’s range of study and activism. From Walker’s first published piece of non-fiction (for which she won a prize, and spent her winnings on cut peonies) to more elegiac pieces about her heritage, Walker’s thoughts on feminism (which she terms “womanism”) and the Civil Rights Movement remain grippingly pertinent 50 years on.

Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris (2000)

That David Sedaris’s ascent to literary stardom happened later in his life – his breakthrough collection of humour essays was released when he was 44 – suited the author’s writing style perfectly. Me Talk Pretty One Day is both a painfully funny account of his childhood and an enduring snapshot of mid-forties malaise. First story ‘Go Carolina’, about his attempt to transcend a childhood lisp, is told from a perfect distance and with all the worldliness necessary to milk every drop of tragic, cringeworthy humour from his childhood. It never falters from there: by the book’s second half, in which Sedaris is living in France, he’s firmly established his niche, writing about the ways that even snobs experience utter humiliation ­– and Me Talk Pretty One Day is all the more human for it. 

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How to list books in an essay (in-text)? [closed]

I would like to list in an essay three books that I read. I do not know how to do so in text.

Ellie Kesselman's user avatar

  • Do you mean within the text, or as a bibliography? Do you have a style-guide you have to write this essay too, as style-guides tend to have firm, but differing, rules on references. –  Jon Hanna Commented Nov 26, 2013 at 1:54
  • I do not have a style-guide, I am writing a Statement of Purpose and I want to list some of the books I used in a course, right now it looks like this: "...alongside we studied the theory behind theme from diverse books, such as: Optical Coherence and Quantum Optics (Mandel & Wolf 1995); Quantum Optics (Scully & Zubairy 1997); and Laser Cooling and Trapping (Metcalf & Van der Straten 1999)". But I do not know if this is correct. –  Monica G Commented Nov 26, 2013 at 2:44
  • Visit our sister site Writing –  Kris Commented Nov 26, 2013 at 5:54

2 Answers 2

Generally, you should italicize (or underline in some cases) the book titles. This is true for nearly all scholarly journals and legal writing that I've seen. Most scholarly books I've read use italics as well.

"...alongside we studied the theory behind them from diverse books, such as: Optical Coherence and Quantum Optics (Mandel & Wolf 1995); Quantum Optics (Scully & Zubairy 1997); and Laser Cooling and Trapping (Metcalf & Van der Straten 1999)."

However, it seems that the New York Times and other newspapers don't use italics because of something to do with AP computers and their inability to do italics. The New York Times quotes book titles.

The Phil Lee's user avatar

like this: Last name, The author Middle name, Suffix. Title. Edition ed. Publication city: (tab) Publisher, year. Print. Series name Series number. Source noodletools.com

Droonkid's user avatar

  • Says who? Where? –  Kris Commented Nov 26, 2013 at 5:55

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list books in essay

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Reference

List of famous essay books, listed alphabetically with jacket cover images of the books when available. Information for these popular essay books is included as well, such as the author's name and the book's publication date. This list includes the best essay novels, textbooks, and stories, so use it to find books you haven't already read and add them to your reading list.

A list made up of books like Me Talk Pretty One Day and A Room of One's Own.

This list should answer the questions, "What are the best essay books?" and "What are the most famous essay books?"

Far as Human Eye Could See

Far as Human Eye Could See

  • First Published : 1984-11
  • Subjects : Science
  • Genres (Book) : Essay, Science
  • Original Language : English Language

Notes of a Native Son

Notes of a Native Son

  • First Published : 1955
  • Subjects : Demographics of the United States, African American, United States of America, History of the United States
  • Genres (Book) : Essay

A Writer's Nightmare

A Writer's Nightmare

A Room of One's Own

A Room of One's Own

  • First Published : 1929-10-24
  • Subjects : Feminism
  • Genres (Book) : Non-fiction, Essay
  • Dig Deeper... 100 Famous English Non-Fiction Books
  • # 232 of 271 on The Top Must-Read Books of All Time
  • # 199 of 329 on Books That Changed Your Life

Tributes: Celebrating Fifty Years of New York City Ballet

Tributes: Celebrating Fifty Years of New York City Ballet

Unarmed Victory

Unarmed Victory

list books in essay

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Nonfiction Books » Essays

Adam gopnik on his favourite essay collections.

In Mid-Air: Points of View from over a Decade by Adam Gopnik

In Mid-Air: Points of View from over a Decade by Adam Gopnik

What makes a great essayist? Who had it, who didn’t? And whose work left the biggest mark on the New Yorker ? Longtime writer for the magazine, Adam Gopnik , picks out five masters of the craft

In Mid-Air: Points of View from over a Decade by Adam Gopnik

And Even Now by Max Beerbohm

Adam Gopnik on his Favourite Essay Collections - The Common Reader by Virginia Woolf

The Common Reader by Virginia Woolf

Adam Gopnik on his Favourite Essay Collections - Essays of E.B. White by E.B. White

Essays of E.B. White by E.B. White

Adam Gopnik on his Favourite Essay Collections - A Sad Heart At The Supermarket by Randall Jarrell

A Sad Heart At The Supermarket by Randall Jarrell

Adam Gopnik on his Favourite Essay Collections - Visions Before Midnight by Clive James

Visions Before Midnight by Clive James

Adam Gopnik on his Favourite Essay Collections - And Even Now by Max Beerbohm

1 And Even Now by Max Beerbohm

2 the common reader by virginia woolf, 3 essays of e.b. white by e.b. white, 4 a sad heart at the supermarket by randall jarrell, 5 visions before midnight by clive james.

B efore we get into the books, I wanted to ask you about essays generally. In your introduction to The Best American Essays of 2008 you have a rather nice phrase: “The essay is a classical form for short-winded Romantics.” What do you mean by that?

There are certain kinds of criticism that I think of as essentially essays – Clive James or Randall Jarrell’s criticism, for instance – whereas there are other critics whom I admire just as much – say [William] Empson and [WH] Auden – but whom I don’t think of as essayists. They’re superior literary critics.

Is the distinction to do with the presence of the “I” in their work?

The “I” need not appear in the piece, but it’s always implicit in the essay. Empson and Auden want to win you round to their point of view, Jarrell and James want to make their experience persuasive. Of course, one of the best ways of winning you round to a point of view is to make your experience persuasive, and one of the best ways to make your experience persuasive is to win you round to a point of view!

There are no absolute lines in this. But there does seem to me a real difference between the things Empson – who is an absolutely wonderful writer and an amazing companion – is trying to do in his critical articles and the things Jarrell is trying to do in his. Jarrell conceives of criticism poetically. That is, that it should have some of the surprise and delight of personal revelation: “ I felt this then, and I passed through the prism of a work of writing” rather than “this is a general truth of literature”.

With essayists, we feel we’re reading their first names rather than their honorifics. We’re reading Clive and Virginia and Randall rather than James and Woolf and Jarrell, in a way we never feel we’re reading William and Wystan rather than Empson and Auden.

You have written that the essay has an implicit politics to it, and that the job of the essay is “to drain the melodrama from overwrought debate and replace it with common sense and comedy”.

Did I say that? When you think [of essays] historically, beginning with Montaigne, one of the things Montaigne does – at a time of violent and feverish religious debate – is he makes the case for both and at once, for either and or, for the division within oneself. That there is no pure or certain state which we can be in in our mental lives.

Even someone as seemingly non-political as Max Beerbohm is placed at the intersection of all kinds of political passions – Oscar Wilde and George Bernard Shaw’s socialism, Rudyard Kipling’s imperialism and so on – and he makes fun of them all. That’s one of the things that makes Beerbohm attractive. In a very decorous and mischievous way, he mocks that kind of ideological passion.

You mentioned Beerbohm. Let’s begin with his book And Even Now . You said his approach was to parody and make light of things. He was also a caricaturist. Do you see a link between his illustrations and his essays?

Yes, absolutely. He was a caricaturist with remarkable insight and relatively little malice in his parodies and cartoons. He found the pomposities of over-zealous ideology absurd. He also had a lovely vein of affection. One of my favourite of his picture-books is called Rossetti and H is Circle . It’s basically imaginary pictures of Rossetti and the Pre-Raphaelites in their very complicated domestic life. The implicit theme of the whole book is that behind the Pre-Raphaelite dream of the perfect Botticelli nymph and the medieval romantic life is this very funny, furtive domestic life in Chelsea [London]. Constantly referring dream-life back to reality is another way Beerbohm works.

He’s an essayist who isn’t so widely read these days. Why do you think that is?

For me, Beerbohm has an almost dangerously perfect tone – a mixture of benign serenity and quiet intellectual authority that I think is the tone every essayist searches for. It’s not accidental that Beerbohm was influential on the first generation of The New Yorker writers, people like Wolcott Gibbs.

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One of the dangers of that tone, though, is that it can seem unduly complacent or self-satisfied. I suspect that the note of complacency in Beerbohm’s writing is kind of out of kilter with the times. It’s a note that was so hugely popular for 50 or 60 years that I guess it came to seem old-fashioned. If you ever read old collections of light editorials from The  London Times , they all strive for the Beerbohm sound. Inevitably, when a sound gets imitated for too long it becomes a little empty.

Beerbohm is also not a writer of fanatic passion or political certainty. You can’t consult him directly for the quote you might need about the topic of the day. For those reasons, he’s gone a bit out of fashion. But he remains a wonderful writer, and for me the best witness of that period – the end of the Victorian age and the beginning of the modern age.

What do you think he writes best about?

Literature. My favourite of his essays are ones like “A Clergyman”, which is a very close, loving analysis of an obscure passage of [James] Boswell’s The Life of Samuel Johnson . A clergyman, identified in no other way, squeaks out a little objection to something Dr Johnson has said, and Johnson crushes him with his rejoinder. Beerbohm reflects on the lost and hidden life of this clergyman, who made one brief bid for literary immortality and whose name even Boswell couldn’t recall.

Let’s go on to another English essayist, Virginia Woolf . She wrote a great deal of non-fiction. Why does her writing in The Common Reader qualify as essays rather than what they strictly appear to be – reviews or criticism?

Exactly because we read Woolf for her tone – her equanimity, her ability to weave together a detached and usually very severe critical judgement with a tone of ruminative engagement. That’s a tone, as much as Beerbohm’s is in another way, which seems to me particularly enviable.

Is it, along with Beerbohm, a particularly English tone? The next three essayists we’re going to talk about are American or Australian.

I think that’s true. There’s a sense in which both Woolf and Beerbohm come after the age of Victorian literary industry. They both take for granted this common pool of Dickens , [George] Eliot and Trollope – writers of huge industry, enormous achievement and vast social observation – and they both make a quiet case for the miniature, for the perfectly wrought. So there’s a kind of running commentary on Victorian fiction in both of their work.

I also think, without having illusions about the nature of the societies in which they worked, that there is a strong lure of a stable and secure literary society in their work. They both feel themselves to be at home with literature, not out of place in any way. Their tone – unlike certain American essayists – does not give a sense of having an uncertain or anxious relationship to literature.

That sense is certainly something you get from the title essay of Jarrell’s collection.

Next, you have gone with a collection of EB White ’s essays. He is one of the most iconic New Yorker writers.

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 Beerbohm suddenly look stuffy and literary. White has an amazing ability, which I still marvel at, to come very close to a faux-naïve simplicity that’s excessive and then pull it back.

I’m just picking up one of his collections. I’m going to open it up at random and look for a sentence that captures White. Here’s one from a piece called “The Trailer Park”:

“Before sitting down to draft a preamble to the constitution of a world federations of democracies uniting free people under one banner, I decided I would mosey over to the trailer park at the edge of town and ask some of the campers whether they favoured any such idea of this union.”

The virtue of White’s kind of writing is to start with something that sounds pompous and editorial and then use a verb like “mosey over” to make it work. He cleans up the prose of the essay. Both Beerbohm and Woolf are belle-lettrist sort of writers and they connect to that leisurely tradition. White is a much more urbane and American writer.

What is the key “if you haven’t read any White, read this essay” essay for you?

Next up is A Sad Heart At The Supermarket . Randall Jarrell is best known as a poet, rather than an essayist. Why are his essays worth reading?

Jarrell, for me, is the absolute master of what I like to think of as “cabaret criticism”. The man has endless wit. I think his novel Pictures From an Institution is the single wittiest book of the last century, even though I’ve read it 10 times and can never recall the story! He’s a very poor storyteller but an amazingly witty writer.

Jarrell is a comedian of a kind. He always finds something not just witty in a literary way but outright funny to say about extremely serious subjects – about Auden, [Robert] Graves, Laura Riding or Wallace Stevens. I admire that ability to turn straight, old-fashioned literary criticism into a constant performance in the best sense – into a form of entertainment in itself. He supplied a new tone of enormous, wonderful excitability. That’s one of the things I love about Jarrell, and one of the things I struggle to infuse my own work with – a sense of excitement and pleasure even in the driest texts. Most of all he’s just a wonderful joker.

Do you have any favourite lines of his?

Again, let me open the book and take a sentence at random. Here’s one. He’s writing about [Walt] Whitman:

“The interesting thing about Whitman’s worst language (for, just as few poets have ever written better, few poets have written worse) is how unusually absurd, how really ingeniously bad, such language is.”

It’s that tone of hyperbolic excitability in the presence of literature, which is a constant antidote to the solemnity and false seriousness of most literary study.

You mention that Jarrell is a model you seek to emulate. But in terms of taste, at least, you’re a very different kind of writer. In the title essay of A Sad Heart at the Supermarket Jarrell is very wary of popular culture, whereas in last week’s New Yorker you compare the Book of Revelations to Transformers. Love of popular culture runs through your work.

That’s very true. I think all the interesting writers of my generation drew the high brow-low brow line in a very different way to Jarrell’s generation. We all came of age – I’m thinking of Louis Menand or Martin Amis or Clive James – when there seemed to be more genuine artistic energy in popular culture, movies and rock music in particular, than there was in high culture. The experience of The Beatles or Fellini or the Godfather films illuminated our understanding of high culture, rather than the other way around. I think that is a true fault line in the history of modern writing – you’re either on one side of it or the other.

Do you think for Jarrell and his contemporaries it was a lack of genuinely great pop culture in their time that put them off? Or was it a generational thing where they couldn’t get on board with the idea that pop culture, even if very good, is something you can consider seriously alongside high culture?

A little of both. Jarrell writes wonderfully about race cars and American football . He was no snob. But as far as I remember he never references jazz – which is a kind of in-between form of pop culture, more culture than pop in lots of ways. You have to remember too that for Jarrell’s generation, the GI generation, they were in the process of recognising and discovering what we now think of as high culture.

My own father was one of that generation. For him, each piece of high culture he achieved, understood, enjoyed – whether it was Bach or Milton – was part of a mountain climbed. We all, in a sense, started too easily – somewhere up on the mountain – because of their work, and therefore had a different view of it.

Do you have a favourite Jarrell essay?

Your last choice is Visions Before Midnight by Clive James. How did you come across his work? He’s well known in Britain, especially for his TV career, but not so much in America.

In 1980, Knopf did an anthology of his essays called First Reactions . In a curious way it was an advantage to read him flat-out as a writer. All of my friends in England read him as an entanglement of personal presence and prose style. I read him simply as prose style, without any knowledge of what his personal presence was like.

What was it you liked about his writing?

He has some of Jarrell’s excitability in the presence of creative energy. He has the ability to bring you into his writing, even when he’s writing about things that are in some ways utterly trivial and often completely forgotten, like British TV of the 1970s. He has a way of turning each of those subjects into a wonderful essay – an exercise in cabaret criticism – about values.

Values, I think, are his real subject. The overriding lesson of his work is that categories – high art, low art, television, theatre – are misleading guides to value. That even runs at a deeper, moral level in James’s work about the larger categories – provincial and metropolitan, for instance. He’s a provincial guy who comes to the city, but his provincial experience is in lots of ways richer than his metropolitan experience. It’s the rejection of categories in place of values that is the Montaigne-like takeaway in all his work.

Did he have an influence on your writing, or were you far enough in your writing career to find him as a friend and ally rather than a mentor figure?

Whereas Jarrell, Beerbohm and White were in different ways direct elements in the long-simmering braise that produced my prose style, for whatever it’s worth, Clive came along when I was already, in some sense, a formed writer.

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But I did learn one very specific thing from his writing. He’s a very linear writer. His essays are always organised around sharp, direct and forward-pushing sentences. Whereas with Virginia Woolf your first response to one of her paragraphs, in the best way, is to read it again. Your first response to a Clive James piece is to keep on reading. I learned a great deal about how to make a piece propulsive from reading him.

And can you pick a favourite Clive James essay?

As with Woolf, the joy is cumulative – it’s the pleasure of reading all of his work. But here’s a good one. It’s a television column from December 3rd 1972 which goes from an argument between the philosophers Isaiah Berlin and Stuart Hampshire, to a documentary on “Bomber” Harris and the morality of area bombing, to a production of Oedipus Rex , to a new David Mercer play. In the midst of it, this comes up:

“Why, then, with all this talent [in the production of Oedipus], including a sumptuous lighting design that covers the décor with spiced gloom, does the production have so little sting? The answer, I think, is that there’s not much point in trying to supply a binding image to a play whose author was so intent on leaving imagery out. It’s difficult to think of Sophocles looking with favour on any attempt to pin his universalised theme to mere political instability.”

That’s a deep and original thought, perfectly expressed, which rises out of the normal eddies of TV journalism. That combination of range, ease and aphoristic subtlety is what I love in Clive’s work.

March 7, 2012

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  • How to write a literary analysis essay | A step-by-step guide

How to Write a Literary Analysis Essay | A Step-by-Step Guide

Published on January 30, 2020 by Jack Caulfield . Revised on August 14, 2023.

Literary analysis means closely studying a text, interpreting its meanings, and exploring why the author made certain choices. It can be applied to novels, short stories, plays, poems, or any other form of literary writing.

A literary analysis essay is not a rhetorical analysis , nor is it just a summary of the plot or a book review. Instead, it is a type of argumentative essay where you need to analyze elements such as the language, perspective, and structure of the text, and explain how the author uses literary devices to create effects and convey ideas.

Before beginning a literary analysis essay, it’s essential to carefully read the text and c ome up with a thesis statement to keep your essay focused. As you write, follow the standard structure of an academic essay :

  • An introduction that tells the reader what your essay will focus on.
  • A main body, divided into paragraphs , that builds an argument using evidence from the text.
  • A conclusion that clearly states the main point that you have shown with your analysis.

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Table of contents

Step 1: reading the text and identifying literary devices, step 2: coming up with a thesis, step 3: writing a title and introduction, step 4: writing the body of the essay, step 5: writing a conclusion, other interesting articles.

The first step is to carefully read the text(s) and take initial notes. As you read, pay attention to the things that are most intriguing, surprising, or even confusing in the writing—these are things you can dig into in your analysis.

Your goal in literary analysis is not simply to explain the events described in the text, but to analyze the writing itself and discuss how the text works on a deeper level. Primarily, you’re looking out for literary devices —textual elements that writers use to convey meaning and create effects. If you’re comparing and contrasting multiple texts, you can also look for connections between different texts.

To get started with your analysis, there are several key areas that you can focus on. As you analyze each aspect of the text, try to think about how they all relate to each other. You can use highlights or notes to keep track of important passages and quotes.

Language choices

Consider what style of language the author uses. Are the sentences short and simple or more complex and poetic?

What word choices stand out as interesting or unusual? Are words used figuratively to mean something other than their literal definition? Figurative language includes things like metaphor (e.g. “her eyes were oceans”) and simile (e.g. “her eyes were like oceans”).

Also keep an eye out for imagery in the text—recurring images that create a certain atmosphere or symbolize something important. Remember that language is used in literary texts to say more than it means on the surface.

Narrative voice

Ask yourself:

  • Who is telling the story?
  • How are they telling it?

Is it a first-person narrator (“I”) who is personally involved in the story, or a third-person narrator who tells us about the characters from a distance?

Consider the narrator’s perspective . Is the narrator omniscient (where they know everything about all the characters and events), or do they only have partial knowledge? Are they an unreliable narrator who we are not supposed to take at face value? Authors often hint that their narrator might be giving us a distorted or dishonest version of events.

The tone of the text is also worth considering. Is the story intended to be comic, tragic, or something else? Are usually serious topics treated as funny, or vice versa ? Is the story realistic or fantastical (or somewhere in between)?

Consider how the text is structured, and how the structure relates to the story being told.

  • Novels are often divided into chapters and parts.
  • Poems are divided into lines, stanzas, and sometime cantos.
  • Plays are divided into scenes and acts.

Think about why the author chose to divide the different parts of the text in the way they did.

There are also less formal structural elements to take into account. Does the story unfold in chronological order, or does it jump back and forth in time? Does it begin in medias res —in the middle of the action? Does the plot advance towards a clearly defined climax?

With poetry, consider how the rhyme and meter shape your understanding of the text and your impression of the tone. Try reading the poem aloud to get a sense of this.

In a play, you might consider how relationships between characters are built up through different scenes, and how the setting relates to the action. Watch out for  dramatic irony , where the audience knows some detail that the characters don’t, creating a double meaning in their words, thoughts, or actions.

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Your thesis in a literary analysis essay is the point you want to make about the text. It’s the core argument that gives your essay direction and prevents it from just being a collection of random observations about a text.

If you’re given a prompt for your essay, your thesis must answer or relate to the prompt. For example:

Essay question example

Is Franz Kafka’s “Before the Law” a religious parable?

Your thesis statement should be an answer to this question—not a simple yes or no, but a statement of why this is or isn’t the case:

Thesis statement example

Franz Kafka’s “Before the Law” is not a religious parable, but a story about bureaucratic alienation.

Sometimes you’ll be given freedom to choose your own topic; in this case, you’ll have to come up with an original thesis. Consider what stood out to you in the text; ask yourself questions about the elements that interested you, and consider how you might answer them.

Your thesis should be something arguable—that is, something that you think is true about the text, but which is not a simple matter of fact. It must be complex enough to develop through evidence and arguments across the course of your essay.

Say you’re analyzing the novel Frankenstein . You could start by asking yourself:

Your initial answer might be a surface-level description:

The character Frankenstein is portrayed negatively in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein .

However, this statement is too simple to be an interesting thesis. After reading the text and analyzing its narrative voice and structure, you can develop the answer into a more nuanced and arguable thesis statement:

Mary Shelley uses shifting narrative perspectives to portray Frankenstein in an increasingly negative light as the novel goes on. While he initially appears to be a naive but sympathetic idealist, after the creature’s narrative Frankenstein begins to resemble—even in his own telling—the thoughtlessly cruel figure the creature represents him as.

Remember that you can revise your thesis statement throughout the writing process , so it doesn’t need to be perfectly formulated at this stage. The aim is to keep you focused as you analyze the text.

Finding textual evidence

To support your thesis statement, your essay will build an argument using textual evidence —specific parts of the text that demonstrate your point. This evidence is quoted and analyzed throughout your essay to explain your argument to the reader.

It can be useful to comb through the text in search of relevant quotations before you start writing. You might not end up using everything you find, and you may have to return to the text for more evidence as you write, but collecting textual evidence from the beginning will help you to structure your arguments and assess whether they’re convincing.

To start your literary analysis paper, you’ll need two things: a good title, and an introduction.

Your title should clearly indicate what your analysis will focus on. It usually contains the name of the author and text(s) you’re analyzing. Keep it as concise and engaging as possible.

A common approach to the title is to use a relevant quote from the text, followed by a colon and then the rest of your title.

If you struggle to come up with a good title at first, don’t worry—this will be easier once you’ve begun writing the essay and have a better sense of your arguments.

“Fearful symmetry” : The violence of creation in William Blake’s “The Tyger”

The introduction

The essay introduction provides a quick overview of where your argument is going. It should include your thesis statement and a summary of the essay’s structure.

A typical structure for an introduction is to begin with a general statement about the text and author, using this to lead into your thesis statement. You might refer to a commonly held idea about the text and show how your thesis will contradict it, or zoom in on a particular device you intend to focus on.

Then you can end with a brief indication of what’s coming up in the main body of the essay. This is called signposting. It will be more elaborate in longer essays, but in a short five-paragraph essay structure, it shouldn’t be more than one sentence.

Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein is often read as a crude cautionary tale about the dangers of scientific advancement unrestrained by ethical considerations. In this reading, protagonist Victor Frankenstein is a stable representation of the callous ambition of modern science throughout the novel. This essay, however, argues that far from providing a stable image of the character, Shelley uses shifting narrative perspectives to portray Frankenstein in an increasingly negative light as the novel goes on. While he initially appears to be a naive but sympathetic idealist, after the creature’s narrative Frankenstein begins to resemble—even in his own telling—the thoughtlessly cruel figure the creature represents him as. This essay begins by exploring the positive portrayal of Frankenstein in the first volume, then moves on to the creature’s perception of him, and finally discusses the third volume’s narrative shift toward viewing Frankenstein as the creature views him.

Some students prefer to write the introduction later in the process, and it’s not a bad idea. After all, you’ll have a clearer idea of the overall shape of your arguments once you’ve begun writing them!

If you do write the introduction first, you should still return to it later to make sure it lines up with what you ended up writing, and edit as necessary.

The body of your essay is everything between the introduction and conclusion. It contains your arguments and the textual evidence that supports them.

Paragraph structure

A typical structure for a high school literary analysis essay consists of five paragraphs : the three paragraphs of the body, plus the introduction and conclusion.

Each paragraph in the main body should focus on one topic. In the five-paragraph model, try to divide your argument into three main areas of analysis, all linked to your thesis. Don’t try to include everything you can think of to say about the text—only analysis that drives your argument.

In longer essays, the same principle applies on a broader scale. For example, you might have two or three sections in your main body, each with multiple paragraphs. Within these sections, you still want to begin new paragraphs at logical moments—a turn in the argument or the introduction of a new idea.

Robert’s first encounter with Gil-Martin suggests something of his sinister power. Robert feels “a sort of invisible power that drew me towards him.” He identifies the moment of their meeting as “the beginning of a series of adventures which has puzzled myself, and will puzzle the world when I am no more in it” (p. 89). Gil-Martin’s “invisible power” seems to be at work even at this distance from the moment described; before continuing the story, Robert feels compelled to anticipate at length what readers will make of his narrative after his approaching death. With this interjection, Hogg emphasizes the fatal influence Gil-Martin exercises from his first appearance.

Topic sentences

To keep your points focused, it’s important to use a topic sentence at the beginning of each paragraph.

A good topic sentence allows a reader to see at a glance what the paragraph is about. It can introduce a new line of argument and connect or contrast it with the previous paragraph. Transition words like “however” or “moreover” are useful for creating smooth transitions:

… The story’s focus, therefore, is not upon the divine revelation that may be waiting beyond the door, but upon the mundane process of aging undergone by the man as he waits.

Nevertheless, the “radiance” that appears to stream from the door is typically treated as religious symbolism.

This topic sentence signals that the paragraph will address the question of religious symbolism, while the linking word “nevertheless” points out a contrast with the previous paragraph’s conclusion.

Using textual evidence

A key part of literary analysis is backing up your arguments with relevant evidence from the text. This involves introducing quotes from the text and explaining their significance to your point.

It’s important to contextualize quotes and explain why you’re using them; they should be properly introduced and analyzed, not treated as self-explanatory:

It isn’t always necessary to use a quote. Quoting is useful when you’re discussing the author’s language, but sometimes you’ll have to refer to plot points or structural elements that can’t be captured in a short quote.

In these cases, it’s more appropriate to paraphrase or summarize parts of the text—that is, to describe the relevant part in your own words:

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The conclusion of your analysis shouldn’t introduce any new quotations or arguments. Instead, it’s about wrapping up the essay. Here, you summarize your key points and try to emphasize their significance to the reader.

A good way to approach this is to briefly summarize your key arguments, and then stress the conclusion they’ve led you to, highlighting the new perspective your thesis provides on the text as a whole:

If you want to know more about AI tools , college essays , or fallacies make sure to check out some of our other articles with explanations and examples or go directly to our tools!

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By tracing the depiction of Frankenstein through the novel’s three volumes, I have demonstrated how the narrative structure shifts our perception of the character. While the Frankenstein of the first volume is depicted as having innocent intentions, the second and third volumes—first in the creature’s accusatory voice, and then in his own voice—increasingly undermine him, causing him to appear alternately ridiculous and vindictive. Far from the one-dimensional villain he is often taken to be, the character of Frankenstein is compelling because of the dynamic narrative frame in which he is placed. In this frame, Frankenstein’s narrative self-presentation responds to the images of him we see from others’ perspectives. This conclusion sheds new light on the novel, foregrounding Shelley’s unique layering of narrative perspectives and its importance for the depiction of character.

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25 of the Best Nonfiction Books of All Time

This is one of the 326 lists we use to generate our main The Greatest Books list.

Nationalism by Rabindranath Tagore

Cover of 'Nationalism' by Rabindranath Tagore

In this insightful work, the author critiques the concept of nationalism, arguing that it often leads to divisiveness and conflict rather than unity and progress. He emphasizes the importance of a more universal humanism that transcends national boundaries, advocating for a world where individuals prioritize their shared humanity over nationalistic fervor. Through a blend of philosophical reflection and cultural analysis, the author calls for a reevaluation of how societies understand and practice nationalism, urging a move towards a more inclusive and compassionate global community.

A Room of One's Own by Virginia Woolf

Cover of 'A Room of One's Own' by Virginia Woolf

This book is an extended essay that explores the topic of women in fiction, and the societal and economic hindrances that prevent them from achieving their full potential. The author uses a fictional narrator and narrative to explore the many difficulties that women writers faced throughout history, including the lack of education available to them and the societal expectations that limited their opportunities. The central argument is that a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction.

Hiroshima by John Hersey

Cover of 'Hiroshima' by John Hersey

This book provides a detailed account of the aftermath of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima during World War II, as experienced by six survivors. The narrative follows the survivors from the moment of the explosion to their lives in the following years. It explores their struggles, their resilience, and the profound physical, emotional, and social impacts of the event, offering a poignant examination of the human capacity to endure and rebuild in the face of unimaginable devastation.

Silent Spring by Rachel Carson

Cover of 'Silent Spring' by Rachel Carson

This influential environmental science book presents a detailed and passionate argument against the overuse of pesticides in the mid-20th century. The author meticulously describes the harmful effects of these chemicals on the environment, particularly on birds, hence the metaphor of a 'silent spring' without bird song. The book played a significant role in advancing the global environmental movement and led to a nationwide ban on DDT and other pesticides in the United States.

The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin

Cover of 'The Fire Next Time' by James Baldwin

This book is a powerful exploration of race relations in America in the early 1960s. The author presents his experiences and observations in the form of two essays. The first is a letter to his 14-year-old nephew, discussing the role of race in American history. The second essay takes a broader look at the civil rights movement and the author's own experiences with religion and identity. Throughout, the author presents a passionate plea for the recognition of the humanity and dignity of all people, regardless of race.

Orientalism by Edward W. Said

Cover of 'Orientalism' by Edward W. Said

This book is a critical examination of Western attitudes towards the East, particularly the Middle East, and how these attitudes have shaped and continue to shape Western policies and perceptions. The author argues that the West has a long history of viewing the East as the "other," exotic and inferior, and that this view has been institutionalized through academic disciplines, literature, and media. This "Orientalism," as the author calls it, has served to justify colonialism and imperialism, and continues to influence Western attitudes and policies towards the East today.

Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde

Cover of 'Sister Outsider' by Audre Lorde

"Sister Outsider" is a collection of essays and speeches that delve into the complexities of intersectional identity, exploring themes of racism, sexism, and homophobia. The author, a black lesbian poet and feminist writer, challenges the marginalization of minority groups and critiques the lack of inclusivity within feminist movements. Through personal narratives and powerful prose, the work confronts social injustices and calls for the recognition and celebration of differences as a means to drive political change and dismantle systemic oppression. The book is a seminal text in intersectional feminist thought, advocating for solidarity and the importance of communication across diverse communities.

The Unwomanly Face Of War by Svetlana Alexievich

Cover of 'The Unwomanly Face Of War' by Svetlana Alexievich

"The Unwomanly Face Of War" is a powerful and poignant collection of interviews with Soviet women who fought in World War II. Through their testimonies, the author sheds light on the often overlooked and untold stories of these brave women who served as snipers, pilots, nurses, and soldiers on the front lines. The book explores their experiences, sacrifices, and the lasting impact of war on their lives, providing a unique and intimate perspective on the realities of war from a female point of view.

Decolonising The Mind by Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o

Cover of 'Decolonising The Mind' by Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o

The book explores the profound impact of colonialism on African languages, cultures, and identities, arguing that the imposition of European languages has led to a form of mental colonization. It advocates for the reclamation and revitalization of indigenous languages as a crucial step towards cultural liberation and self-determination. Through a blend of personal narrative, historical analysis, and literary critique, the author underscores the importance of language in shaping thought and consciousness, urging a return to native tongues to foster genuine decolonization and cultural renaissance.

A Brief History of Time by Stephen Hawking

Cover of 'A Brief History of Time' by Stephen Hawking

A Brief History of Time is a popular science book that explores a broad range of topics in cosmology, including the Big Bang, black holes, light cones and superstring theory. The author does not shy away from complex theories and concepts, but explains them in a way that is accessible to non-scientific readers. The book also discusses the possibility of time travel and the boundaries of scientific knowledge. Throughout, the author emphasizes the ongoing quest for a unifying theory that can combine quantum mechanics and general relativity into one all-encompassing, coherent theoretical framework.

The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander

Cover of 'The New Jim Crow' by Michelle Alexander

"The New Jim Crow" is a thought-provoking and eye-opening book that examines the deeply ingrained racial bias within the American criminal justice system. Drawing on extensive research and personal anecdotes, the author explores how the War on Drugs has disproportionately targeted and marginalized Black communities, leading to a modern-day system of racial control and oppression. This powerful critique challenges readers to confront the systemic racism that continues to perpetuate inequality and injustice in the United States.

The Warmth Of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson

Cover of 'The Warmth Of Other Suns' by Isabel Wilkerson

"The Warmth of Other Suns" is a powerful and deeply moving narrative that chronicles the Great Migration, a significant event in American history that saw millions of African Americans leave the South in search of better opportunities and freedom from racial oppression. Through the compelling stories of three individuals, the book explores the challenges, triumphs, and sacrifices made by these courageous migrants as they embarked on a journey to find a new life in the North and West, ultimately reshaping the social and cultural landscape of America.

Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noah Harari

Cover of 'Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind' by Yuval Noah Harari

This book provides a comprehensive exploration of the history of the human species, tracing back from the earliest forms of Homo Sapiens to the modern day. It delves into evolutionary biology, the development of cultures and societies, and the rise of major ideologies and technologies. The book also discusses the future of the species, posing thought-provoking questions about our roles and responsibilities in a rapidly changing world.

Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer

Cover of 'Braiding Sweetgrass' by Robin Wall Kimmerer

The book intertwines indigenous wisdom, scientific knowledge, and the teachings of plants to explore the relationship between humans and the natural world. Through a series of essays, the author, a botanist and member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation, reflects on the ways in which traditional ecological knowledge and modern science can complement each other. The narrative emphasizes the importance of gratitude, reciprocity, and stewardship in fostering a sustainable and respectful connection with the Earth. The author’s personal stories and reflections offer a profound and poetic meditation on the interconnectedness of all living things.

Men Explain Things To Me by Rebecca Solnit

Cover of 'Men Explain Things To Me' by Rebecca Solnit

This book is a collection of essays that delve into the issues of feminism, gender inequality, and the pervasive problem of men dismissing and undermining women's voices. It opens with a now-iconic essay that recounts a personal experience where the author was patronizingly lectured to about her own book by a man who failed to recognize her as its author. The essays explore the cultural phenomenon where women's knowledge and expertise are often questioned or ignored, leading to broader discussions about power dynamics, violence against women, and the struggle for women's rights. Through incisive commentary and sharp wit, the book examines the silencing of women and calls for a more equitable social discourse.

The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History by Elizabeth Kolbert

Cover of 'The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History' by Elizabeth Kolbert

The book explores the concept of the sixth extinction, suggesting that we are currently in the midst of it due to human activity. By examining previous mass extinctions and the current rapid loss of species, the author argues that humans are causing a mass extinction event through climate change, habitat destruction, and spreading of non-native species. The book offers a sobering look at the impact of human behavior on the natural world, emphasizing the urgency of addressing these environmental issues.

The Gene by Siddhartha Mukherjee

Cover of 'The Gene' by Siddhartha Mukherjee

This book provides a comprehensive exploration of the history and science of genetics, tracing its development from the earliest experiments on pea plants to the cutting-edge advancements in gene editing technologies. Through a blend of scientific insights, historical narratives, and personal stories, the text delves into the complexities of heredity, the moral implications of genetic manipulation, and the potential future of human evolution. It aims to demystify the concept of the gene for a general audience, illustrating how these fundamental units of heredity influence not only physical traits and diseases but also contribute to our understanding of identity and kinship.

I Contain Multitudes by Ed Yong

Cover of 'I Contain Multitudes' by Ed Yong

This book delves into the complex and often overlooked world of the microbiome, the myriad of microscopic organisms living within and around us. Through engaging storytelling and rigorous science, it explores how these tiny entities influence everything from our health and immune system to our behavior and evolution. The narrative weaves together fascinating examples from across the natural world, demonstrating how microbes are not just pathogens to be eradicated but vital partners in the planet's ecosystems. It challenges our perceptions of microbes, revealing how they are integral to our past, present, and future.

The Anarchy by William Darlymple

The book provides a detailed account of the rise of the East India Company and its transformation from a modest trading enterprise into a powerful, quasi-governmental force that played a pivotal role in shaping the history of India. Through meticulous research and vivid storytelling, it explores the complex interplay of commerce, politics, and warfare that allowed a private company to conquer vast territories and exert control over millions of people. The narrative delves into the personalities, battles, and strategies that defined this period, shedding light on the broader implications of corporate power and colonialism.

Figuring by Maria Popova

Cover of 'Figuring' by Maria Popova

"Figuring" explores the complex interconnections between the lives of several historical figures across four centuries, primarily focusing on women who have made significant contributions to science, art, and culture. The narrative weaves together the personal and professional endeavors of these individuals, highlighting their struggles, relationships, and the societal challenges they faced. The book delves into themes of love, discovery, and the pursuit of knowledge, illustrating how these elements are intertwined in the human experience and how the contributions of these figures have shaped our understanding of the world.

Invisible Women: Exposing Data Bias In A World Designed For Men by Caroline Criado Perez​​

Cover of 'Invisible Women: Exposing Data Bias In A World Designed For Men' by Caroline Criado Perez​​

This book sheds light on the pervasive gender data gap that exists in our society, revealing how the world we live in is largely designed for men. Through extensive research and compelling examples, the author exposes the ways in which women are systematically excluded and overlooked in various aspects of life, from healthcare and transportation to the workplace and public policy. By highlighting the consequences of this data bias, the book calls for a more inclusive and equitable approach to designing and collecting data, ultimately advocating for a world that recognizes and addresses the needs and experiences of all genders.

Time's Monster by Priya Satia

Cover of 'Time's Monster' by Priya Satia

The book explores the intricate relationship between historical narratives and the exercise of power, particularly in the context of British imperialism. It delves into how historians and their interpretations of the past have influenced and justified colonial policies and actions. By examining the moral and ethical dimensions of historical writing, the author argues that the way history is told can either perpetuate injustices or challenge them, urging a rethinking of how history is used to shape the present and future.

A Vindication of the Rights of Woman by Mary Wollstonecraft

Cover of 'A Vindication of the Rights of Woman' by Mary Wollstonecraft

This influential work from the late 18th century argues passionately for the education and societal recognition of women. The author asserts that women are not naturally inferior to men, but appear to be only because they lack education. She suggests that both men and women should be treated as rational beings and imagines a social order founded on reason. The book is considered one of the earliest works of feminist philosophy.

On the Origin of Species by Charles Darwin

Cover of 'On the Origin of Species' by Charles Darwin

This groundbreaking work presents the theory of evolution, asserting that species evolve over generations through a process of natural selection. The book provides a comprehensive explanation of how the diversity of life on Earth developed over millions of years from a common ancestry. It includes detailed observations and arguments to support the idea that species evolve by adapting to their environments, challenging the prevailing belief of the time that species were unchanging parts of a designed hierarchy.

The Souls of Black Folk by W. E. B. Du Bois

Cover of 'The Souls of Black Folk' by W. E. B. Du Bois

This seminal work is a collection of essays that explores the history and condition of African Americans at the turn of the 20th century. It delves into the issues of race, class, and the socio-economic realities faced by black people post-emancipation. The author employs a combination of history, sociology, and personal narrative to present a powerful critique of American society, highlighting the struggle for civil rights, the importance of black spirituals, and the concept of "double consciousness" - the idea of viewing oneself through the lens of a society that sees you as inferior.

Book Riot , 25 Books

Senjuti Patra's article, published on December 13, 2022, showcases a selection of 25 nonfiction works that have profoundly influenced readers' understanding of the world. Initially inclined toward fiction, the author has transitioned to an enthusiastic appreciation for nonfiction, particularly titles that tackle significant and profound themes. This list, which deliberately excludes memoirs, autobiographies, and poetry to focus on other impactful genres, is described as a personal yet informed collection of readable and well-written works. It is acknowledged as not exhaustive, inviting readers to consider it a starting point for exploring complex ideas and knowledge.

This list was originally published in 2022 and was added to this site about 14 hours ago.

This list has a weight of 46% . To learn more about what this means please visit the Rankings page .

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BERTRAND RUSSELL



of Russell’s books and articles see our online . We also maintain a of Russell’s life and an to his analytic philosophy.


These first essays, mostly book reviews, are Russell’s earliest professional writings.

, , , n.s. 4, no. 14 (Apr 1895), 245-9

, , , n.s. 5, no. 17 (Jan 1896), 128

“ ,” , o.s.3, no.2 (1895-6), 97-112

, , , n.s. 6, no. 21 (Jan 1897), 112-19

, , 7 (Mar 1897), 94-5  On German Trade Unions

, , , n.s. 7, no. 28 (Oct 1898), 567-8

, , , n.s. 8, no. 30 (Apr 1899), 251-6

, , , n.s. 9, no. 33 (Jan 1900), 120-1

, , , n.s. 10, no. 38 (Apr 1901), 274

, , n.s. 10, no. 39 (Jul 1901), 405-7

“ ,” 2 (May 1902), 165-7

“ ,” 1 (Dec 1903), 415-24  Repr.   Spanish translation, by Jose Melgarejo (2023)

, 25 (Dec 3 1903), lit. sup. 37-8

“ ,” 1 (Jan 1904), 684-8 Lit Review

, ed., , , n.s. 13, no. 49 (Jan 1904), 131-2

, , , n.s. 13, no. 49 (Jan 1904), 132-3

“ ,” 85 (Feb 1904), 198-206

“ ,” 2 (Mar 1904), 328-33  Review of G.E. Moore,

“ ,” 3 (Jul 1904), 207-15  Repr.

“ ,” 9 (Apr 1906), 109-16  Review of McTaggart,

“ ,” (London) Jun 4 1906, 2  Review of Robertson,

“ ,” , n.s. 14 (Aug 4 1906), 402-3  Review of Robertson,

“ ,” 12 (Feb 1907), 204-10  Review of Hobhouse,

“ ,” (London) 1 (Apr 13 1907), 276  Review of Picton,

“ ” (May 3 1907) Election Leaflet. (pdf )

“ ,” (London) n.s. 2 (Oct 1907), 89-98  Review of Chatterton-Hill,

“ ,” (London) 1 (Mar 12 1908), 429  On the women’s enfranchisement bill

“ ,” (London) 1 (May 28 1908), 565

“ ,” 94 (Jul 1908), 11-16

“ ,” (London) 3 (Sep 26 1908), 918, 920  Review of George Chatterton-Hill,

“ ” (Manchester) 1 (Dec 9 1909), 463-4

(1910) Political pamphlet in which Russell demolishes every possible argument against giving women the vote  The best thing Russell ever wrote

“ ” (London) 8 (Nov 12 1910), 278, 280  Review of Spinoza’s , White and Stirling translation

“ ,” 33 (Nov 16 1911), 118  Review of William James, , (Longmans, 1911)

“ ,” 33 (Jan 18 1912), 193-4  Review of Bergson’s (Macmillan, 1911)

, 35 (Dec 4 1913), 189-90


  London: Longmans, Green, 1896  (pdf )

Anonymous review of , 147 (Mar 1897)

  Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1897

“ ?” 6 (Nov 1898), 759-76  Trans. 2  Reply to Couturat’s review of Russell’s

“ ,” 7 (Nov 1899), 684-707  Trans. 2  Reply to Poincaré’s review of Russell’s

  Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1900

“ ,” 4 (Jul 1901), 83-101 Repr. as “Mathematics and the Metaphysicians,” in , 1918

  Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1903  Repr. 1931 with a new introduction by Russell  (pdf )

“ ,” 2, no. 4 (Jul 1904), 809-12  Reply to Keyser, “The Axiom of Infinity, ” 2, no. 3 (Apr 1904), 532-52  Repr.

“ ” (parts 1-3), , n.s. 13, nos. 50, 51, 52 (Apr, Jul, Oct 1904), 204-19, 336-54, 509-24  A review essay of Meinong’s 1899 article “On Objects of Higher Order” and his 1902 book

“ ,” , n.s. 14, no. 55 (Jul 1905), 398-401  Repr.

“ ,” , n.s. 14, no. 56 (Oct 1905), 479-93  Repr.

, , , n.s. 14, no. 56 (Oct 1905), 530-538

“ ” 9 (Jun 1906), 349-53  Review of Joachim,

, , , n.s. 15, no. 59 (Jul 1906), 412-415

“ ,” , n.s. 15, no. 60 (Oct 1906), 528-33

, , , n.s. 16, no. 63 (Jul 1907), 436-439

“ ,” 1 (Nov 1907) Repr. , 1910; , 1918

“  ,” , n.s. 17, no. 66 (Apr 1908), 300-1

“ ,” , n.s. 17, no. 66 (Apr 1908), 238-42

  London: Longmans, Green, 1910    Revised ed., London: George Allen & Unwin, 1966

, with Alfred North Whitehead, 3 volumes  Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1910-3  Revised ed., 1925-7 , 1st ed., , , (1910-13)

Combined tables of contents of vols. 1, 2, and 3 of , 1st ed. (pdf )

Preface, , 1st ed. (pdf ) “ ” 19 (May 1911), 281-91  Repr. in

(London: Williams & Norgate, 1912)  Russell’s most popular book on analytic philosophy

of Russell’s by Bernard Bosanquet, (Oct 1912)

“ ,” , n.s., 13 (1912-13)  Repr.

“ ,” 1 (May 24 & 31, 1913)  Repr.

“ ,” 12 (July 1914), 780-803  Repr.

“ ,” No. 4, 1914  Repr. , 1918

Russell’s to Poincaré’s , London, Thomas Nelson and Sons, 1914

, the Herbert Spencer lecture delivered Nov 1914, published as a pamphlet by the Clarenden Press, 1914  Repr. , 1918

. Chicago: Open Court, 1914    Revised ed., London: George Allen & Unwin, 1926 (1914)

“ ,” July 1915  Repr. , 1918

, 12, no. 14 (Jul 8, 1915)  Russell asserts that for him sense-data are physical objects

  London: Longmans, Green, 1918 ” to , 1918

, 1919  Kevin Klement’s online edition of Russell’s best book  Russell’s informal account of the mathematics and logic of

, (Oct 1918, Jan, April, July 1919)  Russell’s most important book for linguistic analytic philosophers - complete and online

“ ” , n.s., vol. 28, no. 119 (Jan 1919), 124

Russell’s to Wittgenstein’s , Kegan Paul, 1922

“ ” , 13th ed. (1926)

Two Russell reviews of A. J. Ayer’s,

“Philosophy and Grammar” of A.J. Ayer, . 33 (Mar 1936), 541-3.

of A.J. Ayer, , 2nd ed. 15 (Jan 1947): 71-2.


“ ” 2, no. (Jan 1915)
Russell on just war theory and an early expression of his moral subjectivism.

“ ” by Ralph Barton Perry, (Apr 1915)  Reply to Russell

“ ” (Oct 1915) 
Rejoinder to Perry

“ ” (Aug 1915)

“ ” (trans.: “Here I am. I did it.”) , May 17 1916, p.9

“ ” , nos. 4,642-3 (Apr 18, 25 1919)  Repr.

“ ” 66:445-8 (May 3, 1919)  Repr. Daniel Bloomfield (ed.), , H.W. Wilson, 1919

  New York: B. W. Huebsch Inc., 1922

, London, Watts & Co., 1927  First published as a pamphlet for the Rationalist Press Association Limited

“ ” 1, no.6 (Sep 1929), 14-29  Also as “What I Believe,” 82 (Sep 1929), 129-34  An important autobiographical essay by Russell

“ ” 16 (Aug 12 1936), 289  Repr. as “Obituary”   An “auto-obituary” written by Russell in 1936

“ ” 1 (Nov 1946)  Russell’s best statement of what philosophy should be

“ ,” BBC broadcast transcript, 39 (May 27 1948), 865-6

“ ,” BBC broadcast transcript, 40 (Sep 23 1948), 452-3

“ ” (1951)

  A Batchworth Press Background Book, 1953  Repr. FF, 78-110

“ ,” , 1961  First published as “Education’s Place in a New Age,” (Toronto), 68, no. 22 (Mar 7 1953), 1, 7-8

“ ” (Jul 9 1955)

The Russell-Einstein Manifesto (audio), Jul 9 1955

“ ,” a BBC European Service talk, Jul 1956  Repr. FF, 120-26

“ ,” written for, and rejected by, the in 1956; first published in in 1961

“ ,” in , ed. C.H. Rolph, London, Heinemann, 1957  Repr. FF

“ ,” a BBC Overseas Service talk, 1957  Repr. FF

“ ,” 11, no.2 (Feb 1958), 4  Russell’s Kalinga prize acceptance speech

“ ,” , 1960 Repr. FF, 120-26

“ ,” Prologue to (1967)


(1916)

(1917)

(1917)

(1917)

(1920)

(1921)

(1921)

(1922)

(1924)

(1930)

(1971) Reports from the International War Crimes Tribunal.


“ ,” , Jun 1916

“ , , Mar 1951

“ ” 39, no. 43 (Aug 1945) A hypertext of Russell’s first anti-nuclear writing.

“ ” (1950) Russell’s Nobel prize acceptance speech.

Last Essay: “ ”

“ ”:  excerpt from (1934), Chapter XXXI, Imperialism

“ ” (1929)

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list books in essay

The Best Reviewed Essay Collections of 2020

Featuring zadie smith, helen macdonald, claudia rankine, samantha irby, and more.

Zadie Smith’s Intimations , Helen Macdonald’s Vesper Flights , Claudia Rankine’s Just Us , and Samantha Irby’s Wow, No Thank You all feature among the Best Reviewed Essay Collections of 2020.

Brought to you by Book Marks , Lit Hub’s “Rotten Tomatoes for books.”

Vesper Flights ribbon

1. Vesper Flights by Helen Macdonald (Grove)

18 Rave • 3 Positive • 1 Mixed

Read Helen Macdonald on Sherlock Holmes, Ursula Le Guin, and hating On the Road  here

“A former historian of science, Macdonald is as captivated by the everyday (ants, bird’s nests) as she is by the extraordinary (glowworms, total solar eclipses), and her writing often closes the distance between the two … Always, the author pushes through the gloom to look beyond herself, beyond all people, to ‘rejoice in the complexity of things’ and to see what science has to show us: ‘that we are living in an exquisitely complicated world that is not all about us’ … The climate crisis shadows these essays. Macdonald is not, however, given to sounding dire, all-caps warnings … For all its elegiac sentences and gray moods, Vesper Flights  is a book of tremendous purpose. Throughout these essays, Macdonald revisits the idea that as a writer it is her responsibility to take stock of what’s happening to the natural world and to convey the value of the living things within it.”

–Jake Cline  ( The Washington Post )

2. Intimations by Zadie Smith (Penguin)

13 Rave • 7 Positive • 3 Mixed

Listen to Zadie Smith read from Intimations here

“Smith…is a spectacular essayist—even better, I’d say, than as a novelist … Smith…get[s] at something universal, the suspicion that has infiltrated our interactions even with those we want to think we know. This is the essential job of the essayist: to explore not our innocence but our complicity. I want to say this works because Smith doesn’t take herself too seriously, but that’s not accurate. More to the point, she is willing to expose the tangle of feelings the pandemic has provoked. And this may seem a small thing, but it’s essential: I never doubt her voice on the page … Her offhandedness, at first, feels out of step with a moment in which we are desperate to feel that whatever something we are trying to do matters. But it also describes that moment perfectly … Here we see the kind of devastating self-exposure that the essay, as a form, requires—the realization of how limited we are even in the best of times, and how bereft in the worst.”

–David L. Ulin  ( The Los Angeles Times )

3. Just Us: An American Conversation by Claudia Rankine (Graywolf)

11 Rave • 6 Positive • 5 Mixed

Read an excerpt from Just Us here

“ Just Us  is about intimacy. Rankine is making an appeal for real closeness. She’s advocating for candor as the pathway to achieving universal humanity and authentic love … Rankine is vulnerable, too. In ‘lemonade,’ an essay about how race and racism affect her interracial marriage, Rankine models the openness she hopes to inspire. ‘lemonade’ is hard to handle. It’s naked and confessional, deeply moving and, ultimately, inspirational … Just Us , as a book, is inventive … Claudia Rankine may be the most human human I’ve ever encountered. Her inner machinations and relentless questioning would exhaust most people. Her labor should be less necessary, of course.”

–Michael Kleber-Diggs  ( The Star Tribune )

4. Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning by Cathy Park Hong (One World)

7 Rave • 10 Positive • 2 Mixed

Listen to an interview with Cathy Park Hong here

“Hong’s metaphors are crafted with stinging care. To be Asian-American, she suggests, is to be tasked with making an injury inaccessible to the body that has been injured … I read Minor Feelings  in a fugue of enveloping recognition and distancing flinch … The question of lovability, and desirability, is freighted for Asian men and Asian women in very different ways—and Minor Feelings  serves as a case study in how a feminist point of view can both deepen an inquiry and widen its resonances to something like universality … Hong reframes the quandary of negotiating dominance and submission—of desiring dominance, of hating the terms of that dominance, of submitting in the hopes of achieving some facsimile of dominance anyway—as a capitalist dilemma … Hong is writing in agonized pursuit of a liberation that doesn’t look white—a new sound, a new affect, a new consciousness—and the result feels like what she was waiting for. Her book is a reminder that we can be, and maybe have to be, what others are waiting for, too.”

–Jia Tolentino  ( The New Yorker )

5. World of Wonders: In Praise of Fireflies, Whale Sharks, and Other Astonishments by Aimee Nezhukumatathil (Milkweed Editions)

11 Rave • 3 Positive

Read an excerpt from World of Wonders here

“In beautifully illustrated essays, poet Aimee Nezhukumatathil writes of exotic flora and fauna and her family, and why they are all of one piece … In days of old, books about nature were often as treasured for their illustrations as they were for their words. World of Wonders,  American poet and teacher Aimee Nezhukumatathil’s prose ode to her muses in the natural world, is a throwback that way. Its words are beautiful, but its cover and interior illustrations by Fumi Mini Nakamura may well be what first moves you to pick it up in a bookstore or online … The book’s magic lies in Nezhukumatathil’s ability to blend personal and natural history, to compress into each brief essay the relationship between a biographical passage from her own family and the life trajectory of a particular plant or animal … Her kaleidoscopic observations pay off in these thoughtful, nuanced, surprise-filled essays.”

–Pamela Miller  ( The Star Tribune )

WOW, NO THANK YOU by Samantha Irby

6. Wow, No Thank You by Samantha Irby (Vintage)

10 Rave • 3 Positive • 1 Mixed

Watch an interview with Samantha Irby here

“Haphazard and aimless as she claims to be, Samantha Irby’s Wow, No Thank You  is purposefully hilarious, real, and full of medicine for living with our culture’s contradictory messages. From relationship advice she wasn’t asked for to surrendering her cell phone as dinner etiquette, Irby is wholly unpretentious as she opines about the unspoken expectations of adulting. Her essays poke holes and luxuriate in the weirdness of modern society … If anyone whose life is being made into a television show could continue to keep it real for her blog reading fans, it’s Irby. She proves we can still trust her authenticity not just through her questionable taste in music and descriptions of incredibly bloody periods, but through her willingness to demystify what happens in any privileged room she finds herself in … Irby defines professional lingo and describes the mundane details of exclusive industries in anecdotes that are not only entertaining but powerfully demystifying. Irby’s closeness to financial and physical precariousness combined with her willingness to enter situations she feels unprepared for make us loyal to her—she again proves herself to be a trustworthy and admirable narrator who readers will hold fast to through anything at all.”

–Molly Thornton  ( Lambda Literary )

7. Funny Weather: Art in an Emergency by Olivia Laing (W. W. Norton & Company)

5 Rave • 10 Positive • 3 Mixed • 1 Pan

“Yes, you’re in for a treat … There are few voices that we can reliably read widely these days, but I would read Laing writing about proverbial paint drying (the collection is in fact quite paint-heavy), just as soon as I would read her write about the Grenfell Tower fire, The Fire This Time , or a refugee’s experience in England, The Abandoned Person’s Tale , all of which are included in Funny Weather … Laing’s knowledge of her subjects is encyclopaedic, her awe is infectious, and her critical eye is reminiscent of the critic and author James Wood … She is to the art world what David Attenborough is to nature: a worthy guide with both a macro and micro vision, fluent in her chosen tongue and always full of empathy and awe.”

–Mia Colleran  ( The Irish Times )

8. Conditional Citizens: On Belonging in America by Laila Lalami (Pantheon)

6 Rave • 7 Positive • 1 Mixed • 2 Pan

“A] searing look at the struggle for all Americans to achieve liberty and equality. Lalami eloquently tacks between her experiences as an immigrant to this country and the history of U.S. attempts to exclude different categories of people from the full benefits of citizenship … Lalami offers a fresh perspective on the double consciousness of the immigrant … Conditional citizenship is still conferred on people of color, women, immigrants, religious minorities, even those living in poverty, and Lalami’s insight in showing the subtle and overt ways discrimination operates in so many facets of life is one of this book’s major strengths.”

–Rachel Newcomb  ( The Washington Post )

9. This is One Way to Dance by Sejal Shah (University of Georgia Press)

7 Rave • 2 Positive 

Watch an interview with Sejal Shah here

“Shah brings important, refreshing, and depressing observations about what it means to have dark skin and an ‘exotic’ name, when the only country you’ve ever lived in is America … The essays in this slim volume are engaging and thought-provoking … The essays are well-crafted with varying forms that should inspire and enlighten other essayists … A particularly delightful chapter is the last, called ‘Voice Texting with My Mother,’ which is, in fact, written in texts … Shah’s thoughts on heritage and belonging are important and interesting.”

–Martha Anne Toll  ( NPR )

10. Having and Being Had by Eula Biss (Riverhead)

5 Rave • 4 Positive • 4 Mixed

Read Eula Biss on the anticapitalist origins of Monopoly here

“… enthralling … Her allusive blend of autobiography and criticism may remind some of The Argonauts  by Maggie Nelson, a friend whose name pops up in the text alongside those of other artists and intellectuals who have influenced her work. And yet, line for line, her epigrammatic style perhaps most recalls that of Emily Dickinson in its radical compression of images and ideas into a few chiseled lines … Biss wears her erudition lightly … she’s really funny, with a barbed but understated wit … Keenly aware of her privilege as a white, well-educated woman who has benefited from a wide network of family and friends, Biss has written a book that is, in effect, the opposite of capitalism in its willingness to acknowledge that everything she’s accomplished rests on the labor of others.”

–Ann Levin  ( Associated Press )

The Book Marks System: RAVE = 5 points • POSITIVE = 3 points • MIXED = 1 point • PAN = -5 points

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It’s official: These 13 books are now banned from all public schools in Utah

A list of the first-ever books to be banned from every public school in utah was released friday.

The Utah state school board on Friday ordered the removal of 13 book titles from every public school in the state, in accordance with a new law passed earlier this year.

The list’s publication comes only weeks before the new school year will begin. Six of the 13 titles were written by the same fantasy romance author, Sarah J. Maas.

Districts and charter schools must now dispose of the following titles, according to the Utah State Board of Education, marking a historical first for the state.

These books are now banned from all Utah public schools:

“Blankets” by Craig Thompson.

“A Court of Frost and Starlight” by Sarah J. Maas.

“A Court of Mist and Fury” by Sarah J. Maas.

“A Court of Silver Flames” by Sarah J. Maas.

“A Court of Thorns and Roses” by Sarah J. Maas.

“A Court of Wings and Ruin” by Sarah J. Maas.

“Empire of Storms” by Sarah J. Maas.

“Fallout” by Ellen Hopkins.

“Forever” by Judy Blume.

“Milk and Honey” by Rupi Kaur.

“Oryx & Crake” by Margaret Atwood.

“Tilt” by Ellen Hopkins.

“What Girls Are Made Of” by Elana K. Arnold.

(Alastair Grant | Associated Press file photo) Canadian author Margaret Atwood — pictured here in 2019 — is the author of "Oryx & Crake," one of the 13 books that the Utah State Board of Education announced on August 2, 2024, must be removed from public schools across the state.

How were the books banned statewide?

The books on this list had already been banned by select school districts or charters, but because of the new law signed by Gov. Spencer Cox in March , they will now be banned statewide.

The law, which went into effect July 1, requires that a book be removed from all public schools in the state if at least three school districts (or at least two school districts and five charter schools) determine it amounts to “objective sensitive material” — pornographic or otherwise indecent content, as defined by Utah code.

Since the law applied retroactively, school districts and charters were asked to reevaluate the books that they had already decided to ban before July 1 using the state’s new “objective sensitive material” criteria, a standard that did not exist before.

Once those reevaluations were completed, school districts submitted a list of the banned titles that they found met the new criteria to the Utah State Board of Education. Those submissions were then aggregated in a spreadsheet and the data was organized by book title, as well as district or charter, to determine which titles met the threshold, USBE officials said.

Under the law, USBE members may still decide to overturn a statewide ban for each title that met the threshold — an action board leadership will always to be able to take should more titles be subject to statewide removal.

To overturn a book’s statewide removal, “three or more” USBE leaders have 30 days from the moment a statewide ban is instituted to request that the material be placed on a board meeting agenda, so leaders can vote on the matter.

If no hearing is held, the statewide removal stands.

Moving forward, districts and charters must report any “objective sensitive material” that they decide to remove to USBE. Upon receiving those alerts, the state school board will notify districts and charters within 10 school days of any titles that meet the statewide removal threshold, as well as publish the titles to a public list on its website .

See which school districts originally banned the books:

Here is a breakdown of the individual school district book bans that led to the titles’ statewide removal, according to USBE.

Both Davis and Washington County school districts each banned all 13 titles included on Friday’s list.

Alpine School District and Nebo School District each banned seven of the titles on the statewide removal list.

Jordan School District banned six of the titles. And the Tooele County School District banned one.

Collectively, the individual bans led to the titles reaching the new threshold for statewide removal.

No charter schools had banned the books on the Friday list, according to USBE.

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How We Chose the 50 Best Romance Novels

Happily ever after. These three words form the backbone of the romance genre. Because no matter how fraught the journey, in romance, the protagonists will be together by the story’s end. This is the reason so many readers return again and again to these books—in a tumultuous world, romance novels offer a guarantee.

And they’ve never felt so needed, or enjoyed such mainstream celebration, as they have over the past few years. Sales in the genre began to spike as COVID-19 shut down the world and readers sought a dose of warmth and levity in 2020; the emergence of TikTok as a platform for word-of-mouth book recommendations around the same time made romance novels both new and old go viral, shooting a handful of authors to the rarified territory of repeat no. 1 New York Times best sellers. Last year, romance book sales surged even higher, with nearly 40 million printed copies sold, according to market research company Circana . And the number of romance-specific bookstores in the U.S.—from Tropes & Trifles in Minneapolis to the Ripped Bodice in New York City and L.A.—has grown from just two in 2020 to more than 20 today.

If you don’t understand the appeal of romance novels, we’re willing to bet you’ve never read one. Reading romance can be an escape into a sweeter, softer version of our world—or it can be a risky adventure into strange new lands. Romance can be contemporary, historical, paranormal, erotic. It can tell stories of enemies combusting into lovers, of childhood sweethearts reuniting as adults, of strangers begrudgingly forced together who find themselves catching feelings, of unintentional bedmates , of bloodthirsty vampires and clandestine witches and overworked doctors and amnesic spouses learning to love one another all over again. Romance can take place in a Regency mansion , in a boardroom , on the sidelines of a football field , in a tiny town . There is a subgenre, a trope, and a plot for every reader—a story to satisfy any particular taste.

To create our list of The 50 Best Romance Novels to Read Right Now , we began in early 2024 by speaking with booksellers, editors, authors, and other industry experts who helped us understand the nuances and evolution of romance. These conversations helped shape the entries on this list (all books in the English language), which TIME editors honed by considering key factors including ingenuity, commercial success, acclaim, and impact, aiming to curate a list that celebrates the burgeoning inclusivity of the genre.

The resulting list features books that span hundreds of years, beginning with Frances Burney’s 1782 novel Cecilia —a book that influenced one of the most beloved novels of the genre —and ending with Ali Hazelwood’s 2023 STEM romance Love, Theoretically . No single writer’s work appears more than once. Spanning diverse subcategories and tropes, the books on this list showcase the thrilling, heart-warming, and often spicy narratives that represent the best of what the genre has to offer. Not only do they provide satisfying resolutions for their characters, but they also tackle big ideas around grief, identity, vulnerability, empathy, and acceptance—all the things that power our most potent relationships.

Which is why, as best-selling author Casey McQuiston argues in an essay for this project , anyone who dismisses romance as fluff or the stuff of guilty pleasure is missing the point. “If we expect a great novel to tell us about humanity, romance holds a mirror to our wants and needs,” McQuiston writes. “If we want to study works that sit within a greater literary tradition, romance has one of the richest.”

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That history is as complex as societal attitudes about gender roles and sexuality. Tracing the evolution of the romance genre means contending with popular narratives that handle sex and consent in outdated and sometimes harmful ways. Many books that are considered foundational to the modern romance novel, from authors like Kathleen E. Woodiwiss and Judith McNaught , feature rape and coercion narratives—and while we can acknowledge the ground they broke in helping to establish a wide readership of the genre, we elected not to recommend those books to today’s readers.

Also not on TIME’s list: The Notebook . Nicholas Sparks’s 1996 hit may come to mind for many people when they think of romance, but—forgive us if you’ve managed to remain unspoiled for nearly 30 years—it does not end happily. Likewise, E.L. James’ 2011 erotic best seller Fifty Shades of Grey did not meet our criteria, because of its ending (though the series as a whole could have). A happily ever after , or at least a happily for now , was our first non-negotiable in selecting the titles on this list. Our second was less black and white: the love story needed to be the central focus of the plot. For that reason, popular romantasy series like Sarah J. Maas' A Court of Thorns and Roses and Rebecca Yarros' Fourth Wing do not appear on this list, as we aimed to draw a line between fantasy books with romantic elements and romance books with fantastical elements.

Despite these absences, there are many familiar names on TIME’s list, from Nora Roberts and Beverly Jenkins to Nalini Singh and Stephenie Meyer to Jasmine Guillory and Emily Henry . Whether you’re a veteran romance reader, a genre newcomer, or something in between, you’ll find something here to love.

See the full list

Special thanks to Bolu Babalola, Eliza Berman, Clair Brett, Samantha Cooney, Helen Fielding, Erin Galloway, Katie Garaby , Melissa Gill, Jasmine Guillory, Jenny Han, Bea Hodges-Koch, Cindy Hwang, Jayashree Kamblé, Kevin Kwan, Leah Koch, Wes Lukes, Belinda Luscombe, Erin McMullen, Casey McQuiston, Caitlin O'Neil, Julia Quinn, Lauren Richards, Tessa Berenson Rogers, Simmone Shah, Emma Straub, Chelsea Stringfield , Becca Title, Tia Williams, and Rebecca Yarros

More Must-Reads from TIME

  • The Rise of a New Kind of Parenting Guru
  • The 50 Best Romance Novels to Read Right Now
  • Mark Kelly and the History of Astronauts Making the Jump to Politics
  • The Young Women Challenging Iran’s Regime
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  • Can Food Really Change Your Hormones?
  • Column: Why Watching Simone Biles Makes Me Cry
  • Get Our Paris Olympics Newsletter in Your Inbox

Write to Annabel Gutterman at [email protected] , Lucy Feldman at [email protected] and Megan McCluskey at [email protected]

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20 Must-Read Best Essay Collections of 2019

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Rebecca Hussey

Rebecca holds a PhD in English and is a professor at Norwalk Community College in Connecticut. She teaches courses in composition, literature, and the arts. When she’s not reading or grading papers, she’s hanging out with her husband and son and/or riding her bike and/or buying books. She can't get enough of reading and writing about books, so she writes the bookish newsletter "Reading Indie," focusing on small press books and translations. Newsletter: Reading Indie Twitter: @ofbooksandbikes

View All posts by Rebecca Hussey

Calling all essay fans! For your reading pleasure, I’ve rounded up the best essay collections of 2019. It was a fabulous year for essays (although I say that about most years, to be honest). We’ve had some stellar anthologies of writing about disability, feminism, and the immigrant experience. We’ve had important collections about race, mental health, the environment, and media. And we’ve had collections of personal essays to entertain us and make us feel less alone. There should be something in this list for just about any reading mood or interest.

These books span the entire year, and in cases where the book isn’t published yet, I’ve given you the publication date so you can preorder it or add it to your library list.

I hope this list of the best essay collections of 2019 helps you find new books you love!

About Us: Essays from the Disability Series of the New York Times , edited by Peter Catapano and Rosemarie Garland-Thomson

This book emerged from a  New York Times series of personal essays on living with a disability. Each piece was written by a person in the disabled community, and the volume contains an introduction by Andrew Solomon. The topics cover romance, shame, ambition, childbearing, parenting, aging, and much more. The authors offer a wide range of perspectives on living in a world not built for them.

Black is the Body: Stories from my Grandmother’s Time, My Mother’s Time, and Mine by Emily Bernard

Emily Bernard’s essays are about her experiences of race. She writes about life as a black woman in Vermont, her family’s history in Alabama and Nashville, her job as a professor who teaches African American literature, and her adoption of twin girls from Ethiopia. It begins with the story of a stabbing in New Haven and uses that as a springboard to write about what it means to live in a black body.

Burn It Down: Women Writing about Anger , edited by Lilly Dancyger (Seal Press, October 8)

Women’s anger has been the source of some important and powerful writing lately (see Rebecca Traister’s  Good and Mad and Soraya Chemaly’s  Rage Becomes Her ). This collection brings together a diverse group of writers to further explore the subject. The book’s 22 writers include Leslie Jamison, Melissa Febos, Evette Dionne, and more.

The Collected Schizophrenias by Esmé Weijun Wang

The Collected Schizophrenias is a collection of essays on mental and chronic illness. Wang combines research with her personal knowledge of illness to explore misconceptions about schizophrenia and disagreements in the medical community about definitions and treatments. She tells moving, honest personal stories about living with mental illness.

The Collector of Leftover Souls: Field Notes on Brazil’s Everyday Insurrections by Eliane Brum, Translated by Diane Grosklaus Whitty (Graywolf, October 15)

This volume collects work from two of Brum’s books, and includes investigative pieces and profiles about Brazil and its people. She focuses on underrepresented communities such as indigenous midwives from the Amazon and people in the favelas of São Paulo. Her book captures the lives and voices of people not often written about.

Erosion: Essays of Undoing by Terry Tempest Williams (Sarah Crichton Books, October 8)

This volume collects essays written between 2016 and 2018 covering the topic she has always written so beautifully about: the natural world. The essays focus on the concept of erosion, including the erosion of land and of the self. They are her response to the often-overwhelming challenges we face in the political and the natural world.

The Good Immigrant: 26 Writers Reflect on America ,  edited by Nikesh Shukla and Chimene Suleyman

This volume brings together an amazing group of writers including Chigozie Obioma, Jenny Zhang, Fatimah Asghar, Alexander Chee, and many more. The essayists are first and second generation immigrants who describe their personal experiences and struggles with finding their place in the U.S. The pieces connect first-person stories with broader cultural and political issues to paint an important picture of the U.S. today.

Good Things Happen to People You Hate: Essays by Rebecca Fishbein (William Morrow, October 15)

In the tradition of Samantha Irby and Sloane Crosley, this collection is a humorous look at life’s unfairness. Fishbein writes about trouble with jobs, bedbugs, fires, and cyber bullying. She covers struggles with alcohol, depression, anxiety, and failed relationships. She is honest and hilarious both, wittily capturing experiences shared by many.

I Like to Watch: Arguing My Way Through the TV Revolution by Emily Nussbaum

This book contains new and previously published essays by  New Yorker  critic Emily Nussbaum. The pieces include reviews and profiles. They also argue for a new type of criticism that can accommodate the ambition and complexity of contemporary television. She makes a case for opening art criticism up to new forms and voices.

I’m Telling the Truth, But I’m Lying by Bassey Ikpi

Bassey Ikpi’s essay collection is about her personal experiences dealing with Bipolar II and anxiety. She writes about struggling with mental health even while her career as a spoken word artist was flourishing. She looks at the ways our mental health is intertwined with every aspect of our lives. It’s an honest look at identity, health, and illness.

Little Weirds by Jenny Slate (Little, Brown and Company, November 5)

These pieces are humorous, whimsical essays about things that are on Jenny Slate’s mind. As she—an actress and stand-up comedian as well as writer—describes it, “I looked into my brain and found a book. Here it is.” With a light touch, she tells us honestly what it’s like to be her and how she sees the world, one little, weird piece of it at a time.

Make It Scream, Make It Burn: Essays   by Leslie Jamison

Here is Jamison’s follow-up essay collection to the bestselling   Empathy Exams . This one is divided into three sections, “Longing,” “Looking,” and “Dwelling,” each with pieces that combine memoir and journalism. Her subjects include the Sri Lankan civil war, the online world Second Life, the whale 52 Blue, eloping in Las Vegas, giving birth, and many more.

My Time Among the Whites: Notes from an Unfinished Education   by Jennine Capó Crucet

Crucet grew up in Miami, the daughter of Cuban refugees. Here she explores her family’s attempts to fit into American culture and her feeling of being a stranger in her own country. She considers her relationship to the so-called “American Dream” and what it means to live in a place that doesn’t always recognize your right to be there.

Notes to Self: Essays by Emilie Pine

Emilie Pine is an Irish writer, and this book is a bestseller in Ireland. These six personal essays touch on addiction, sexual assault, infertility, and more. She captures women’s experiences that often remain hidden. She writes about bodies and emotions from rage to grief to joy with honesty, clarity, and nuance.

Our Women on the Ground: Essays by Arab Women Reporting from the Arab World by Zahra Hankir (Editor) and Christiane Amanpour (Foreword)

This collection gathers together 19 writers discussing their experiences as journalists working in their home countries. These women risk their lives reporting on war and face sexual harassment and difficulties traveling alone, but they also are able to talk to women and get stories their male counterpoints can’t. Their first person accounts offer new perspectives on women’s lives and current events in the Middle East.

The Source of Self-Regard: Selected Essays, Speeches, and Meditations by Toni Morrison

Picking this up is a fitting way to pay tribute to the great Toni Morrison, who just passed away last summer. This book is a collection of essays, speeches, and meditations from the past four decades. Topics include the role of the artist, African Americans in American literature, the power of language, and discussions of her own work and that of other writers and artists.

Surfacing by Kathleen Jamie

Kathleen Jamie is a poet and nature writer. These essays combine travel, memoir, and history to look at a world rapidly changing because of our warming climate. She ranges from thawing tundra in Alaska to the preserved homes of neolithic farmers in Scotland and also examines her own experiences with change as her children grow and her father dies.

Thick: And Other Essays by Tressie McMillan Cottom

As of this writing,  Thick  was just longlisted for a National Book Award in nonfiction. McMillan Cottom’s essays look at culture and personal experience from a sociological perspective. It’s an indispensable collection for those who want to think about race and society, who like a mix of personal and academic writing, and who want some complex, challenging ideas to chew on.

White Flights: Race, Fiction, and the American Imagination   by Jess Row

White Flights is an examination of how race gets written about in American fiction, particularly by white writers creating mostly white spaces in their books. Row looks at writers such as Don DeLillo, Annie Dillard, David Foster Wallace, Jonathan Franzen, and more to consider the role that whiteness has played in the American literary imagination.

The Witches Are Coming   by Lindy West (Hachette Books, November 5)

The Witches Are Coming  is Lindy West’s follow-up to her wonderful, best-selling book  Shrill .  She’s back with more of her incisive cultural critiques, writing essays on feminism and the misogyny that is (still) embedded in every part of our culture. She brings humor, wit, and much-needed clarity to the gender dynamics at play in media and culture.

There you have it—the best collections of 2019! This was a great year for essays, but so were the two years before. Check out my round-ups of the best essay collections from 2018 and 2017 .

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Books by Rachel Kushner and Richard Powers Are Among Booker Prize Nominees

There are six American novels in the running for the prestigious British literary award, but only two by U.K. authors.

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Alex Marshall

By Alex Marshall

Reporting from London

A stack of 13 books of different colors and sizes placed on a white table

Six novels by U.S. authors, including Percival Everett, Rachel Kushner and Richard Powers, are among the 13 titles nominated for this year’s Booker Prize, the award’s organizers announced on Tuesday.

Everett’s book “ James ” is a retelling of Mark Twain’s “Huckleberry Finn” from the perspective of an enslaved runaway; Kushner’s “ Creation Lake ,” is a forthcoming novel about a spy who infiltrates an environmental activist group; and Powers’s “ Playground ,” another forthcoming title, imagines a plan to send floating cities into the Pacific Ocean.

The Booker Prize is one of the most coveted literary awards, given each year to a novel written in English and published in Britain or Ireland. Recent winners include Margaret Atwood’s “The Testaments” and Douglas Stuart’s “Shuggie Bain.” Last year’s winner was “Prophet Song,” a novel by Paul Lynch set in a near-future Ireland torn apart by civil war.

Founded in 1969, the Booker Prize was for most of its life only open to books by writers from Britain, Ireland, the Commonwealth and Zimbabwe, but in 2014, organizers expanded its eligibility criteria to any work written in English. Ever since, British literary figures have regularly complained about the prize’s dominance by American authors.

Tuesday’s announcement could reignite those concerns, especially because only two novels by British authors have been nominated: Samantha Harvey’s “ Orbital ,” a day-in-the-life story of six astronauts circling the earth on a space station; and Sarah Perry’s “ Enlightenment ,” about unrequited love in an English town.

As well as the books by Everett, Kushner and Powers, the three other American novels nominated are Rita Bullwinkel’s “ Headshot ,” set in a women’s boxing tournament; Claire Messud’s “ This Strange Eventful History ,” a family saga that explores France’s colonial history; and “ Wandering Stars ,” by Tommy Orange, which is about the impact of colonization on a Native American family.

Orange is the Booker Prize’s first ever Native American nominee.

The nominated titles vary wildly in subject matter and tone — but Edmund de Waal, the chair of this year’s judges, said in a news release that the 13 books all had a similar emotional impact. “These are not books ‘about issues,’” he said. “They are works of fiction that inhabit ideas by making us care deeply about people and their predicaments.”

“The precarity of lives runs through our longlist like quicksilver,” de Waal added.

The judges will now cut the list down to a six-book shortlist, scheduled to be announced on Sep. 16. The winning title will be revealed during a ceremony in London on Nov. 12.

The full list of nominees:

Colin Barrett, “ Wild Houses ”

Rita Bullwinkel, “ Headshot ”

Percival Everett, “ James ”

Samantha Harvey, “ Orbital ”

Rachel Kushner, “Creation Lake”

Hisham Matar, “ My Friends ”

Claire Messud, “ This Strange Eventful History ”

Anne Michaels, “ Held ”

Tommy Orange, “ Wandering Stars ”

Sarah Perry, “ Enlightenment ”

Richard Powers, “Playground”

Yael van der Wouden, “ The Safekeep ”

Charlotte Wood, “Stone Yard Devotional”

Alex Marshall is a Times reporter covering European culture. He is based in London. More about Alex Marshall

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Oprah Winfrey, Literary Starmaker, Has Spoken (Again). Check Out Her Book Club's 2024 Selections

Oprah’s Book Club, which has been in action since 1996, has recommended more than 100 books

Carly Tagen-Dye is the Books editorial assistant at PEOPLE, where she writes for both print and digital platforms.

Michael Kovac/Getty

When you think of celebrity book clubs, it’s likely that Oprah Winfrey ’s is among the first ones that come to mind. Oprah’s Book Club has been a pivotal part of the literary world since it was founded by the talk show host and philanthropist, 70, in 1996. Winfrey first got the idea for the club when she learned that an intern at the The Oprah Winfrey Show shared her love of Alice Walker’s 1982 novel The Color Purple . The two began to exchange books, until the intern suggested that they should expand the club and literary discussions to the show itself. For 15 years, Oprah’s Book Club was included as a discussion segment on The Oprah Winfrey Show , and helped launch many books to bestseller status. After a brief hiatus in 2002, it now spotlights books that Winfrey chooses on a limited basis and has featured over 100 selections. Oprah’s Book Club aims to share books that “engender conversation, spark enlightenment, help launch emerging authors, and reacquaint us with the already prominent,” according to Oprah Daily .

Never miss a story — sign up for  PEOPLE's free daily newsletter  to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. From classics to memoirs and the hottest new contemporary fiction, Winfrey has picked a wide range of titles over the years. Read below for the 2024 selections of Oprah's Book Club.

‘Familiaris’ by David Wrobleswki

Blackstone Publishing

The sequel to Wrobleswki’s bestseller The Story of Edgar Sawtelle , this ambitious novel follows John Sawtelle, who embarks on a fresh start in the Wisconsin woods in 1919. Joined by his wife, their two friends and a trio of dogs, John and his companions come to depend on each other while learning to adapt to the strangeness of their new home.

‘Long Island’ by Colm Tóibín

In 1976, Irish immigrant Ellis Lacey, whom readers might recognize from the author’s novel Brooklyn , is now a wife and a mother to two teenagers. When Ellis learns that her husband, Tony, has gotten another woman pregnant — and that the woman’s husband plans to leave the baby with Ellis — her decisions reverberate throughout this emotional novel that Winfrey calls “deeply emotional.”

‘The Many Lives of Mama Love’ by Lara Love Hardin

Simon and Schuster

In this stunning memoir, the author, a mother and wife, is convicted of 32 felonies after paying to feed her heroin addiction by stealing money from her neighbors. During her time in prison, Hardin became known as “Mama Love” to her fellow inmates, and, following her release, she reflects on her journey of survival, forgiveness and redemption. “‘Once you start reading, be prepared, because you won’t want to stop," Winfrey said of the book.

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It’s part of a new approach to teaching America’s least favorite subject.

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In the second episode of my new podcast, I sat down with the founder of Khan Academy to talk about how artificial intelligence will transform education.

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In the sixth episode of my podcast, I sat down with the OpenAI CEO to talk about where AI is headed next and what humanity will do once it gets there.

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Artificial intelligence is as revolutionary as mobile phones and the Internet.

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And upend the software industry.

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The Lone Star State is showing the world how to power a clean tomorrow.

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Why I’m making big bets on novel fats and oils.

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In the latest episode of my podcast, I talked to author and researcher Hannah Ritchie about why there are more reasons for hope than one might think.

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We already know how to save millions of newborn lives.

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Meet some of the heroes who are fighting poverty and saving lives.

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I’m excited to see the latest breakthroughs during my visit this week.

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The Women gave me a new perspective on the Vietnam War

Kristin Hannah’s wildly popular novel about an army nurse is eye-opening and inspiring.

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Infectious Generosity is a timely, inspiring read about philanthropy in the digital age.

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Brave New Words paints an inspiring picture of AI in the classroom.

This is my personal blog, where I share about the people I meet, the books I'm reading, and what I'm learning. I hope that you'll join the conversation.

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  1. 39+ Best Books On Essay Writing Most Popular

    list books in essay

  2. 3 Simple Ways to Write Book Titles in MLA

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  3. Best Books for English Essay 28-11-2022

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  4. 9 Best Essay Writing Books For High School Students

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  5. Coming up with a catchy title for your book would seem pretty easy

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  6. How To Annotate A Book In An Essay

    list books in essay

VIDEO

  1. Write an essay on The Value of Books in English || Value of Books essay in English || #extension.com

  2. Essay on My Books

  3. books i plan to read in 2024

  4. 10 Lines Essay on books

  5. Write an essay on book || Essay writing || English

  6. all the books i read in 2023 (tier listed)

COMMENTS

  1. The 10 Best Essay Collections of the Decade ‹ Literary Hub

    Hilton Als, White Girls (2013) In a world where we are so often reduced to one essential self, Hilton Als' breathtaking book of critical essays, White Girls, which meditates on the ways he and other subjects read, project and absorb parts of white femininity, is a radically liberating book.

  2. 100 Must-Read Essay Collections

    Art & Ardor — Cynthia Ozick. 5. The Art of the Personal Essay — anthology, edited by Phillip Lopate. 6. Bad Feminist — Roxane Gay. 7. The Best American Essays of the Century — anthology, edited by Joyce Carol Oates. 8. The Best American Essays series — published every year, series edited by Robert Atwan.

  3. The 25 Greatest Essay Collections of All Time

    After the jump, our picks for the 25 greatest essay collections of all time. Feel free to disagree with us, praise our intellect, or create an entirely new list in the comments. The Book of My ...

  4. 50 Must-Read Contemporary Essay Collections

    Insomniac City: New York, Oliver, and Me by Bill Hayes. "Bill Hayes came to New York City in 2009 with a one-way ticket and only the vaguest idea of how he would get by. But, at forty-eight years old, having spent decades in San Francisco, he craved change.

  5. The Best Reviewed Essay Collections of 2022 ‹ Literary Hub

    4. Body Work: The Radical Power of Personal Narrative by Melissa Febos. "In her new book, Body Work: The Radical Power of Personal Narrative, memoirist Melissa Febos handily recuperates the art of writing the self from some of the most common biases against it: that the memoir is a lesser form than the novel.

  6. 100 Best Essays Books of All Time (Updated for 2021)

    A Room of One's Own. A Room of One's Own is an extended essay by Virginia Woolf. First published on the 24th of October, 1929, the essay was based on a series of lectures she delivered at Newnham College and Girton College, two women's colleges at Cambridge University in October 1928.

  7. The Best Reviewed Essay Collections of 2021 ‹ Literary Hub

    Featuring Joan Didion, Rachel Kushner, Hanif Abdurraqib, Ann Patchett, Jenny Diski, and more. By Book Marks. December 10, 2021. Article continues below. Well, friends, another grim and grueling plague year is drawing to a close, and that can mean only one thing: it's time to put on our Book Marks stats hats and tabulate the best reviewed ...

  8. Best Essays: the 2021 Pen Awards

    2 Unfinished Business: Notes of a Chronic Re-Reader by Vivian Gornick. 3 Nature Matrix: New and Selected Essays by Robert Michael Pyle. 4 Terroir: Love, Out of Place by Natasha Sajé. 5 Maybe the People Would be the Times by Luc Sante. W e're talking about the books shortlisted for the 2021 PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the ...

  9. The best essay collections to read now

    If you're looking for an insight into millennial life, then Trick Mirror should be on your to-read list. In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens by Alice Walker (1983) Sometimes essays collected from a sprawling period of a successful writer's life can feel like a hasty addition to a bibliography; a smash-and-grab of notebook flotsam.

  10. How to list books in an essay (in-text)? [closed]

    1. Generally, you should italicize (or underline in some cases) the book titles. This is true for nearly all scholarly journals and legal writing that I've seen. Most scholarly books I've read use italics as well. "...alongside we studied the theory behind them from diverse books, such as: Optical Coherence and Quantum Optics (Mandel & Wolf ...

  11. The 215+ Best Essay Books

    List of famous essay books, listed alphabetically with jacket cover images of the books when available. Information for these popular essay books is included as well, such as the author's name and the book's publication date. This list includes the best essay novels, textbooks, and stories, so use it to find books you haven't already read and ...

  12. The Greatest "Essays" Books of All Time

    The 804th Greatest Book of All Time. 11. Tristes Tropiques by Claude Lévi-Strauss. "Tristes Tropiques" is a blend of autobiography, travel literature, and anthropology by a renowned scholar. The book is a recounting of the author's travels and anthropological work, primarily in Brazil, in the 1930s.

  13. While We're On the Subject: 10 of the Best Essay Collections

    An essay is a short piece of writing about a specific subject. That's all. And just like all other writing, the subject possibilities are endless! There are so many amazing collections of essays to choose from. That's why we're helping you find a few great ones with this list of ten of the best essay collections.

  14. Favourite Essay Collections

    1 And Even Now by Max Beerbohm. 2 The Common Reader by Virginia Woolf. 3 Essays of E.B. White by E.B. White. 4 A Sad Heart At The Supermarket by Randall Jarrell. 5 Visions Before Midnight by Clive James. B efore we get into the books, I wanted to ask you about essays generally. In your introduction to The Best American Essays of 2008 you have a ...

  15. How to Write a Literary Analysis Essay

    Table of contents. Step 1: Reading the text and identifying literary devices. Step 2: Coming up with a thesis. Step 3: Writing a title and introduction. Step 4: Writing the body of the essay. Step 5: Writing a conclusion. Other interesting articles.

  16. The Best Books to Improve Your Essay Writing Skills

    Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life by Anne Lamott: Gain insights on the creative process and overcome writer's block. Writing Down the Bones by Natalie Goldberg: Unleash your creativity and develop a daily writing practice to refine your skills. Explore these essential books to enhance your essay writing abilities and stand ...

  17. The Best 77 Essay Collection Books

    Essay Collection Books to read in 2024 to broaden your knowledge in Society and Culture. User verified book suggestions such as 'The Anthropocene Reviewed' and 'On the Genealogy of Morals' by top notch authors like John Green and Friedrich Nietzsche.

  18. The Greatest Books: 25 of the Best Nonfiction Books of All Time from

    All the books on the list "25 of the Best Nonfiction Books of All Time" from Book Riot. Senjuti Patra's article, published on December 13, 2022, showcases a selection of 25 nonfiction works that have profoundly influenced readers' understanding of the world. Initially inclined toward fiction, the author has transitioned to an enthusiastic appreciation for nonfiction, particularly titles that ...

  19. Books and Articles by Bertrand Russell

    This is an online collection of over one hundred books and articles by Bertrand Russell. For a complete list of Russell's books and articles see our online Russell bibliography.We also maintain a chronology of Russell's life and an introduction. to his analytic philosophy.. I. EARLY ESSAYS BY RUSSELL

  20. Funny Books: NPR's Readers Pick The Best : NPR

    That process continued apace with this, his fourth book, a collection of essays built from his life as a writer, husband, father, friend, homeowner, full-time Yankee and part-time Mainer. He's as ...

  21. Donald Trump Told Me Disabled Americans "Should Just Die"

    Fred C. Trump III and his wife, Lisa, welcomed their son William in 1999; as nephew to former President Donald Trump, Fred Trump advocated for disabled Americans in White House meetings.

  22. The Best Reviewed Essay Collections of 2020 ‹ Literary Hub

    December 10, 2020. Zadie Smith's Intimations, Helen Macdonald's Vesper Flights, Claudia Rankine's Just Us, and Samantha Irby's Wow, No Thank You all feature among the Best Reviewed Essay Collections of 2020. Article continues below. Brought to you by Book Marks, Lit Hub's "Rotten Tomatoes for books.". *. 1. Vesper Flights by Helen ...

  23. Utah book ban list: These titles are now banned from every public school

    The Utah state school board on Friday ordered the removal of 13 book titles from every public school in the state, in accordance with a new law passed earlier this year. The list's publication ...

  24. How We Chose the 50 Best Romance Novels

    The resulting list features books that span hundreds of years, beginning with Frances Burney's 1782 novel Cecilia—a book that influenced one of the most beloved novels of the genre—and ...

  25. List of The New York Times number-one books of 2024

    The American daily newspaper The New York Times publishes multiple weekly lists ranking the best-selling books in the United States. The lists are split in three genres—fiction, nonfiction and children's books.Both the fiction and nonfiction lists are further split into multiple lists.

  26. The 20 Best Essay Collections of 2019 to Add to Your TBR

    The Witches Are Coming by Lindy West (Hachette Books, November 5) The Witches Are Coming is Lindy West's follow-up to her wonderful, best-selling book Shrill. She's back with more of her incisive cultural critiques, writing essays on feminism and the misogyny that is (still) embedded in every part of our culture.

  27. Books by Rachel Kushner and Richard Powers Are Among Booker Prize Nominees

    100 Best Books of the 21st Century: As voted on by 503 novelists, nonfiction writers, poets, critics and other book lovers — with a little help from the staff of The New York Times Book Review.

  28. Oprah Winfrey's Book Club: See All of Her 2024 Selections

    For 15 years, Oprah's Book Club was included as a discussion segment on The Oprah Winfrey Show, and helped launch many books to bestseller status. After a brief hiatus in 2002, it now spotlights ...

  29. Can tyrants be curtailed?

    Two books examine how today's autocrats differ from those of the past, and what liberal democracies can do to counter their influence

  30. 5 great things to read or watch this summer

    The books and TV series on my summer list all touch on the idea of service to others—why we do it, the things that can make it difficult, and why we should do it anyway. One is a novel about the sacrifices made by American nurses on the front lines of the Vietnam War. Another is a call for (and a guide to) being more generous in the digital age.