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Admire John McPhee, Bill Bryson, David Remnick, Thomas Merton, Richard Rohr and James Martin (and most open and curious minds)

27.8.19

Books

100 Books Every Man Should Read

100 Books Every Man Should Read

John LeFevre
John LeFevre
Aug 27 · 4 min read
Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness
Reading allows you to borrow someone else’s brain. It makes you smarter, richer intellectually, more interesting, and a better person.
So here’s an eclectically curated list, albeit slanted by my personal preferences, of books that every man should read — replacing a handful of the obvious classics with a few obscure choices, and a few books left off lists in the name of political correctness:
  1. The Sun Also Rises — Ernest Hemingway
  2. Lonesome Dove — Larry McMurtry
  3. Dubliners — James Joyce
  4. Bonfire of the Vanities — Tom Wolfe
  5. The Collected Poetry of William Butler Yeats — William Butler Yeats
  6. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest — Ken Kesey
  7. The Road — Cormac McCarthy
  8. Manual for Living — Epictetus
  9. A River Runs Through It — Norman MacLean
  10. Meditations — Marcus Aurelius
  11. The Private Life of Chairman Mao — Li Zhi-Sui
  12. The Picture Of Dorian Grey — Oscar Wilde
  13. God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater — Kurt Vonnegut
  14. A Confederacy of Dunces — John Kennedy Toole
  15. Hard Times — Charles Dickens
  16. Infinite Jest — David Foster Wallace
  17. The Book of Deeds of Arms and Chivalry — Christine de Pizan
  18. The Big Rich — Bryan Burrough
  19. The Brothers Karamazov — Fyodor Dostoevsky
  20. Fahrenheit 451 — Ray Bradbury
  21. The Odyssey — Homer
  22. The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy Series — Douglas Adams
  23. Catch-22 — Joseph Heller
  24. Candide — Voltaire
  25. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas — Hunter S. Thompson
  26. A Man Called Ove — Fredrik Backman
  27. The Great Gatsby — F. Scott Fitzgerald
  28. Revolutionary Road — Richard Yates
  29. The Catcher in the Rye — J.D. Salinger
  30. The Complete Works of Rudyard Kipling — Rudyard Kipling
  31. The Things They Carried — Tim O’Brien
  32. Heart of Darkness — Joseph Conrad
  33. Things Fall Apart — Chinua Achebe
  34. The Corrections — Jonathan Franzen
  35. Endurance — Alfred Lansing
  36. East of Eden — John Steinbeck
  37. Crime and Punishment — Fyodor Dostoyevsky
  38. The Stranger — Albert Camus
  39. Lord of the Flies — William Golding
  40. For Whom the Bell Tolls — Ernest Hemingway
  41. How to Win Friends and Influence People — Dale Carnegie
  42. When Breath Becomes Air — Paul Kalanithi
  43. Atlas Shrugged — Ayn Rand
  44. 1984 — George Orwell
  45. The Count of Monte Cristo — Alexander Dumas
  46. Reminiscences of a Stock Operator — Edwin Lefevre
  47. Oil! — Upton Sinclair
  48. The Grapes of Wrath — John Steinbeck
  49. The Holy Bible
  50. Don Quixote — Miguel de Cervantes
  51. Duluth — Gore Vidal
  52. The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin — Benjamin Franklin
  53. Killing Pablo — Mark Bowden
  54. Over The Edge Of The World — Laurence Bergreen
  55. American Psycho — Bret Easton Ellis
  56. Against the Gods — Peter Bernstein
  57. The Fountainhead — Ayn Rand
  58. Into Thin Air — Jon Krakauer
  59. The Maltese Falcon — Dashiell Hammett
  60. Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance — Robert Pirsig
  61. Genealogy of Morals — Fried Nietzsche
  62. Fight Club — Chuck Palahniuk
  63. A People’s History of the United States — Howard Zinn
  64. Essential Manners for Men — Peter Post
  65. Thinking, Fast and Slow — Daniel Kahneman
  66. Thus Spoke Zarathustra — Friedrich Nietzsche
  67. Guns, Germs, and Steel — Jared M. Diamond
  68. The Republic — Plato
  69. A Short History of Nearly Everything — Bill Bryson
  70. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass by Frederick Douglass
  71. Astrophysics for People in a Hurry — Neil deGrasse Tyson
  72. The Social Contract — Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  73. All Quiet on the Western Front — Erich Maria Remarqu
  74. The Wealth of Nations — Adam Smith
  75. The Theodore Roosevelt Trilogy — Edmund Morris
  76. On the Road — Jack Kerouac
  77. The Histories — Herodotus
  78. Ulysses — James Joyce
  79. The Prince — Niccolo Machiavelli
  80. Nicomachean Ethics — Aristotle
  81. The Naked and the Dead — Norman Mailer
  82. The Greatest Generation — Tom Brokaw
  83. A Tale of Two Cities — Charles Dickens
  84. The Sound and the Fury — William Faulkner
  85. Man’s Search for Meaning — Viktor Frankl
  86. Fear and Trembling — Soren Kierkegaard
  87. The Elements of Style — William Strunk, Jr
  88. Out of Africa — Isak Dinesen
  89. In Cold Blood — Truman Capote
  90. If This Is a Man — Primo Levi
  91. Alexander Hamilton — Ron Chernow
  92. Cognitive Psychology — E. Bruce Goldstein
  93. Common Sense and the Rights of Man — Thomas Paine
  94. Extraordinary Popular Delusions and The Madness of Crowds — Charles MacKay
  95. Den of Thieves — James B. Stewart
  96. The Divine Comedy — Dante Alighieri
  97. Into Africa — Martin Dugard
  98. One Hundred Years of Solitude — Gabriel Garcia Marquez
  99. Communist Manifesto — Karl Marx
  100. Sapiens — Yuval Noah Harari

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