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The Autobiography of Malcolm X, released posthumously on October 29, 1965, stands as one of the most significant works in American nonfiction — a New York Times bestseller and one of Time's ten most important nonfiction books of the twentieth century. Coauthored by Malcolm X and journalist Alex Haley through a series of in-depth interviews conducted between 1963 and 1965, the book traces Malcolm Little's journey from childhood poverty in Omaha and Lansing through petty crime and imprisonment, to his transformation into Nation of Islam spokesman Malcolm X, and finally to his founding of the Organization of Afro-American Unity. Its power as a religious conversion narrative, a document of Black pride and pan-Africanism, and a portrait of a man whose thinking outran his own life has made it required reading across generations.
Feb 17, 2026
The Modern Library edition of Meditations — featuring Gregory Hays's translation and a foreword by Ryan Holiday — brings one of the most enduring works of Stoic philosophy to contemporary readers in a form that is both scholarly and accessible. Written as private journals by Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius during the years 170–180 CE, the twelve books were never intended for publication, yet they have become, as Daily Stoic notes, one of the most influential philosophy books in the history of the world. This edition is a national bestseller and an essential entry point for anyone drawn to ancient wisdom on self-discipline, mortality, and what it means to live well.
Feb 17, 2026
The Power of Showing Up is an encouraging parenting guide from psychiatrist Daniel J. Siegel and clinical social worker Tina Payne Bryson, published by Ballantine Books, that argues consistent parental presence — physical and emotional — is the single most important factor in shaping a child's brain development and lifelong wellbeing. Built around the "Four S's" framework and grounded in attachment science, the book earned praise from Publishers Weekly as an "encouraging and empowering" work that delivers an "empathetic and helpful philosophy" for caregivers at any stage.
Feb 16, 2026
Why We Sleep is a New York Times and Sunday Times bestselling popular science book by Matthew Walker, a professor of neuroscience and psychology and director of the Center for Human Sleep Science at the University of California, Berkeley. Originally published in 2017 and reissued by Scribner in 2018, the book makes a sweeping case for sleep as one of the most consequential forces governing human health, cognition, and longevity — drawing on roughly two decades of research by Walker and his team. It earned broadly positive reviews from mainstream critics and a wide general readership, while also attracting pointed pushback from academic peers for overreach and alarmism.
Feb 16, 2026
Martin Gilbert's Churchill: A Life stands as the authoritative single-volume biography of Sir Winston Churchill, distilling decades of primary scholarship into a chronological portrait of one of the twentieth century's most consequential public figures.
Feb 18, 2026
Published by Greystone Books in 2016, The Obesity Code by Dr. Jason Fung — a practicing physician and New York Times bestselling author — argues that obesity is fundamentally a hormonal disorder driven by persistently high insulin levels and insulin resistance, not a simple failure of willpower or calorie counting. The book has become a landmark title in popular nutrition science, and its foreword is written by Timothy Noakes.
Feb 17, 2026
Jonathan Haidt's The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion is a social psychology book, originally published in 2012 and reissued by Vintage in 2013, that argues human morality is driven primarily by intuition rather than reason — and that this fundamental fact explains the chasm between liberals, conservatives, and libertarians in modern political life. Structured across three distinct arguments, the book introduces Haidt's moral foundations theory, mapping six dimensions of moral judgment — care/harm, fairness/cheating, loyalty/betrayal, authority/subversion, sanctity/degradation, and liberty/oppression — to show why different political tribes speak what amount to different moral languages. It is a challenging, research-grounded work that draws both strong admiration and pointed critique, and remains one of the most discussed social psychology books of the past decade.
Feb 17, 2026
Published by PESI Publishing in November 2021, Maybe You Should Talk to Someone: The Workbook is a companion workbook by Lori Gottlieb, designed to extend the therapeutic framework of her New York Times bestselling memoir into a structured, interactive self-help guide — built around exercises, writing prompts, and concepts drawn from the original book's patient stories.
Feb 17, 2026
First published in 1999, Laurie Halse Anderson's Speak is a National Book Award Finalist and Michael L. Printz Honor Book that has sold more than 3.5 million copies and been translated into 35 languages — a genuine modern classic of young adult literature, and one of the most decorated and widely taught novels in its genre.
Feb 17, 2026
Barbara W. Tuchman's The Guns of August is a Pulitzer Prize-winning work of narrative military history that chronicles the outbreak of World War I — from the prewar mobilization plans of the great powers through the Franco-British offensive that halted the German advance into France — with a scope and vividness that has kept it in print and in classrooms for more than six decades.
Feb 17, 2026
This fitness guide by Lou Schuler, Cassandra Forsythe, and Alwyn Cosgrove makes a direct, research-backed case that strength training — not aerobics — is the foundation women need for fat loss and a fit, strong body, packaging that argument into a comprehensive program that covers lifting, conditioning, and nutrition.
Feb 16, 2026
Matt Haig's speculative novel The Midnight Library follows Nora Seed through a liminal space between life and death where every unchosen path becomes a door — a richly imaginative premise that earned strong sales and generally positive critical reception, though some critics found its emotional resolution more comforting than challenging.
Feb 16, 2026Search
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Search
Rating
Subcategories
Fiction
142Science & Nature
113Self-Help & Personal Development
106Philosophy & Religion
92Health & Wellness
85History
73Politics & Society
73Biography & Memoir
63Business & Economics
61Cooking & Food
53Travel & Adventure
43Young Adult
43Children's Books
37Thriller
37Historical Fiction
35Romance
31Fantasy
28Memoir
28Pet Care
28Home & Garden
24Psychology
24Literary Fiction
22Mystery
19Science Fiction
19Short Stories
18Non-Fiction
16Classics
15Women's Fiction
13Horror
12Graphic Novels & Comics
8Parenting & Child Development
7Religion & Spirituality
6War Fiction
6Career & Leadership
5General Reference
5Poetry
5Dystopian
4Relationships
4Personal Finance
3Productivity
3Mindfulness
1Sports
1Test Prep & Study Guides
1Cozy Mystery
0True Crime
0Tags
Showing 577 - 588 of 656 reviews