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Where to Start with John C. Bogle: A Reading Guide

Where to start with John C. Bogle — how to approach The Little Book of Common Sense Investing, the concentrated case for index funds from the man who invented them. A complete reading guide.

By Marcus Webb

John C. Bogle (1929–2019) was an American investor and business magnate who founded The Vanguard Group in 1975 and created the world’s first index mutual fund available to retail investors. The investment industry initially mocked the idea — one competitor called it “Bogle’s Folly.” By the time of his death, Vanguard managed over $5 trillion in assets and the index fund had fundamentally transformed how millions of people invest their money. The Little Book of Common Sense Investing (2007, updated edition) is Bogle’s concentrated argument, written directly to the individual investor.


Where to Start: The Little Book of Common Sense Investing (2007)

The essential John C. Bogle — and the most authoritative statement of the index fund case available in any single volume. The Little Book of Common Sense Investing is written by the man who invented the index fund, and it has the authority of someone who spent fifty years watching his simple idea prove itself correct against the skepticism of an industry with commercial reasons to resist it.

The book makes one core argument and makes it with the precision of someone who has had a lifetime to refine it: buy and hold a diversified, low-cost index fund that owns the entire stock market, and never sell. This is Bogle’s investment strategy. Everything else is supporting evidence or preparation.

The argument rests on three pillars.

The mathematics of costs is the first and most devastating. Bogle demonstrates with arithmetic that cannot be disputed: costs are the primary determinant of net investment returns over long periods. Consider two investors who both earn 7% annual gross returns over forty years. One invests in an index fund with a 0.04% expense ratio; the other invests in an actively managed fund with a 1.2% expense ratio. The fee difference of 1.16% per year, compounded over forty years, produces a difference in terminal wealth that most investors would find shocking to calculate. The investment industry profits from fees that compound against the investor just as surely as returns compound for them. Bogle makes this visible.

The zero-sum game is the second pillar. Before fees, the aggregate return of all active investors in a market equals the market return — they collectively are the market. After fees, they collectively underperform the market by exactly the amount they paid in fees. This is arithmetic, not hypothesis. Index funds, with minimal costs, capture nearly the full market return. Active funds must generate substantial above-average gross returns simply to match the index net of fees. The data shows this is rare and unreliable over twenty-year periods.

Reversion to the mean is the third. High-performing funds attract investor capital and subsequently underperform — this regression to mean performance is consistent enough that past fund performance is functionally useless as a predictor of future performance. The investor who chases last year’s winners is making one of the most reliable mistakes available.

The book is direct to the point of repetition — Bogle makes the same case from several angles over the course of under 200 pages, which some readers find persuasive and others find preachy. His missionary quality reflects a genuine conviction that the individual investor has been systematically disadvantaged by an industry that has every incentive to obscure these straightforward truths.


Reading John C. Bogle

The Little Book of Common Sense Investing is Bogle’s most concentrated and accessible book. It stands alone and requires no prior reading.


For the full John C. Bogle bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the John C. Bogle author page on Editors Reads.


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Frequently Asked Questions

Where should I start with John C. Bogle?

The Little Book of Common Sense Investing: The Only Way to Guarantee Your Fair Share of Stock Market Returns (2007, updated edition) is Bogle's essential book — a concentrated, mathematically rigorous argument for buying and holding low-cost index funds from the founder of Vanguard and the inventor of the index fund. Concise, focused, and potentially the most financially valuable book a retail investor can read.

What is The Little Book of Common Sense Investing about?

The Little Book of Common Sense Investing argues that the optimal investment strategy for most people is to buy a low-cost diversified index fund representing the total stock market and hold it indefinitely. Bogle demonstrates with arithmetic clarity that costs are the primary determinant of net investment returns over long periods, that most active funds underperform their benchmark index after fees, that past performance is an unreliable predictor, and that simplicity serves the individual investor far better than complexity.

How does The Little Book of Common Sense Investing compare to other investing books?

The Little Book of Common Sense Investing is the most authoritative statement of the index fund case because it is written by the man who founded it — Bogle spent fifty years fighting for individual investors against an industry whose profits depend on complexity. Burton Malkiel's A Random Walk Down Wall Street provides more academic depth on market efficiency. Ben Carlson's A Wealth of Common Sense covers the same argument with more contemporary examples. JL Collins's The Simple Path to Wealth is more accessible and practical for beginner implementation.

What should I read after The Little Book of Common Sense Investing?

After The Little Book of Common Sense Investing, Burton Malkiel's A Random Walk Down Wall Street covers the efficient market hypothesis with more academic rigour. Morgan Housel's The Psychology of Money covers the behavioural dimension — why intelligent people make financially destructive decisions despite knowing better. Ben Carlson's A Wealth of Common Sense covers the portfolio construction and behavioural framework with contemporary evidence.

Affiliate Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. This article contains affiliate links — if you purchase through them we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. Our editorial recommendations are independent of affiliate arrangements.

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