Editors Reads

All Books

2305 expert-reviewed books — rated honestly, recommended confidently.

The Black Company book cover

The Black Company

by Glen Cook

4.2

Croaker, the Black Company's physician and annalist, chronicles the mercenary band's bloody journey as they are hired into the service of a terrifying sorceress called the Lady — and slowly realise there may be no good side in this war.

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The Blind Man of Seville book cover

The Blind Man of Seville

by Robert Wilson

4.2

Inspector Javier Falcón of the Seville homicide squad is called to the scene of a man found dead in front of a painting of Goya's Saturn Devouring His Son — eyes burnt out, posed with deliberate horror. The investigation pulls Falcón into his own family history, specifically the life of his celebrated father, the painter Francisco Falcón. Set against Seville's streets and its Moorish architecture, the first Falcón novel establishes one of crime fiction's most psychologically complex detectives.

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The Brothers Hawthorne book cover

The Brothers Hawthorne

by Jennifer Lynn Barnes

4.2

Grayson and Jameson Hawthorne find themselves on separate, dangerous missions — Grayson drawn into a high-stakes game that threatens everything his family built, Jameson on a globe-trotting adventure that tests the limits of his recklessness. A dual POV expansion of the Hawthorne brothers' world.

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The Castle book cover

The Castle

by Franz Kafka

4.2

K. arrives in a village dominated by an enormous castle and attempts to gain access to the authorities who have apparently summoned him as a land surveyor — an attempt that proves endlessly deferred, interrupted, and obscured.

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The Charisma Myth book cover

The Charisma Myth

by Olivia Fox Cabane

4.2

Olivia Fox Cabane dismantles the myth that charisma is an innate quality and provides a science-based framework for developing presence, power, and warmth.

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The Charterhouse of Parma book cover
4.2

Fabrizio del Dongo, a young Italian nobleman, wanders onto the field of Waterloo (without understanding what is happening), flees various entanglements, falls in love with the actress Marietta, and becomes caught in the political intrigues of the court of Parma, where his aunt, the Duchess Sanseverina, rules through her relationship with the Count.

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The City & The City book cover

The City & The City

by China Miéville

4.2

Two city-states occupy the same geography but citizens must 'unsee' the other city on pain of intervention by a mysterious force called Breach. A noir detective novel and a meditation on perception.

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The Clan of the Cave Bear book cover
4.2

A Cro-Magnon girl orphaned by an earthquake is taken in by a Neanderthal clan, and her different nature — her upright posture, her ability to learn and innovate — puts her in perpetual conflict with a social order not built for her.

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The Cold Start Problem book cover
4.2

A comprehensive framework for understanding and building network effects — the most powerful and most misunderstood force in technology — from a partner at Andreessen Horowitz who has studied them across dozens of companies.

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The Confessions of Nat Turner book cover
4.2

Styron's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel inhabits the first-person voice of Nat Turner, leader of the 1831 Virginia slave rebellion, as he awaits execution. The most controversial American novel of the 1960s — attacked by ten Black writers as a white man's appropriation of Black history — it is also a work of extraordinary formal achievement and moral seriousness.

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The Consolations of Philosophy book cover
4.2

Six philosophers — Socrates, Epicurus, Seneca, Montaigne, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche — applied to six common sources of human unhappiness: unpopularity, not having enough money, frustration, inadequacy, a broken heart, and difficulties.

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The Crown of Gilded Bones book cover

The Crown of Gilded Bones

by Jennifer L. Armentrout

4.2

Poppy learns the truth about her origins and what she truly is — a revelation that shifts the entire Blood and Ash series into a larger, more mythological conflict. The third book takes the story from personal stakes to civilisational ones.

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The Wind Through the Keyhole book cover
4.2

Set between Wizard and Glass and Wolves of the Calla, the ka-tet takes shelter from a deadly storm called a starkblast. As they wait, Roland tells a story from his early days as a gunslinger, within which young Roland tells a fairy tale to a frightened boy. Three nested narratives — frame, memory, and fable — make this the series' most structurally playful and tonally gentle entry.

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Wolves of the Calla book cover

Wolves of the Calla

by Stephen King

4.2

Roland and his ka-tet arrive at Calla Bryn Sturgis, a farming village terrorised by the Wolves — armoured riders who sweep in every generation to steal one child from every pair of twins, returning them as 'roont' adults, permanently diminished. King structures the novel as a western, drawing directly on The Magnificent Seven, as the gunslingers agree to help the Calla defend itself.

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The Days of Abandonment book cover

The Days of Abandonment

by Elena Ferrante

4.2

Olga's husband of fifteen years announces he is leaving her for a younger woman. The novel follows the weeks that follow — the rage, the dissolution, the terrifying loss of self that abandonment can produce in someone whose identity was built around a partnership. Ferrante's most concentrated and most visceral novel.

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The Dharma Bums book cover

The Dharma Bums

by Jack Kerouac

4.2

Ray Smith and the poet Japhy Ryder climb mountains, attend rucksack parties, and discuss Buddhism — embodying the 'rucksack revolution' Kerouac imagined for young Americans who had dropped out of the postwar dream. More focused and more spiritually serious than On the Road.

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The Elegant Universe book cover

The Elegant Universe

by Brian Greene

4.2

Physicist Brian Greene explains superstring theory and the quest for a unified theory of everything — the attempt to reconcile quantum mechanics and general relativity in a single mathematical framework.

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The Extended Mind book cover

The Extended Mind

by Annie Murphy Paul

4.2

Science journalist Annie Murphy Paul synthesizes research showing that human cognition extends beyond the brain into body, space, and relationships — with practical implications for how we learn and think.

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The Family Remains book cover

The Family Remains

by Lisa Jewell

4.2

A sequel to The Family Upstairs: Rachel Rimmer goes to France to attend the funeral of a woman who may have been her mother — and discovers connections to the dark Chelsea house of her past. Simultaneously, Detective Inspector Samuel Owusu investigates a body found in the Thames. Two investigations converge on the same terrible story.

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The Geography of Bliss book cover
4.2

NPR foreign correspondent Eric Weiner travels to ten countries ranked at the extremes of happiness surveys — Netherlands, Bhutan, Qatar, Iceland, Switzerland, Thailand, India, Moldova, Britain, and the USA — to investigate what makes some places measurably happier than others.

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The Ghost Brigades book cover

The Ghost Brigades

by John Scalzi

4.2

The Special Forces soldiers of the Colonial Defense Forces are the Ghost Brigades — created from the DNA of the dead, with no memories of previous lives. When a traitor's consciousness is inserted into one of them, Scalzi explores identity and loyalty in a worthy sequel to Old Man's War.

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The God Delusion book cover

The God Delusion

by Richard Dawkins

4.2

Richard Dawkins makes the case that belief in a personal God is not merely wrong but irrational — that the existence of any supernatural creator is a scientific hypothesis that the evidence decisively refutes, and that religion is neither necessary for morality nor harmless in its effects.

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The Grass Harp book cover

The Grass Harp

by Truman Capote

4.2

Two elderly cousins and a boy go to live in a treehouse in a chinaberry tree rather than conform to the small town's expectations, and the town decides to bring them down. Capote's most gentle novel is a celebration of eccentricity, chosen family, and the prose is some of the most beautiful he ever wrote.

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The Great Crash 1929 book cover

The Great Crash 1929

by John Kenneth Galbraith

4.2

The definitive account of the 1929 stock market crash — the speculative bubble, the collapse, and the economic consequences that shaped modern financial regulation.

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