Editors Reads

Our Top Picks

59 books rated 4.8 stars or above — our most confidently recommended reads.

War and Peace book cover
Editor's Pick

War and Peace

by Leo Tolstoy

4.8

Tolstoy's vast panorama of Russian society during Napoleon's invasion, following five aristocratic families across fifteen years of war, love, loss, and transformation.

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A Christmas Carol book cover

A Christmas Carol

by Charles Dickens

4.9

Ebenezer Scrooge, a cold and miserly businessman, is visited by three spirits on Christmas Eve and given the chance to confront his past, his present, and a terrible possible future. The most beloved Christmas story ever written — and a genuine literary fable about the possibility of redemption.

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Anna Karenina book cover

Anna Karenina

by Leo Tolstoy

4.9

Anna Karenina abandons her respectable life for a passionate affair with the dashing Count Vronsky — and both are destroyed by the collision between private desire and social convention. Tolstoy's great novel of passion and consequence contains the most famous opening sentence in fiction.

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Master of the Senate book cover

Master of the Senate

by Robert Caro

4.9

The third volume of Robert Caro's biography of Lyndon Johnson follows his Senate career from 1949 to 1958 — covering his rise to Majority Leader and the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1957, the first since Reconstruction.

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Pride and Prejudice book cover

Pride and Prejudice

by Jane Austen

4.9

Elizabeth Bennet and Fitzwilliam Darcy clash on every point of pride and principle — and fall irrevocably in love. Austen's most beloved novel is a razor-sharp comedy of manners and one of the great love stories in the English language.

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The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes book cover
Bestseller
4.9

Twelve stories from The Strand Magazine collected into the first Holmes short story anthology, including A Scandal in Bohemia, The Red-Headed League, and The Speckled Band. The short story format reveals Conan Doyle's genius at compression — twelve complete puzzles delivered at full intensity.

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The Brothers Karamazov book cover

The Brothers Karamazov

by Fyodor Dostoevsky

4.9

Three brothers — the sensualist Dmitri, the rationalist Ivan, and the saintly Alyosha — are bound together by the murder of their corrupt father. Dostoevsky's final and greatest novel asks the hardest question: if God does not exist, is everything permitted?

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Alice's Adventures in Wonderland book cover
4.8

Alice follows a White Rabbit down a rabbit hole and falls into Wonderland — a world where size is unstable, logic is inverted, authority is arbitrary, and language itself has become unmoored from meaning. Carroll's 1865 masterpiece is ostensibly a children's fantasy but operates simultaneously as linguistic philosophy, dream narrative, and one of the strangest and most sustained acts of imagination in the English literary tradition.

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All Quiet on the Western Front book cover
Bestseller

All Quiet on the Western Front

by Erich Maria Remarque

4.8

Paul Bäumer enlists in the German army at 18, full of patriotic idealism, and spends the next few years watching his friends die one by one on the Western Front while the world that sent them there carries on. Remarque's novel is the definitive anti-war testimony: written in the flat, precise language of men who have stopped expecting rescue.

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Clockwork Princess book cover

Clockwork Princess

by Cassandra Clare

4.8

The Infernal Devices reaches its devastating, then beautiful, conclusion. Mortmain's clockwork army threatens every Shadowhunter, but it is the question of Will, Jem, and Tessa — and whether love can survive impossible choices — that makes this ending one of the most discussed in young adult fiction.

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Crime and Punishment book cover

Crime and Punishment

by Fyodor Dostoevsky

4.8

Raskolnikov, a destitute former student in St. Petersburg, murders a pawnbroker to test his theory that extraordinary people are above conventional morality — and then spends the rest of the novel being destroyed by his own conscience. Dostoevsky's most accessible masterpiece is the definitive novel about guilt.

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Frankenstein book cover

Frankenstein

by Mary Shelley

4.8

Victor Frankenstein creates life from dead matter and then abandons his creation. Shelley's 1818 novel, written when she was 18, invented science fiction as a genre and remains the most philosophically profound horror novel ever written: a meditation on creation, abandonment, and what it means to be human.

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Great Expectations book cover

Great Expectations

by Charles Dickens

4.8

Pip, an orphan boy raised by a fearsome blacksmith's wife, is elevated by a mysterious anonymous benefactor and sent to London to become a gentleman. Dickens's most personally felt novel is a meditation on class, ambition, and the painful cost of social aspiration.

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Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban book cover
Bestseller
4.8

A convicted murderer has escaped Azkaban prison and is believed to be hunting Harry Potter, forcing Harry to confront the true story of his parents' betrayal and death. The mystery that unravels is more complicated, more painful, and more morally instructive than any straightforward threat.

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Jane Eyre book cover

Jane Eyre

by Charlotte Brontë

4.8

Jane Eyre — orphaned, plain, passionate, and morally unyielding — survives a punishing childhood to become governess at Thornfield Hall, where she falls in love with the fierce, sardonic Mr Rochester, whose dark secret haunts the upper floors. Brontë's first-person novel, with its direct, confrontational address to the reader and its heroine's ferocious insistence on her own inner worth, fundamentally changed what heroines in fiction were permitted to be.

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Joseph and His Brothers book cover
4.8

Mann's four-volume retelling of the Joseph story from Genesis — sixteen years in the writing — treats the biblical narrative not as sacred history but as myth that characters know they are living inside. The most sustained act of literary ambition of the twentieth century.

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King Lear book cover

King Lear

by William Shakespeare

4.8

An ageing king divides his kingdom between his daughters based on their professions of love, disowns the one who refuses to flatter him, and descends into madness on the heath while his kingdom fractures around him. King Lear is Shakespeare's greatest tragedy — the most philosophically ambitious, the most emotionally devastating, and the most resistant to consolation.

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Les Misérables book cover

Les Misérables

by Victor Hugo

4.8

Jean Valjean, paroled after nineteen years in prison for stealing a loaf of bread, spends the rest of his life pursued by the relentless Inspector Javert while trying to become a better man. Hugo's vast novel about poverty, redemption, and the Paris barricades of 1832 is one of the most epic and emotionally overwhelming novels ever written.

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Little Women book cover

Little Women

by Louisa May Alcott

4.8

The four March sisters — Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy — come of age in Civil War-era New England, each navigating the tension between social expectation and personal aspiration in Alcott's masterpiece about ambition, sisterhood, and growing up.

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Macbeth book cover
Bestseller

Macbeth

by William Shakespeare

4.8

A brave Scottish general is corrupted by ambition and prophecy, murders his king, seizes the throne, and descends into a tyranny from which there is no return.

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Meditations book cover

Meditations

by Marcus Aurelius

4.8

The private philosophical notebook of the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius — written for himself, never intended for publication — containing his Stoic practice across twelve books of thought.

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