The Greatest Books Since 2018
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This list represents a comprehensive and trusted collection of the greatest books. Developed through a specialized algorithm, it brings together 759 'best of' book lists to form a definitive guide to the world's most acclaimed books. For those interested in how these books are chosen, additional details can be found on the rankings page.
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976. The Cia Book Club by Charlie English
The Cia Book Club tells how US intelligence covertly sent millions of Western books into the Soviet bloc during the Cold War to circumvent censorship and offer alternative ideas and culture. It follows key figures—notably Bucharest-born George Minden—and describes the covert networks, risks, and moral tensions involved in bringing literature, art and reassurance to readers behind the Iron Curtain, without revealing outcomes.
The 12175th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
977. The Unworthy by Agustina Bazterrica
A woman confined to a secretive religious order writes her life from a cell, labeled an “unworthy” while dreaming of joining the Enlightened at the convent’s center. Outside, a collapsed world of flooded cities and lawless survivors presses at the walls; when a new arrival joins the ranks of the unworthy, the narrator’s buried past and the true nature of the sisterhood begin to unravel, forcing her to confront belief, power, and survival.
The 12180th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org -
978. The Place Of Tides by James Rebanks
Years after meeting an elderly woman who cared for wild eider ducks on a remote Norwegian island, James Rebanks returns to spend her final season there. He joins her harsh, ancient work—building shelters and gathering precious eiderdown—and witnesses the rhythms of an elemental landscape. The book follows that season and Rebanks’s evolving understanding of the woman, the place, and himself.
The 12182nd Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org -
979. I'll Tell You When I'm Home by Hala Alyan
Hala Alyan’s memoir follows her path to motherhood through surrogacy and how that choice forces her to confront infertility, marital strain, and the legacy of her family’s exile. As she revisits memories of Beirut and stories passed down from previous generations, she pieces together questions of identity, belonging, and what it means to make a home for herself and her child.
The 12179th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
980. Pick A Color by Souvankham Thammavongsa
Ning, a retired boxer who works in a nail salon under the name Susan, spends a single summer day tending to clients while watching the patterns of her work and the people around her. Quietly observant and sharply drawn, the story follows her navigation of anonymity, class, and the complicated ties with coworkers and customers, exploring identity, labor, and longing without revealing key plot details.
The 12181st Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org -
981. The Rest Of Our Lives by Benjamin Markovits
Tom Layward, who once vowed to leave his wife after their youngest daughter turned eighteen following her affair, puts that plan into motion while driving their daughter to college and keeps heading west. The novel follows his solitary road trip and memories as it examines the emotional complexities and aftermath of a long-term marriage.
The 12186th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
982. Mothers And Sons by Adam Haslett
Peter, a solitary asylum lawyer in New York, is forced to confront a long-buried past when a client’s case reawakens memories of his first love and a night of violence. His estranged mother, Ann, who has built a life apart from him, must also face the secret that has kept them apart, and the novel traces their tentative, emotionally charged journey toward truth and possible reconciliation.
The 12183rd Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
983. Necessary Fiction by Eloghosa Osunde
Necessary Fiction follows more than two dozen interconnected characters navigating queer life in contemporary Lagos. Through their relationships, careers in art and entertainment, and clashes with family and faith, the novel examines desire, identity, and the chosen forms of belonging people create to survive.
The 12193rd Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
984. People Like Us by Jason Mott
People Like Us follows two Black writers whose lives intersect against a backdrop of gun violence—one on a book tour, the other preparing to speak at a school after a shooting. The novel mixes realist scenes with dreamlike, surreal elements (time slips, strange creatures, and vivid memories) to explore loss, love, belonging, and the search for peace, balancing sharp humor with emotional depth.
The 12192nd Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
985. Water Mirror Echo by Jeff Chang
Bruce Lee and the Making of Asian America
Water Mirror Echo is a cultural biography of Bruce Lee that follows his journey from segregated San Francisco and a youth in Hong Kong to his return to the United States and emergence as a global figure. Jeff Chang examines how Lee popularized martial arts in the West, bridged Eastern and Western perspectives, and helped shape early ideas of Asian American identity, drawing on interviews, personal documents, and family photographs.
The 12196th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org -
986. Apple In China by Patrick McGee
Apple in China examines how Apple’s decision to concentrate production in China helped build the country’s electronics manufacturing dominance while leaving the company deeply dependent on an authoritarian state. Drawing on interviews with former Apple employees and industry sources, Patrick McGee outlines how massive scale and profitability from iPhone manufacturing brought political and operational vulnerabilities—data rules, pressure to work with local suppliers, and exposure to Beijing’s demands. The book situates Apple’s business choices within the broader US–China geopolitical tensions.
The 12205th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
987. The Old Man By The Sea by Domenico Starnone
An 82‑year‑old Neapolitan named Nicola spends his days by the sea recording life’s small details in a notebook while watching a nearby coastal town. Observing a young store clerk and remembering the women who shaped him, he confronts the limits of language, memory, and desire. Quiet and reflective, the novel explores aging, imagination, and the struggle to capture what slips beyond words.
The 12199th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org -
988. Playworld by Adam Ross
In 1980 Manhattan, fourteen-year-old Griffin Hurt struggles to balance his role as a child TV star with the pressures of an elite prep school, a demanding coach, and a family in quiet disarray. When he becomes involved with Naomi Shah, a significantly older married woman, his attempts to confide in her complicate his search for identity and maturity. Playworld follows one intense year of miseducation and emotional coming-of-age against the shifting backdrop of a city and era in flux.
The 12207th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
989. All Consuming by Ruby Tandoh
Why We Eat the Way We Eat Now
All Consuming examines how food shifted from a routine necessity to a central part of contemporary life. Through essays, Ruby Tandoh traces the social, economic and media forces—supermarkets, restaurants, television and social platforms—that have reshaped tastes, dining habits and the modern culture of food.
The 12208th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org -
990. Girls Play Dead by Jen Percy
Girls Play Dead is a narrative nonfiction exploration of womanhood, trauma, and survival. Blending memoir, reporting, and cultural history, the book traces the author’s childhood and personal experiences alongside stories of women who respond to danger by freezing, joining cults, preparing bunkers, or taking desperate action. It examines how people become trapped by abuse and fear, and the psychological and social forces that shape — and sometimes free — their responses to violence.
The 12209th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
991. Perspective by Laurent Binet
Florence, 1557 : le peintre Pontormo est retrouvé assassiné près des fresques sur lesquelles il travaillait. Vasari, chargé de l'enquête par le duc, mène une correspondance avec un Michel‑Ange exilé à Rome pour démêler indices artistiques et jeux de pouvoir. Entre ateliers, couvents et cours princières, rivalités et secrets rendent chaque interlocuteur suspect — un polar historique épistolaire mêlant art, politique et suspicion, sans dévoiler la vérité finale.
The 12212th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org -
992. Something From Nothing by Alison Roman
Something from Nothing is a collection of straightforward, pantry-first recipes that show how to turn everyday shelf-stable ingredients into flavorful, relaxed meals. Covering snacks, soups, vegetables, pastas, grains and proteins, it emphasizes an intuitive, flavor-forward approach for both weeknights and casual entertaining.
The 12210th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
993. Good Dirt by Charmaine Wilkerson
In a narrative that intertwines the lives of diverse characters, the story delves into the intricate relationship between humans and the earth, exploring themes of sustainability, community, and personal growth. Through a tapestry of interconnected stories, the book highlights the importance of nurturing the land and each other, revealing how the soil beneath our feet holds the key to healing and transformation. As characters navigate their individual journeys, they discover the profound impact of their choices on the environment and their own lives, ultimately finding redemption and hope in the embrace of nature.
The 12214th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
994. A Tropical Rebel Gets The Duke by Adriana Herrera
A Caribbean Heiress in Paris
In 1889 Paris, doctor Aurora Montalban Wright runs an underground women’s clinic and accepts protection from Apollo César Sinclair Robles, the newly anointed Duke of Annan. Their pragmatic arrangement grows into a complicated attraction as Aurora fiercely guards her independence and Apollo navigates his public role. When a threat from their past forces them away to his villa on the French Riviera, they must confront whether their relationship can survive the risks and expectations around them.
The 12215th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org -
995. The Afterlife Of Malcolm X by Mark Whitaker
Mark Whitaker traces how Malcolm X’s reputation transformed after his 1965 assassination, showing how he became a major cultural and political icon. The book maps his influence across the Black Power and Black Arts movements, music and hip‑hop, sports, film, and contemporary activism, and notes how figures across the political spectrum have cited him. Whitaker also reexamines the legal history surrounding Malcolm’s murder and the efforts to revisit the convictions connected to the case.
The 12220th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org -
996. The Three Lives Of Cate Kay by Kate Fagan
In a captivating narrative that intertwines the past, present, and future, the story follows Cate Kay, a woman who finds herself living three distinct lives across different timelines. Each life presents unique challenges and opportunities, forcing Cate to confront her deepest fears and desires while navigating the complexities of identity and choice. As she grapples with the consequences of her decisions in each life, Cate embarks on a journey of self-discovery, ultimately seeking to reconcile the fragmented pieces of her existence into a cohesive whole. This tale of resilience and transformation explores the profound impact of the choices we make and the lives we lead.
The 12222nd Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
997. Vulture by Phoebe Greenwood
Set in Gaza’s Beach Hotel — a four-star media hub where reporters shelter and file stories amid conflict — Vulture follows ambitious journalist Sara as she chases the story that will make her career. When her fixer refuses a dangerous assignment, she turns to Fadi, a young member of a powerful militant family, and her decisions illuminate the moral compromises, complicity, and human cost of war reporting.
The 12230th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
998. The Killing Fields Of East New York by Stacy Horn
The Killing Fields of East New York examines how decades of housing policy, predatory lending, and mortgage fraud transformed a once‑thriving Brooklyn neighborhood into a place of violence and abandonment. Framed by the 1991 murder of 17‑year‑old Julia Parker and the ensuing spike in killings, Stacy Horn traces the crisis back to post‑1960s housing programs and the ways banks, realtors, and corrupt officials exploited them. The book combines investigative journalism and true crime to show how white‑collar crimes helped produce the neighborhood’s collapse.
The 12233rd Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org -
999. Original Sin by Jake Tapper
A Charlie and Margaret Mystery
Set against the backdrop of 1960s Washington, D.C., this gripping political thriller delves into the murky world of power, ambition, and betrayal. The narrative follows a seasoned congressman navigating the treacherous waters of Capitol Hill as he becomes embroiled in a scandal that threatens to unravel his career and personal life. As secrets from the past resurface, alliances are tested, and the protagonist must confront his own moral dilemmas while trying to uncover the truth behind a mysterious death that could shake the foundations of the political establishment. With its intricate plot and richly drawn characters, the story offers a compelling exploration of the dark underbelly of American politics.
The 12235th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org -
1000. I Deliver Parcels In Beijing by Hu Anyan
Hu Anyan recounts his experience doing short-term, precarious jobs across Chinese megacities—from night shifts in a sweltering logistics center to parcel delivery in Beijing. Using dry humor and candid detail, he describes the physical and emotional toll of harsh, unstable work and how reading and writing become sources of strength and companionship. The book is a first-person portrait of survival and resilience in contemporary urban labor.
The 12236th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org
Reading Statistics
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