The Greatest Biography Books of 2025
Click to learn how this list is calculated.
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.
What should I read next?
Get personalized book recommendations based on your reading history and preferences. Our algorithm analyzes your favorite books and reading patterns to suggest your next great read.
Get RecommendationsGenres
Biography is a genre of literature that focuses on the life story of a person, typically a historical figure or a celebrity. It provides a detailed account of the subject's life, including their upbringing, achievements, struggles, and personal relationships. Biographies can be written in various formats, including memoirs, autobiographies, and third-person narratives. This category of books offers readers an opportunity to gain insight into the lives of notable individuals and their impact on society.
Countries
Date Range
Filter books by their publication year. Enter the earliest year (Start) and latest year (End) to find books published within that period. Leave either field empty to search from the beginning of time or up to the present day.
Reading Statistics
Click the button below to see how many of these books you've read!
Download
If you're interested in downloading this list as a CSV file for use in a spreadsheet application, you can easily do so by clicking the button below. Please note that to ensure a manageable file size and faster download, the CSV will include details for only the first 500 books.
DownloadTo download this list as a CSV file, please log in to your account. Once logged in, you'll be able to download the data for use in spreadsheet applications.
Login to Download-
1. Things In Nature Merely Grow by Yiyun Li
Yiyun Li reflects on the deaths of her two sons and her attempts to live alongside that loss. Through writing, gardening, reading philosophy, learning piano, and close attention to language and thought, she examines what it means to continue "being" after a loved one is gone, offering intimate, meditative observations without revealing private details.
The 8624th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
2. Raising Hare by Chloe Dalton
During lockdown, speechwriter Chloe Dalton rescues an orphaned leveret and forms an unexpected companionship with a wild hare. The memoir follows their evolving relationship and reflects on freedom, trust, loss, and our connection to the natural world, while also exploring hare behavior and their place in culture and folklore.
The 8648th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Amazon -
3. Mother Mary Comes To Me by Arundhati Roy
Arundhati Roy reflects on her relationship with her mother, Mary Roy, exploring how childhood in Kerala and her mother’s fierce presence shaped her life and work. Written after Mary’s death, the memoir navigates complex feelings—love, anger, grief and admiration—without revealing plot details. Intimate, candid, and often quietly humorous, it examines how personal history forms identity and writing.
The 8781st Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
4. Baldwin by Nicholas Boggs
Nicholas Boggs’s Baldwin examines how James Baldwin’s intimate and artistic relationships—including his mentor Beauford Delaney, his partner Lucien Happersberger, and collaborators Engin Cezzar and Yoran Cazac—influenced his life and writing. Using archival material, the book traces how geographic, cultural, political, artistic, and erotic ties shaped Baldwin’s work and its place in Civil Rights and Black and queer literary history.
The 9997th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
5. A Truce That Is Not Peace by Miriam Toews
A Truce That Is Not Peace is a memoir in which Miriam Toews reflects on her sister’s suicide and the ways memory, language, and humor shape a life. Through short, inventive pieces she wrestles with grief, guilt, and the question of why artists write, offering an intimate, unsentimental exploration of loss without revealing plot details.
The 10054th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
6. A Flower Traveled In My Blood by Haley Cohen Gilliland
A Flower Traveled in My Blood follows the Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo and one family’s search for a grandchild taken during Argentina’s 1976–1983 dictatorship. Centering on Rosa and her daughter Patricia—a pregnant activist who was disappeared—the book chronicles how the grandmothers investigate, confront officials, and help pioneer genetic tools to identify stolen children. It is a tightly reported, compassionate account of loss, resilience, and the fight to reclaim identity and justice.
The 10098th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
7. Memorial Days by Geraldine Brooks
After her partner’s sudden death, a writer is left grappling with practical demands and little space to grieve. She later retreats to a remote Australian island to mourn, reflect on mourning practices from other cultures, and search for rituals and ways to rebuild a life around the absence. The memoir is an intimate, spare exploration of love, loss, and the work of grieving.
The 10394th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
8. Dark Renaissance by Stephen Greenblatt
Dark Renaissance traces Christopher Marlowe’s rise from a humble background to become a provocative Elizabethan dramatist whose bold poetry and plays challenged religious, political, and moral conventions. The book examines his ties to the queen’s intelligence service and the intellectual circles around him, showing how his daring imagination and skepticism helped reshape English literature, language, and culture without revealing plot details.
The 10406th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
9. Motherland by Julia Ioffe
A Feminist History of Modern Russia, from Revolution to Autocracy
Journalist Julia Ioffe explores modern Russia through the lives of its women. Drawing on her own return to Moscow and on stories from revolutionary feminists, wartime fighters, single mothers, and contemporary activists, she traces how women's roles shifted from Soviet-era professionals to post‑Soviet expectations of domesticity and how those social changes relate to broader political developments. Part memoir, part reportage and history, the book uses personal and historical vignettes to illuminate Russia’s recent transformations without revealing its outcomes.
The 10509th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
10. Careless People by Sarah Wynn-Williams
A candid, often darkly funny memoir from a former Facebook executive that offers an insider’s look at life inside a tech giant. Wynn-Williams recounts elite encounters, workplace sexism, the strains of working motherhood, and how decisions and company culture at the top shaped both employees’ lives and broader events—without revealing specific outcomes.
The 10537th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
11. Claire McCardell by Elizabeth Evitts Dickinson
The Designer Who Set Women Free
Elizabeth Evitts Dickinson’s Claire McCardell is a concise biography of the American designer who reshaped midcentury womenswear by prioritizing comfort, practicality, and independence. The book traces McCardell’s innovations—separates, accessible fastenings, pockets, and relaxed silhouettes—alongside her professional rise and personal choices that challenged gender expectations and helped define American sportswear.
The 10583rd Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
12. Deep House by Jeremy Atherton Lin
Set in 1996 as the US prepares the Defense of Marriage Act, Deep House follows Jeremy’s relationship with a British lover and the precarious choices they make to stay together when the law denies same-sex couples federal protections like immigration. The narrative moves through cities, clandestine apartments, and nightlife scenes while tracing a lineage of gay men who found ways to live and love outside legal recognition. Blending tenderness and sharp humor, the book examines intimacy, domesticity, and the systems that decide which relationships are legitimized.
The 10589th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
13. The Harder I Fight The More I Love You by Neko Case
Neko Case’s memoir traces her journey from a poverty-stricken childhood in rural Washington to her emergence as a musician, exploring how solitude, nature, music, and friendships shaped her identity. It’s a candid, lyrical reflection on creativity, resilience, and making space for oneself.
The 10595th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
14. Book Of Lives by Margaret Atwood
A Memoir of Sorts
Margaret Atwood’s Book of Lives is a compact memoir tracing the experiences that shaped her voice — a nomadic childhood in the forests of northern Quebec with scientifically minded parents, pivotal relationships (including life with writer Graeme Gibson), and the moments that fed her imagination. Through linked episodes and reflections, she shows how place, memory, and people influenced her work, without revealing the plots of her novels.
The 10598th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
15. Black Moses by Caleb Gayle
A Saga of Ambition and the Fight for a Black State
Black Moses chronicles Edward McCabe, a Black businessman and political leader who promoted founding a state within the Union governed by Black people. Set during and after the Civil War and Reconstruction, it follows his efforts to recruit Black settlers to Oklahoma and to lobby politicians, and examines the racial, political, and economic obstacles his movement faced as Black Americans sought land and self-governance.
The 10601st Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
16. King Of Kings by Scott Anderson
The Iranian Revolution—A Story of Hubris, Delusion and Catastrophic Miscalculation
King of Kings examines the collapse of Iran’s Pahlavi monarchy in the late 1970s and the rise of a religious revolution led by Ayatollah Khomeini. Through archival research and interviews, the book traces the Shah’s rule, the social and political tensions inside Iran, and the miscalculations of American policymakers that helped set the stage for a dramatic transformation in Iranian and regional politics.
The 10609th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
17. Crumb by Dan Nadel
A Cartoonist's Life
A concise portrait of cartoonist Robert Crumb that follows his life from a troubled childhood in 1950s suburbia to his central role in the 1960s underground-comics scene. The book explores Crumb’s distinctive artwork, cultural influences (popular music and the counterculture), and how his work helped shift comics into a medium for adult expression. It offers a measured, spoiler-free look at a complex artist and the eras he shaped and reflected.
The 10623rd Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
18. Bread Of Angels by Patti Smith
Bread of Angels is a lyrical memoir by Patti Smith that traces her life from a working‑class childhood into young adulthood as she discovers poetry, music, and the impulse to create. It follows her relationships, marriage to Fred “Sonic” Smith, and the building of a family and home, while also facing loss and the long return to writing. Through vivid memories and reflective scenes, the book explores art, imagination, grief, and renewal without revealing key plot details.
The 10645th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
19. Paper Girl by Beth Macy
In Paper Girl, Beth Macy returns to her Ohio hometown of Urbana as her mother’s health declines and finds a community transformed by job loss, fading local institutions (including the newspaper she once delivered), worsening mental-health and school outcomes, and the rise of conspiratorial thinking. Blending personal memory with reporting, Macy examines how these forces have reshaped families and neighbors while also tracing small moments of resilience. The book is a clear, non‑spoiler portrait of a small American town in flux.
The 10657th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
20. Buckley by Sam Tanenhaus
The Life and the Revolution That Changed America
A biography of William F. Buckley Jr. that traces his rise from the 1951 publication of God and Man at Yale to his decades as founder of National Review, columnist, television personality, and influential figure in the conservative movement. It examines his public career, personal relationships, and the internal struggles that reshaped conservatism in the late 20th century, presented without revealing major surprises.
The 10661st Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
21. Lorne by Susan Morrison
A profile of Lorne Michaels, the creator and longtime producer of Saturday Night Live. Based on extensive interviews with Michaels and many SNL writers and performers, it explores his personality, his approach to finding and nurturing talent, and how he built and sustained a show that transformed American comedy.
The 10663rd Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
22. John & Paul by Ian Leslie
Ian Leslie examines the twenty-three-year relationship between John Lennon and Paul McCartney, showing how their intense, shifting personal bond—affectionate, competitive and often turbulent—shaped The Beatles' music. Tracing their shared life before, during and after the band, the book explores how their private language, emotional dynamics and collaboration fueled creativity and songwriting.
The 10676th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
23. Daughters Of The Bamboo Grove by Barbara Demick
Against the backdrop of China’s one‑child policy, this book follows identical twins born in a rural bamboo grove who are separated—one growing up in China, the other adopted to the United States. A journalist’s investigation uncovers coerced relinquishments and child trafficking and examines the human costs of state policy, the ethics of international adoption, and the assumptions that shape how East and West view family and value.
The 10688th Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
24. The Tragedy Of True Crime by John J. Lennon
John J. Lennon, who killed a man in Brooklyn in 2001, became a journalist while serving a 28-to-life sentence and wrote immersive profiles of four men who have killed. Interweaving his own story with the lives of others, Lennon traces the circumstances, backgrounds, and choices that led to violence and follows what happens to those convicted after the cell gate locks. The book examines our fascination with true crime and asks whether knowing a person’s full life story changes how we understand their crime.
The 10691st Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon -
25. I Regret Almost Everything by Keith McNally
A Memoir
Keith McNally’s memoir follows his journey from a tough London childhood and early acting to becoming a defining New York restaurateur. He recalls his travels, the founding of landmark restaurants such as Balthazar, Pastis, and Minetta Tavern, his family and relationships, a life‑changing stroke, and his later social media presence — all delivered with candor and irreverent wit.
The 10701st Greatest Book of All TimePurchase from Bookshop.org or Amazon
Reading Statistics
Click the button below to see how many of these books you've read!
Download
If you're interested in downloading this list as a CSV file for use in a spreadsheet application, you can easily do so by clicking the button below. Please note that to ensure a manageable file size and faster download, the CSV will include details for only the first 500 books.
DownloadTo download this list as a CSV file, please log in to your account. Once logged in, you'll be able to download the data for use in spreadsheet applications.
Login to Download