The Greatest Books of All Time on Identity
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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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3276. So Sad Today by Melissa Broder
Personal Essays
An unflinchingly candid collection of personal essays that confront anxiety, depression, addiction, disordered eating, and fraught relationships with dark humor and stark self-awareness. Navigating lust, love, internet persona, and the search for meaning, the narrator exposes contradictions between public bravado and private fragility. The result is a raw, intimate portrait of modern despair and the messy, sometimes comic attempts to survive it.
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3277. Another Bullshit Night In Suck City by Nick Flynn
A Memoir
A raw, darkly funny memoir in which a man working at a Boston homeless shelter is forced to confront his estranged, alcoholic father when he turns up among the clients; through vivid, lyrical scenes and painful memory, the narrator reckons with childhood abandonment, addiction, shame, and the complicated mixture of anger and compassion that comes with trying to help someone who once hurt you.
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3278. Ordinary Light by Tracy K. Smith
A Memoir
A lyrical, intimate memoir that follows a poet’s coming-of-age in a close-knit Black family, tracing childhood memories, faith, and the wrenching loss of her father; the narrative explores how grief and the search for meaning led to the discovery of poetry as a way to reckon with history, identity, and ordinary moments made luminous by language.
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3279. A Prayer For The Crown Shy by Becky Chambers
A gentle, character-driven sequel that follows a tea monk who left the monastery and their curious robot companion as they travel a pastoral, post-scarcity world, visiting towns and meeting people. Through quiet, philosophical conversations and everyday encounters they examine questions of purpose, belonging, work, and care, discovering how small acts of connection and empathy can reshape identities and communities.
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3280. The Happiest Refugee by Anh Do
A Memoir
A humorous and moving memoir that traces a family's perilous escape from war-torn Vietnam, their struggles as refugees adapting to life in Australia, and the author’s journey from hardship and odd jobs to success and public recognition—anchored by resilience, gratitude, family love, and a determination to find joy despite adversity.
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3281. Elder Race by Adrian Tchaikovsky
An archaeologist unearths the remains of a prehuman civilization whose astonishing technologies and inscrutable motives have been buried for millennia, and the discovery unleashes forces that challenge modern humanity’s assumptions about identity, agency and stewardship. As the past reaches into the present, the narrator and other characters must navigate ethical and political fault lines—deciding who gets to control ancient power, how to reckon with beings that are not simply ‘other,’ and what it means to inherit a world shaped by vanished, elder minds.
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3282. Cage Of Souls by Adrian Tchaikovsky
A grim, atmospheric tale of a desperate expedition into a ruined city to investigate an ancient device that traps and manipulates souls; as survivors face monstrous guardians, rival parties, and the moral cost of using the Cage’s power to revive or control the dead, their choices reveal brutal politics, human desperation, and the price of salvation in a collapsing world.
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3283. Men In Love by Irvine Welsh
A collection of gritty, darkly comic short stories that probe modern masculinity, love and sexual obsession among working‑class Scots, mixing raw, vernacular dialogue with scenes of violence, addiction and tenderness; the linked tales explore infidelity, desire, identity and the messy, often destructive consequences of intimacy, balancing bleak realism with black humour and occasional poignancy.
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3284. Everyone Who Is Gone Here by Jonathan Blitzer
The United States, Central America, and the Making of a Crisis
Everyone who makes the journey faces an impossible choice. Hundreds of thousands of people who arrive every year at the US-Mexico border travel far from their homes. Some are fleeing persecution, others crime or hunger. Their homes have become uninhabitable. They will take their chances. This vast and unremitting crisis did not spring up overnight. Brilliantly weaving the stories of Central Americans whose lives have been devastated by chronic political conflict and violence with those of American activists, government officials, and the politicians responsible for the country's tragically tangled immigration policy, Blitzer reveals the full, layered picture for the first time.
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3285. What Napoleon Could Not Do by DK Nnuro
What Napoleon Could Not Do follows siblings Jacob and Belinda Nti and Belinda’s husband, Wilder, as they grapple with hopes, belonging, and disappointment tied to the United States. Jacob, a Ghanaian programmer, fights to obtain a visa to join his wife in Virginia; Belinda has built a professional life in America; Wilder faces the realities of racism and marginalization as a Black man in the U.S. Their interwoven perspectives explore immigration, ambition, identity, and the gap between expectation and reality without giving away the plot.
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3286. Land Of Big Numbers by Te-Ping Chen
Stories
A spare, often eerie collection of stories set in contemporary and near-future China that follows ordinary people as they navigate economic upheaval, surveillance, and the creep of technology and environmental change. The prose blends realist detail with subtle speculative twists, illuminating how commerce, politics, and desire reshape intimate lives and relationships. Recurring themes of displacement, aspiration, and loss create a vivid, unsettling portrait of a society in flux.
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3287. Futureface by Alex Wagner
How Modern Beauty Secrets Made Us Who We Are
A probing blend of cultural reporting, history and memoir that examines how appearance shapes power, opportunity and identity in the modern world; it traces the science, economics and politics behind beauty standards—from plastic surgery and cosmetics to race, gender, immigration, social media and surveillance—while weaving in the author’s own mixed‑race family experiences to show how looks are managed, commodified and governed, and arguing that who we are perceived to be has profound social and civic consequences.
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3288. Dying by Cory Taylor
A Memoir
An intimate, candid memoir in which the narrator confronts terminal illness with wry humor, blunt honesty and fierce curiosity, reflecting on mortality, memory, family dynamics and the practical and emotional realities of care, loss and what it means to live fully while dying.
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3289. The Laughing Monsters by Denis Johnson
In this darkly comic, violent tale set in a lawless corner of West/Central Africa, a dissolute expatriate and his former partner navigate a world of mercenaries, shady aid money, and shifting loyalties as they pursue a missing associate and a mysterious woman, leading to double-crosses, obsession, and bitter revelations about friendship, greed, and survival.
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3290. Muscle For The Wing by Daniel Woodrell
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3291. Rodin's Debutante by Ward Just
Tommy Ogden, a wealthy man outside turn‑of‑the‑century Chicago, declines to commission a Rodin bust and instead endows a boys’ school. Years later Lee Goodell’s coming of age—his decision to become a sculptor, to live on the South Side, and to enter Hyde Park’s intellectual world—unfolds against midcentury Chicago. The school’s library houses a plaster known as Rodin’s Debutante, a quiet presence as Lee confronts his past and reconnects with a childhood friend who has endured a violent trauma.
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3292. When Will There Be Good News? by Kate Atkinson
A gripping, character-driven mystery that follows private investigator Jackson Brodie and several other figures whose lives collide when a violent attack and a decades-old disappearance intersect. As Brodie traces connections between a small-town past trauma and present-day crimes, secrets surface and coincidences bind strangers together, producing a tense, darkly witty exploration of grief, resilience, morality and the long shadows cast by violence.
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3293. Dingley Falls by Michael Malone
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3294. The Last Voyage Of Somebody The Sailor by John Barth
A self-conscious, picaresque sea tale in which an unreliable narrator recounts improbable voyages, castaway encounters and absurd adventures that parody classic nautical romance and myth. Drifting between reality and invention, the story unfolds through playful digressions and metafictional games that probe storytelling, identity, mortality and rebirth, offering a comic yet haunting meditation on narrative artifice and the human need to invent meaning.
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3295. Ratner's Star by Don DeLillo
A surreal, experimental novel that follows a young mathematical prodigy recruited by a secret scientific project to decode an enigmatic signal from the stars; through fragmented, playful prose it satirizes Cold War science and institutional bureaucracy while probing language, mathematics, meaning, and existential dread as the team’s obsessive quest edges into apocalypse and metafictional reflection.
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3297. 空ろの箱と零のマリア 2 by Eiji Mikage
The second volume deepens the series’ tense, mind-bending mystery as the protagonist and those caught up with the supernatural object are pulled further into repeating timelines and moral quandaries. New players and rules emerge, relationships fracture as hidden motives surface, and characters are forced to confront the painful costs of manipulating fate — escalating the psychological conflict and setting the stage for a darker, more complex struggle to break the cycle.
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3298. Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams by Philip K. Dick
A provocative anthology of speculative short stories that probe the fragile boundaries between human consciousness and technological intrusion, where memories can be altered, identities duplicated, and reality itself is unstable. Set in near-future and alternate landscapes, the tales explore paranoia, authoritarian control, moral ambiguity, and the emotional cost of machines that mimic or manipulate humanity, leaving characters—and readers—to question what it means to be truly real.
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3299. Pequena Coreografia Do Adeus by Aline Bei
Um texto breve e poético que atravessa despedidas, perdas e reencontros; em fragmentos íntimos, a narradora examina memórias, pequenas rotinas e os gestos que sustentam o luto, mesclando dor e delicadeza até encontrar formas de recomeço. A linguagem é concisa e musical, transformando o cotidiano em um mapa de afetos que revela como nos despedimos e seguimos adiante.
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3300. The Lost Flowers Of Alice Hart by Holly Ringland
After a devastating childhood trauma, a young girl is taken to live with her reclusive grandmother on a remote Australian flower farm where she learns the secret language and healing power of plants; as she grows, she uncovers family violence and buried secrets, confronts grief and loss, and ultimately seeks belonging, strength and renewal through her deepening connection to the land, its flowers and the people who tend them.
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Reading Statistics
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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.
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