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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  1. 3351. Doctor Who by Russell T. Davies

    Damaged Goods

    The Seventh Doctor arrives in 1987 Thatcher's Britain with companions Chris and Roz. They come to the Quadrant, a troubled council block where a new drug is killing according to a plan and ordinary residents are implicated. A bizarre trio moves into number 43 as a dead dealer rises from the grave and an ancient weapon is concealed beneath human tragedy. The Doctor uncovers links between a special child, an obsessive woman, and a desperate bargain made one dark Christmas Eve.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
  2. 3352. After The Quake by haruki murakami

    Stories

    A linked set of short stories probes the emotional aftershocks of a devastating earthquake through the lives of disparate characters whose routines are ruptured by grief, guilt and sudden dislocation. Blending spare, melancholic realism with surreal intrusions—a talking giant frog, strange apparitions and uncanny coincidences—the tales explore loneliness, the longing for connection, and the fragile ways people try to rebuild meaning after catastrophe, turning small domestic moments into potent metaphors for trauma and quiet possibility.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  3. 3353. The Sisterhood Of The Traveling Pants by Anne Brasheres

    Four inseparable teenage friends who are forced to spend their first summer apart keep their bond alive by sharing a single pair of jeans that inexplicably fits each of them, sending it from one girl to the next as a talisman of connection. As the pants travel, each girl encounters her own tests—first loves, family tensions, painful loss, and the struggle to define herself—and through those experiences they grow, change, and learn how to support one another even when distance and life pull them in different directions. The story is a tender coming-of-age portrait about friendship, identity, and the ways people hold on to one another through joy and hardship.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
  4. 3354. Melvill by Rodrigo Fresán

    A hypnotic, metafictional meditation in which a narrator becomes consumed by the life and work of a nineteenth-century author of sea tales, using fragments of biography, criticism, dreams and family memory to blur the line between reading and living. The prose drifts between obsession and tenderness as it maps how stories—whales, oceans, shipwrecks and solitary sailors—shape identity, exile and the act of storytelling itself. Playful and elegiac, the book collapses genres to examine how language and literary inheritance haunt and sustain the writer and reader alike.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  5. 3355. A Burning by Megha Majumdar

    Set in contemporary Kolkata, the novel follows three interlinked lives after a deadly incident on a commuter train: an impoverished Muslim gym instructor whose impulsive social-media comment is spun into a terrorism charge; an ambitious young woman from the margins who sacrifices everything for a shot at stardom; and a self-serving political operator who exploits the scandal to advance his career. As courtrooms, news cycles, and rumor take over, the story exposes how hunger, ambition, and rising nationalism warp justice and destroy relationships.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  6. 3356. The Half Drowned King by Linnea Hartsuyker

    Set on the storm-lashed coasts of a Viking-age kingdom, this tense historical saga follows a family shattered by conquest and betrayal as survivors navigate seafaring raids, shifting allegiances, and brutal politics to reclaim power. A fiercely determined woman who survives captivity becomes a strategist and survivor in a world where loyalty is fragile, while the displaced heir gathers allies and wages daring campaigns to regain his birthright. The novel blends vividly rendered battle and maritime life with quieter scenes of loyalty, identity, and the moral costs of vengeance and rule.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  7. 3357. Easy Beauty by Chloé Cooper Jones

    A practical, approachable guide that reframes beauty as simple, low-effort rituals for busy people, offering straightforward skincare, haircare and makeup tips alongside gentle self-care practices; it emphasizes sustainable, time-friendly routines and small habits that boost confidence, calm and everyday wellbeing rather than chasing perfection.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  8. 3358. Drift by Caroline Bergvall

    A hybrid, multilingual poetic meditation that maps linguistic and bodily drift across seas and histories, assembling fragments—from Old Norse echoes and archival traces to contemporary reportage and spoken rhythms—into a collage about migration, memory, climate and the erosion of language and borders; through translation, repetition and sonic play it traces how words and people are carried, transformed and lost by currents of time, water and political movement.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  9. 3359. I Must Be Living Twice by Eileen Myles

    A bracing, candid collection that brings together earlier work and new poems to map a restless, autobiographical voice across love, desire, gender, and urban life. The pieces mix fierce political critique, wry humor, and intimate confession, using conversational diction and sharp imagery to interrogate fame, family, sexuality, and the craft of writing. Ranging from tender observation to outraged manifesto, the poems continually search for selfhood and belonging, transforming ordinary moments into luminous, unsparing lyric statements.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  10. 3360. God And The Chip by Stahl, William A.

    Religion and the Culture of Technology

    A wide-ranging collection that examines how modern technologies — from computing and artificial intelligence to biotechnology and virtual reality — intersect with religious belief, practice, and theology; contributors mix historical overview, philosophical reflection, and contemporary case studies to show how technological change reshapes ideas of the sacred, embodiment, community, and moral responsibility, and to prompt dialogue between theologians, ethicists, and technologists about the promises and perils of a technologically mediated spiritual life.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  11. 3361. East Of Eden & Grapes Of Wrath by John Steinbeck

    Two sweeping American novels explore family, moral choice, and social injustice: one follows a Dust Bowl–era Oklahoma family driven west by economic collapse, tracing their brutal migration, the erosion of dignity, and moments of solidarity amid exploitation; the other is a multi‑generational saga in California’s Salinas Valley that reframes Biblical themes through rival brothers and a haunted father, probing inheritance, sin, and the possibility of redemption and free will. Both works blend gritty realism with philosophical inquiry, using intimate character struggles to illuminate broader social and ethical questions.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
  12. 3362. Il Male Oscuro by Berto, Giuseppe

    A confessional, inward-looking novel in which a man chronicles a debilitating, nameless illness — a creeping depression and psychosomatic crisis — through intimate reminiscences of failed relationships, family tensions and creative paralysis; as he submits to psychoanalysis he dissects guilt, sexual confusion and recurring self-destructive patterns, producing a darkly comic yet painful portrait of a mind at war with itself.

    The 16864th Greatest Book of All Time
  13. 3363. All That Man Is by Szalay, David

    A Novel

    A linked sequence of short narratives follows men at successive stages of life, each story a compact, sharply observed episode—on trips, in bedrooms, at offices and in transit—that together map the shifting shapes of modern masculinity. With spare, often darkly comic prose, the collection probes loneliness, desire, small cruelties and the quiet failures and reassessments that punctuate adulthood, revealing how fleeting encounters and interior compromises accumulate into a portrait of aging, vulnerability and disconnection.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  14. 3364. All The Bright Places by Jennifer Niven

    Two high school students—a girl paralyzed by grief and survivor’s guilt after a family tragedy and a charismatic, deeply troubled boy who battles intense mood swings and suicidal thoughts—meet on the edge of a school bell tower and pair up for a class project to visit notable places across their state. Their growing bond becomes a lifeline that helps each confront painful truths, challenge fears, and briefly imagine a future together, even as his unpredictable darkness and persistent despair complicate everything. The relationship ultimately forces both to face harsh realities: she must learn to grieve and reclaim joy, and he struggles with an illness that leads to a devastating outcome that reshapes her understanding of love and loss. In the aftermath she seeks ways to honor him and find a path toward healing, showing how fragile connections can also foster resilience.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  15. 3365. Shadow Slave by Guiltythree

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  16. 3366. How Did You Get This Number by Sloane Crosley

    Essays

    A razor-sharp collection of witty, self-deprecating essays that chronicle a young woman's misadventures in modern urban life—from awkward job interviews and disastrous relationships to celebrity encounters and travel mishaps. Combining observational humor with candid vulnerability, the pieces examine social anxiety, pop-culture obsessions, and the absurdities of adulthood with brisk pacing and comedic timing. The voice is conversational, irreverent, and empathetic, turning everyday embarrassments into sharply observed, laugh-out-loud storytelling.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  17. 3367. Fault Lines by James Carroll

    Fault Lines is a book by James Carroll. The title is Fault Lines and the author is listed as Carroll, James. The available description includes only the title and the author's name and does not provide any plot summary, themes, or publication details. No bibliographic elements such as publisher, date, or edition are included.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
  18. 3368. The Outlaw Of Torn by Edgar Rice Burroughs

    A rollicking medieval adventure that follows a man raised among brigands who rises to become a feared outlaw leader, then becomes entangled in high-stakes political intrigue, shifting loyalties, romance, and revenge as feudal conflicts and struggles for power in 13th-century England threaten to destroy him and those he loves.

    The 16867th Greatest Book of All Time
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  19. 3369. Children Of Eden by Joey Graceffa

    Rowan is a second child in a society where population controls make her illegal and marked for death. Outside Eden, Earth is poisoned and most life is gone, so Aaron Al-Baz created the EcoPanopticon to seize technology and preserve a pocket of humanity until the world heals. Hidden for sixteen years, Rowan escapes for one night, finds a friend, then faces tragedy and becomes a renegade on the run.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  20. 3370. Identical by Ellen Hopkins

    Told in spare, lyrical verse, the novel follows identical twin sisters whose shared upbringing in a deeply dysfunctional family and hidden traumas drive them in opposite directions—one striving for control and outward success while the other spirals into risky, self-destructive behavior—until long-buried secrets and betrayals erupt, forcing both to confront questions of identity, blame, and survival.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  21. 3371. Jesus Tales by Romulus Linney

    This retelling presents the story of Jesus' life in the mode of folktale. Episodes are relocated into varied cultural settings and told as folk narratives in different parts of the world. By moving familiar scenes into diverse local forms, the work explores the life of Jesus through the rhythms and conventions of traditional tale telling across global landscapes.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
  22. 3372. My Favorite Thing Is Monsters by Emil Ferris

    Set in 1960s Chicago, this vividly illustrated coming-of-age tale is narrated by a ten-year-old who documents her life in a monster-filled sketchbook as she investigates the suspicious death of an elderly Jewish neighbor, unraveling hidden family histories, neighborhood violence, and questions of identity, grief, and otherness through a mix of childlike noir forensics, graphic imagery, and intimate memoir.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  23. 3373. Palmares by Gayl Jones

    A spare, lyrical novel that reimagines the history and afterlives of a maroon community in colonial Brazil, blending myth, memory, and imagination as its voice excavates the violent, erotic, and resistant legacies of slavery; time collapses into a haunting meditation on desire, language, collective memory, and the precarious cost of freedom.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  24. 3374. Daring And The Duke by Sarah MacLean

    The Bareknuckle Bastards Book III

    Grace Condry has spent a lifetime running from her past. Betrayed as a child by her only love and raised on the streets, she now hides in plain sight as queen of London's darkest corners. Ewan, Duke of Marwick, returns after a decade of searching, determined to win her back and make her his duchess. Grace vows revenge and keeps him close, but their reunion threatens the life she has claimed and the heart she swore he would never steal.

    The 17122nd Greatest Book of All Time
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  25. 3375. A Hand Full Of Stars by Rafik Schami

    A teenager in Damascus wants to be a journalist in a suppressed society. He writes in his diary, describing his daily life and the rhythms of his hometown. The diary entries provide a personal account of everyday routines, small moments, and the limits placed on expression. Set in Damascus, Syria, the narrative shows his aspirations and ordinary experiences within a constraining social environment.

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Reading Statistics

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