Journalist Jon Ronson tumbles down a rabbit hole into the world of psychopaths — meeting diagnosed psychopaths, the psychiatrists who identify them, the CEOs who may be among their number, and the critics who question whether the entire diagnostic enterprise makes sense. The result is a darkly funny, genuinely unsettling investigation into madness, power, and the humans who get to decide who is sane.
Drawing on fifty years of fieldwork in New Guinea, Jared Diamond examines what traditional societies — in conflict resolution, child-rearing, diet, aging, multilingualism, and religion — can teach the modern world, and what we have lost in the transition to state societies.
Frances Mayes, a poet and university professor, buys a ruined villa in the Tuscan hills, restores it with her partner Ed, and discovers the rhythms of Italian rural life — its food, its seasons, its ancient craftsmanship, and its unhurried beauty.
Twenty-one meditations on pressing questions of our time — from artificial intelligence and political disillusionment to terrorism, nationalism, and the challenge of staying sane in the information age.
Woolf's extended essay argues that a woman must have money and a room of her own to write fiction. Through invention, irony, and a fictional woman narrator, she examines why women have historically been excluded from literary culture — and what would change if they weren't.
Naipaul's account of his first visit to India — the ancestral homeland he had carried as an idea throughout his Trinidadian childhood. What he found was a place of overwhelming complexity, poverty, and social denial that he could neither embrace as home nor dismiss as foreign. A devastating and controversial travel memoir.
Erin Lowry translates the fundamentals of personal finance — budgeting, debt elimination, credit scores, and negotiation — into plain, judgment-free language aimed at young adults who feel financially lost but are too embarrassed to admit what they don't know.
Ibram X. Kendi argues that there is no neutral position on racism — only racist and antiracist policies and ideas — and weaves this argument through memoir, examining his own history of internalized racism and the process of thinking himself out of it.
Barnes meditates on death — his own, his family's, his writers' — with the clarity and wit that characterize his fiction. Not quite memoir, not quite philosophy, the book is a sustained confrontation with what it means to live knowing the end is coming.
Aristotle's analysis of tragedy — its elements, its purpose, and its effects. Defines tragedy as an imitation of a serious action producing catharsis through pity and fear. Identifies the six elements of tragedy (plot, character, thought, diction, melody, spectacle) and argues that plot is the most important.
A short parable about a young woman who discovers how small daily savings, invested consistently, can grow into life-changing wealth — the accessible summary of Bach's core philosophy.
A selection of Pessoa's critical essays, philosophical reflections, and shorter prose — including pieces by both Pessoa and his heteronyms, showing the full range of his intellectual world.
Rousseau asks how humans can be both free and subject to law. His answer — the social contract, by which individuals submit to the general will — became the theoretical foundation of modern democracy, influenced the French Revolution, and is still the starting point for thinking about legitimate political authority.
Mernissi's most scholarly work — a feminist reading of Islamic sacred texts arguing that the veil and the seclusion of women were political decisions made by the male elite in the early Islamic period, not divine commandments.
Smith's investigation into the causes of national prosperity — the division of labour, free markets, the price system, and the folly of mercantilism. Published in 1776, it became the foundational text of modern economics and the primary intellectual source for arguments in favour of market capitalism.
Murakami has run at least one marathon a year for over twenty-five years. This memoir — written during training for the 2005 New York City Marathon — is about running, but also about writing, ageing, and the relationship between physical and mental endurance. The most personal and direct thing he has published: a self-portrait through the discipline of long-distance running.
Descartes's account of how he came to doubt everything that could be doubted and arrived at the one certainty that could not be doubted — I think, therefore I am (cogito ergo sum). The founding document of modern Western philosophy, written in French rather than Latin to be readable by non-specialists.
Lewis spent a year embedded with Sam Bankman-Fried and FTX before the cryptocurrency exchange's catastrophic collapse. The result is a portrait of the man at the centre of one of the largest financial frauds in history — a portrait that refuses easy categorisation of SBF as either visionary or villain.
Mary Roach investigates the science behind military research — the labs, researchers, and experimental programs working on problems of survival in combat. Chapters cover uniforms that resist bacteria, the acoustics of IED blasts, the psychology of diarrhea in the field, and the science of keeping soldiers alive in increasingly hostile conditions.
Peterson's foundational academic work, exploring how myths, religious narratives, and ideological systems function as maps of meaning that orient human beings toward action in a world of complexity and danger.
Fatema Mernissi explores the different versions of Scheherazade that Western and Eastern cultures have created — arguing that the Western harem fantasy reveals more about Western fears than about Eastern reality.
Theroux's account of his four-month train journey from London through Europe, the Middle East, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Siberia — the trip that established him as the foremost travel writer of his generation. Grumpy, funny, observant, and occasionally uncomfortable in ways that proved influential.
Kahneman, Sibony, and Sunstein argue that human judgment suffers from two distinct problems: bias (consistent error) and noise (random variability). Noise is under-studied and under-corrected — and its costs in medicine, law, and business are enormous.
Hawking and co-author Leonard Mlodinow address three fundamental questions: Why is there something rather than nothing? Why do the laws of physics have the form they do? What is the nature of reality? Their answer, M-theory, generated significant controversy.