Editors Reads

Best Society & Culture Books

These books examine the social structures, cultural forces, and historical patterns that shape how we live — from how societies cohere and fracture to the stories a culture tells about itself.

41 expert-reviewed books — page 1 of 2

Editorial Top Picks

1984 book cover
BestsellerEditor's PickHistorySociety & Culture

1984

by George Orwell

4.7

In the totalitarian super-state of Oceania, Winston Smith works for the Ministry of Truth, rewriting history to serve The Party. His secret rebellion — and its consequences — is one of the most important political novels ever written.

Caste book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

Caste

by Isabel Wilkerson

4.7

A searing analysis of America's unspoken caste system, comparing it to India's caste system and Nazi Germany's racial hierarchy to illuminate the structural foundations of inequality.

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North and South book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

North and South

by Elizabeth Gaskell

4.5

Margaret Hale, a clergyman's daughter raised in the rural south of England, is forced to relocate to the grimy industrial north town of Milton where she meets the mill owner John Thornton and finds both her prejudices and her understanding of class radically transformed.

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Say Nothing book cover
Editor's Pick

Say Nothing

by Patrick Radden Keefe

4.8

The story of the Troubles in Northern Ireland, told through the abduction and murder of Jean McConville and the lives of IRA members Dolours Price and Gerry Adams.

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Darkness at Noon book cover
Editor's Pick

Darkness at Noon

by Arthur Koestler

4.7

Nicolas Rubashov, a veteran of the Revolution and Old Bolshevik, is arrested by the Party he helped create and subjected to interrogation — a psychological unravelling that forces him to confront the logical endpoint of the ideology he has spent his life serving.

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Jerusalem book cover
Editor's Pick

Jerusalem

by Yotam Ottolenghi & Sami Tamimi

4.7

London chefs Yotam Ottolenghi and Sami Tamimi — one Jewish Israeli, one Palestinian Muslim — grew up on opposite sides of Jerusalem and share a profound love for the same city's food. Their cookbook is both a culinary journey and a remarkable act of cultural bridge-building.

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Guns, Germs, and Steel book cover
Editor's Pick

Guns, Germs, and Steel

by Jared Diamond

4.5

Why did Europeans conquer the Americas, Africa, and Australia rather than the other way around? Jared Diamond's Pulitzer Prize-winning answer overturns centuries of racial and cultural explanations: the answer lies in geography, agriculture, and the uneven distribution of domesticable plants and animals.

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The Yellow Wallpaper book cover
Editor's Pick

The Yellow Wallpaper

by Charlotte Perkins Gilman

4.5

Charlotte Perkins Gilman's landmark 1892 short story. Confined to a room and forbidden to work or write as a 'rest cure' for nervous depression, a woman becomes obsessed with the room's hideous yellow wallpaper, descending into a madness that doubles as a devastating indictment of how women were treated.

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Enlightenment Now book cover
Editor's Pick

Enlightenment Now

by Steven Pinker

4.4

Steven Pinker's comprehensive argument that the Enlightenment values of reason, science, humanism, and progress have dramatically improved the human condition — and why we should defend them.

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Snow Crash book cover
Editor's Pick

Snow Crash

by Neal Stephenson

4.4

A pizza delivery driver who moonlights as a hacker navigates the Metaverse — Stephenson's invented virtual reality — to unravel a conspiracy involving a powerful new drug and ancient Sumerian linguistics.

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The Age of Surveillance Capitalism book cover
Editor's Pick
4.4

Harvard Business School professor Shoshana Zuboff's landmark analysis of how Google, Facebook, and the surveillance economy extract human behavioural data as a raw material, process it into prediction products, and sell certainty about future behaviour to advertisers and others.

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The Left Hand of Darkness book cover
Editor's Pick

The Left Hand of Darkness

by Ursula K. Le Guin

4.4

Le Guin's landmark science fiction novel about an envoy from a galactic federation who visits a planet whose inhabitants are ambisexual — neither male nor female — and the profound implications for society and consciousness.

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Tribe book cover
Editor's Pick

Tribe

by Sebastian Junger

4.2

Why do soldiers miss war? Why do PTSD rates in modern armies exceed those of many historical conflicts? Junger argues that humans evolved to live in small, interdependent tribes with shared purpose and genuine mutual dependence — and that wealthy modern societies cannot provide this, producing alienation, depression, and the specific tragedy of veterans who find civilian life unbearable after combat.

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Sapiens book cover
Bestseller

Sapiens

by Yuval Noah Harari

4.6

From the emergence of Homo sapiens in Africa to the 21st century, Harari traces the full sweep of human history, asking why our species conquered Earth while others failed.

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All About Love book cover
Bestseller

All About Love

by bell hooks

4.5

bell hooks argues that our culture has confused love with attachment, need, and control — and that love, properly understood, requires will, intention, and commitment to another person's growth.

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Outliers book cover
Bestseller

Outliers

by Malcolm Gladwell

4.5

Malcolm Gladwell challenges the myth of the self-made success story, arguing that high achievers are the product of hidden advantages, extraordinary opportunities, and cultural legacies — not just individual talent and hard work.

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Bad Feminist book cover
Bestseller

Bad Feminist

by Roxane Gay

4.3

A collection of essays on culture, politics, race, and feminism by Roxane Gay, who refuses the pressure to be a perfect feminist and argues for the political power of imperfect, contradictory humanity.

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