Jay Shetty’s Think Like a Monk: Train Your Mind for Peace and Purpose Every Day is one of those books that sits at the intersection of philosophy and practicality. With over 83,000 ratings on Goodreads and millions of fans around the world, […]
Parvati Shallow’s memoir arrives with a built-in spotlight. For many viewers she is the most magnetic player in the history of Survivor, a strategist with a megawatt smile and a social game that launched a thousand think pieces. Nice Girls Don’t Win […]
Arnold Schwarzenegger has lived a life that sounds like a Hollywood script: a poor Austrian boy becomes the world’s greatest bodybuilder, then a blockbuster movie star, and later, the governor of California. In Be Useful: Seven Tools for Life, he distills the […]
John Green has always had a rare gift for blending intellect with emotion, and in The Anthropocene Reviewed: Essays on a Human-Centered Planet, he takes that talent to an entirely new level. This is his first nonfiction book, adapted from his critically […]
A heartfelt, sharp, and necessary memoir of migration, identity, and love in modern Germany Tahsim Durgun’s “Mama, bitte lern Deutsch: Unser Eingliederungsversuch in eine geschlossene Gesellschaft” is one of those rare books that manages to be both funny and devastating at once. […]
An intimate reflection on empathy, leadership, and the courage to be kind in a divided world Jacinda Ardern’s A Different Kind of Power is not your typical political memoir. It reads less like a victory lap and more like a meditation on […]
A provocative memoir that invites empathy, raises red flags, and keeps you arguing with yourself long after the final page Patric Gagne’s Sociopath arrives with a bold premise: an inside account of life as a self-identified sociopath who is determined to live […]
An Honest but Imperfect Reckoning with Faith, Family, and Freedom “Counting the Cost” is a memoir that dares to pull back the curtain on one of America’s most famous fundamentalist families. Written by Jill Duggar, her husband Derick Dillard, and Craig Borlase, […]
Jennette McCurdy’s I’m Glad My Mom Died is one of those rare memoirs that grabs you by the throat and refuses to let go. Honest, disturbing, and surprisingly funny, it is the story of a young woman who grew up in the […]
Glennon Doyle’s Untamed is part memoir, part manifesto, and very much a cultural lightning rod. It invites readers to question the habits and stories that keep them small, to set boundaries, and to live with a fiercer honesty. It also polarizes, sometimes […]