Christopher Hitchens was a prolific writer and polemicist whose work spanned journalism, essays, and memoirs. He gained prominence as a cultural and political commentator, known for his erudite style and willingness to challenge conventional wisdom across the political spectrum.
223 Books Recommended by Christopher Hitchens
Ranked by popularity across all reading lists on this site
We were all expected to read Animal Farm and [this book], which had been placed on the syllabus as part of the curriculum of the Cold War.
Also recommended by: Richard Branson, Winston Churchill, Anna Akana, Brad Delong, Diane Rehm, Emma Watson, J Cole, Jenn Im, Jordan Peterson, Matt Mullenweg, Noam Chomsky, Sahil Lavingia, Tristan Harris
Crime and Punishment
10 people recommendedI couldnβt sleep for two nights after first reading [this book].
Also recommended by: Brian Dean, Ernest Hemingway, Esther Perel, Jack Edwards, Jim Carrey, Jim Cramer, Jordan Peterson, Larry King, Pewdiepie
In [this book], one can often detect strong hints of a vicarious approval of what is ostensibly being satirized.
Also recommended by: Sam Altman, Winston Churchill, Yuval Noah Harari, Jordan Peterson, Matt Mullenweg, Pewdiepie, Sahil Lavingia, Stewart Brand, Tristan Harris
Epic.
Also recommended by: Oprah Winfrey, Richard Branson, Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, Cal Fussman, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Fred Wilson, Neil Strauss, Shashi Tharoor

The Great Gatsby
9 people recommended[The author] found he'd taken on all the great American themes, from the original 'dream' itself to the corresponding loss of innocence.
Also recommended by: Bill Gates, Ev Williams, Taylor Swift, Daniel Pink, Jim Carrey, Neil Degrasse Tyson, Ryan Holiday, Ta Nehisi Coates

Animal Farm
8 people recommendedThere is a timeless, even transcendent, quality to this little story.
Also recommended by: Vlad Tenev, Daniel Pink, J Cole, Jordan Peterson, Lex Fridman, Sahil Lavingia, Whitney Cummings

The Oxford Shakespeare
8 people recommendedChristopher Hitchens mentioned Shakespeare's work in the "Hitch-22" book.
Also recommended by: Barack Obama, Jk Rowling, Fred Wilson, Mark Twain, Ricardo Semler, Shah Rukh Khan, Stewart Brand
War and Peace
7 people recommendedAt the age of twelve I had summoned the nerve to borrow from the headmaster, and to read [this book].
Also recommended by: Osho, Ernest Hemingway, Jordan Peterson, Larry King, Mark Manson, Nelson Mandela
[The author] essentially recast his friend Thomas Carlyleβs pessimistic version of the French Revolution in fictional form in [this book].
Also recommended by: Jk Rowling, Oprah Winfrey, Amelia Boone, Mahatma Gandhi, Maya Angelou, Derek Sivers

Lincoln
5 people recommended[The author's] finest novel.
Also recommended by: Jamie Dimon, David Sabatini, Ryan Holiday, Tom Keene
I was fairly soon immersed in [this book].
Also recommended by: Marc Andreessen, Ben Shapiro, Brad Delong
The Grapes of Wrath
4 people recommended[The author's] 1939 classic.
Also recommended by: Jordan Peterson, Michelle Obama, Nelson Mandela
For Whom the Bell Tolls
4 people recommendedInfluenced me very greatly.
Also recommended by: Brian Dean, Jordan Peterson, Josh Waitzkin
Ulysses
4 people recommended[Appears] not to be written by [a human being].
Also recommended by: Debbie Millman, Ernest Hemingway, Neil Strauss

Parting the Waters
4 people recommendedA noble edifice of work about the United States in the era of Martin Luther King.
Also recommended by: Barack Obama, Cory Booker, Ryan Holiday

All Quiet on the Western Front
3 people recommendedI became consumed with the subject [of World War I] and got hold of [this book].
Also recommended by: Donald Trump, Dan Carlin

The Collected Works of P. G. Wodehouse
3 people recommendedHow can I forget the moment when [I] learned that to be amusing was not to be frivolous and that languageβalways the languageβwas the magic key as much to prose as to poetry?
Also recommended by: Jk Rowling, Paul Graham
Doctor Zhivago
3 people recommended[The author] was perhaps not such a fool when he wrote in [this book] that all conceptions are immaculate.
Also recommended by: Winston Churchill, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Shortly after I arrived in New York, [this author] claimed to have diagnosed the same syndrome in [this book].
Also recommended by: Charles Koch, Ev Williams
In Search of Lost Time
3 people recommended[Appears] not to be written by [a human being].
Also recommended by: Alain De Botton, Frank Blake

Hitler
3 people recommendedSince [Hitler's] suicide, no one has fully explained how a talentless crank was able to turn Europe into a charnel house. [This book] supplies a piece of the puzzle.
Also recommended by: Marc Andreessen, Brandon Stanton
Dominion
3 people recommendedAsks all the right questions about animal rights, even if it doesn't canvass all the possible answers.
Also recommended by: Hugh Hewitt, Tim Keller
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
2 people recommendedLeaves an ineradicable 'scratch on the mind.'
Also recommended by: George Raveling
Discourses on aspects of the Bacchic and the Dionysian.
Also recommended by: Charles Koch
Pillar of Fire
2 people recommendedA noble edifice of work about the United States in the era of Martin Luther King.
Also recommended by: Ryan Holiday
The End of Faith
2 people recommended[The author is] one of the finest volunteers in this cause.
Also recommended by: Dr Andrew Weil
These pages describe the steady, determined evolution of une femme serieuse.
Also recommended by: Jk Rowling
I was very struck by the courtesy and grace of this famous polemic and by the way that [the author] combined firmness on his own part with an understanding of the position of others.
Also recommended by: Marc Andreessen
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
2 people recommended[The author's] electrifying first book.
Also recommended by: Winston Churchill
The 'subject' is assuredly family life, which is also the tempestuous subtext of much of [the author]'s nonfiction.
Also recommended by: Oprah Winfrey

Wolf Hall
2 people recommendedA service to the history it depicts, and puts the author in the very first rank of historical novelists.
Also recommended by: Barack Obama

The Black Jacobins
2 people recommendedrecommended 2x[The author's] monumental work.
[The author's] monumental work.
Also recommended by: Ben Horowitz
The Bell Jar
2 people recommendedWhen I myself first read [this book], the phrase of hers that most arrested me was the one with which she described her father's hometown.
Also recommended by: Chloe Grace Moretz
Shame
2 people recommended[Anatomizes] the heap of madnesses and contradictions that went to make up the nightmarish state of Pakistan.
Also recommended by: Richa Chadha
Orientalism
2 people recommendedA book that made one think.
Also recommended by: Brad Delong
Watership Down
2 people recommended[The author's] masterpiece.
Also recommended by: Andrew Wilkow
Collected Poems
2 people recommendedChristopher Hitchens said this author is one of his favorite poets.
Also recommended by: Douglas Murray
The Collected Poems of W. B. Yeats
2 people recommendedChristopher Hitchens said this author is one of his favorite poets.
Also recommended by: Tim Oreilly
Reflections on the Revolution in France
2 people recommendedImperishable book.
Also recommended by: Douglas Murray
Burr
2 people recommendedThe best fictional re-creation of the period.
Also recommended by: David Sabatini
Principia Mathematica
2 people recommended[The author's] most imposing work is probably [this book].
Also recommended by: Osho
Selected Poems
2 people recommendedChristopher Hitchens said this author is one of his favorite poets.
Also recommended by: Russell Moore
Diaries
Can greatly enrich our understanding of how [the author] transmuted the raw material of everyday experience into some of his best-known novels and polemics.
Writers and Politics
recommended 2xInfluenced me enormously when I first found it in a public library in Devonshire in 1967.
Influenced me enormously when I first found it in a public library in Devonshire in 1967.
Southern California
recommended 2xWas, and still is, considered more or less the book to beat.
Was, and still is, considered more or less the book to beat.
The File
recommended 2xA well-controlled masterpiece of frigid outrage at Americaβs betrayal of a loyal citizen.
A well-controlled masterpiece of frigid outrage at Americaβs betrayal of a loyal citizen.
The Monument
recommended 2xPossibly the most penetrating of his many books about Saddam and Saddamism.
Possibly the most penetrating of his many books about Saddam and Saddamism.
Reading Lolita in Tehran
recommended 2xA study of the relations between literature, sexuality, and power under Muslim theocracy.
A study of the relations between literature, sexuality, and power under Muslim theocracy.
Beyond a Boundary
Suggests that in several ways [cricket] is not really a 'sport' at all, but more of a classical art form.
The Case of Comrade Tulayev
recommended 2xMany good judges regard as the earliest and best fictional representation of the show trials.
Many good judges regard as the earliest and best fictional representation of the show trials.
Memoirs of a Revolutionary
recommended 2xOne of the finest autobiographies of that same century.
One of the finest autobiographies of that same century.
Watching the Door
The most witty and penetrating first-hand account of [1970s Belfast].
The Savage God
Returns often to the suicide of Cesare Pavese, who took his own life at the apparent height of his powers.
History of the Conquest of Mexico
Emboldened by the sheer bulk of the thing, I swerved into [this book].
How Green Was My Valley
The transition to me between reading 'books for boys' and 'adult reading' was [this book].
Darkness at Noon
I was re-reading [this book] for what felt like (and quite possibly was) the third time in a month.
Keep the Aspidistra Flying
In these pages, I found some specimens of exactly the lower-middle-class family that was familiar to me from life.
Decline and Fall
Have somehow made all this mania and ritual appear 'normal,' even praiseworthy.
Lady Chatterley’s Lover
Plainly intended to suggest that the gamekeeper had sodomized his bossβs wife.
Cruelty and Silence
About the Saddam tyranny and the wars and famines and plagues it had sponsored.
Adolf Hitler My Part in His Downfall
About being a shambolic conscript in some forgotten cookhouse in the wartime British Army.
The Threatening Storm
One of the best pieces of closely marshaled evidence and reasoning ever to emerge from the wonk-world.
The Judgment Of Paris
I winced with recognition when I first read the expression 'British teeth' in [this book].
Yellow Dog
You might think that the contempt shown by the reporters for both their subjects and their readers is overdone, but you would be wrong.
Humboldt’s Gift
I was able to return [Martin Amis] the favor in a way which was to help change his life in turn, by pressing on him a copy [of this book].
A Dance to the Music of Time
[The author's] complex, majestic, rhythmical twelve-volume novel sequence.
Faggots
The book of still another friend, [the author]βs ultrahomosexual effort.
Prisoner without a Name, Cell without a Number
The book above all that clothed in living, hurting flesh the necessarily abstract idea of the desaparecido.
The Protestant Establishment
[The acronym 'WASP' was] first minted by [this author in this book], the term stood for 'White Anglo-Saxon Protestant.'
The Company Of Critics
[In this book, the author] says that most of his friends and colleagues have never even visited Washington except to protest.
The Raj Quartet
Had spoken to my depths because it understood that the treason at midnight in 1947, and the monstrous birth of a spoiled theocracy in Pakistan, was a tragedy for the English too.
Covering Islam
It was with [the author's] much lesser effort, [this book], that I began to realize that there was an apparently narrow but very deep difference between us.
Peace And Its Discontents
At [the author's] request I even wrote an uninspired introduction to [this book], but my heart was not quite in it.
The Benn Diaries
Recorded a meeting of like-minded members of Parliament the day after the fatwah.
A Dream of John Ball
[Wrote that] men fight for things and then lose the battle, only to win it again in a shape and form that they had not expected.
Minima Moralia
Made a beautiful corkscrew or double-helix-shaped aphorism about the Hays Office.
Tortilla Flat
[The main character] manages to lay so many women that, afterward, even the females who didnβt receive his attentions prefer to claim, rather than appear to have been overlooked, that they were included, too.
Persuasion
Captain Frederick Wentworth in [this book], is partly of interest to the female sex because of the 'prize' loot he has extracted from his encounters with Bonaparte's navy.
Microcosm
Illustrates [Wroclaw's] eminence as a hub of Bohemian and Prussian life as well as the epicenter of the Silesian question.
They Fought Back
Combats the wretched image of European Jews as fatalistic and passive.
The Cruiser
[In this book], my father appears under the name (no first or 'Christian' name) of Lieutenant Hale.
The Broken Compass
Contains several assertions and affirmations that make me desire to be wearing a necklace of the purest garlic.
The Enigma of Arrival
While recently rereading [this book], I was struck all over again by the breathtakingly observant operations of [the author's] eye and brain.
The Grass Is Singing
[Combines] the sad indistinctness of a melancholy memoir with the very exact realization that a huge injustice had been done to the 'native' inhabitants of the land.
This Was the Old Chief’s Country
[Combines] the sad indistinctness of a melancholy memoir with the very exact realization that a huge injustice had been done to the 'native' inhabitants of the land.
The Day Stalin Died
[Deserves] reprinting in any anthology of the prose of the 20th century.
The Temptation of Jack Orkney
[This story] was so good, and [it] seemed so much to know what I might be thinking myself, that I was almost afraid to read on.
The Wind Blows Away Our Words
Somewhat too romantic an account of the rebels fighting the Red Army in Afghanistan.
On Chesil Beach
Evokes [the author's] homeland's natural beauty and the straitened sexual manners of the early 1960s.
The Practice and Theory of Bolshevism
Was the first and in many ways the most penetrating critique.
The Lesser Evil
There is a horrid fascination in reading this day-by-day chronicle as it unfolds.
Imperialism at Bay
As its title implies, [this book] is more prepared to call things by their unambiguous names.
Cain
Actually a very moving and despairing assault on biblical literalism and servile human credulity.
Lucky Jim
[The author managed] to synthesize the comic achievements of Evelyn Waugh and P. G. Wodehouse.
The Great Terror
Predated Solzhenitsyn by some years in providing a morbid anatomy of Stalinism.
Ecology of Fear
[A] depiction of a coming environmental and societal apocalypse.
The New York Intellectuals
Shows the germinal, contradictory force of revolutionary politics.
The Strange Death of Liberal England
[One of] the two greatest freehand exercises in English periodization.
Victorian England
[One of] the two greatest freehand exercises in English periodization.
The Mask of Anarchy
One of the finest hymns of hate to authority to have come down to us.
Holidays in Hell
We all take some intellectual baggage when we set off, but [this author's], is positively weighed down.
The Adventures of Augie March
[The author's] most superbly rendered fictional creation.
The Importance of Being Earnest
One of the few faultless three-act plays ever written.
Our Man in Havana
[The author]'s ability to evoke a sense of place and time, [...] are encoded in this book as in no other.
A Struggle for Power
A very good history of the general events without which the American Revolution couldn't have taken place or would have taken a different form.
Greenmantle
Christopher Hitchens mentioned this as one of his favorite books in a C-SPAN interview in 2007.
The Prophet Outcast
Christopher Hitchens mentioned this as one of his favorite books in a C-SPAN interview in 2007.
Maps for Lost Lovers
Christopher Hitchens said he was reading this book in a C-SPAN interview in 2007.
The Complete Short Stories of Saki
Begin with, say, 'Sredni Vashtar' or 'The Lumber-Room' or 'The Open Window.' Then see whether you can put the book down.
The Complete Poems
Christopher Hitchens said this author is one of his favorite poets.
The Collected Poems of G. K. Chesterton
Christopher Hitchens said this author is one of his favorite poets.
Serious Concerns
Christopher Hitchens said this author is one of his favorite poets.
Daniel Deronda
Can and should be defended from the faint praise and outright sneering which have been directed at it.
Pale Fire
Instead of making you want to write, [makes] you wonder why you bother.
The Moor’s Last Sigh
One of [this author's] less-regarded but most magical and musical fictions.
Jefferson and His Time
It is an honor, even when it is not a pleasure, to register disagreement with [this book].
The Wolf by the Ears
For me the most various and illuminating account of the slavery question.
I Will Bear Witness, Volume 1
Don't start [this book] late at night, you will not get to bed.
I Will Bear Witness, Volume 2
Don't start [this book] late at night, you will not get to bed.
An Insular Possesion
If my mighty, critical pen could flash from its scabbard and secure a vast public for any unjustly neglected author, it would flash for [this author].
The Redundancy of Courage
If my mighty, critical pen could flash from its scabbard and secure a vast public for any unjustly neglected author, it would flash for [this author].
Whatever
Showed [the author] to be a highly evolved product of post-1960s disillusionment in France.
Atomised
Showed [the author] to be a highly evolved product of post-1960s disillusionment in France.
Platform
Was almost proscribed by law in France before being properly distributed.
The Two Faces of Islam
Argues that in order to appreciate the pluralist, tolerant side of Islam, we must confront its ugly, extremist side.
Animal Liberation
The parts of [this famous book] that I find most impressive are the deadpan reprints of animal-experiment 'reports.'
At Canaan’s Edge
A noble edifice of work about the United States in the era of Martin Luther King.
The Clinton Tapes
[The author] would tape his own memories of [his talks with Bill Clinton] on the drive back home. [This book] is the consequence.
The Meaning of Hitler
You can chuck out your Alan Bullock and Joachim Fest and Hugh Trevor-Roper biographies, in my opinion, and read only [this] relatively short book.
Infidel
Describes the escape of a young Somali woman from sexual chattelhood to a new life in Holland.
Memoirs of an Anti-Semite
Evokes the charms and hatreds of a lost worldβand the enduring contradictions of anti-Semitism.
Snow
From reading [this book] one might easily conclude that all the Armenians of Anatolia had decided for some reason to pick up and depart en masse.
My Name Is Red
[With this book, the author] became a kind of register of this position, dwelling on the interpenetration of Islamic and Western styles.
Armenian Golgotha
I would recommend [this book] of exceptional interest and scholarship.
Rebel Land
I would recommend [this book] of exceptional interest and scholarship.
Portrait in Sepia
The 'subject' is assuredly family life, which is also the tempestuous subtext of much of [the author]'s nonfiction.
Doctor Faustus
The narrator of [this book] is relating his story against the clock, as the German homeland finds itself pulverized and encircled in the spring of 1945.
The Fall of Berlin 1945
[The author's] heart-freezing account [...] of the rape and murder and humiliation that fell on Germans in the territory taken by the Soviet army in 1945.
Complete Poems by Wilfred Owen
I think [people] should read [this author]. In particular they should read 'Dulce et Decorum Est.' The poem that first arrested me.
Borges
[This] biography reaches the heart of the labyrinthβthe intense and wondrous life of Jorge Luis Borges.
The Sword of Honour Trilogy
When you read [this trilogy], you will straightaway notice that the veterans of the first world war are the instructors of the novices of the second world war.
The Ship
The odds in tonnage and gunnery are adjusted in favour of the British side by sheer discipline, pluck and morale.
Coming Up for Air
In these pages, I found some specimens of exactly the lower-middle-class family that was familiar to me from life.
A Clergyman’s Daughter
In these pages, I found some specimens of exactly the lower-middle-class family that was familiar to me from life.
The House of the Spirits
The 'subject' is assuredly family life, which is also the tempestuous subtext of much of [the author]'s nonfiction.