Explore our collection of politics books. Discover key insights and summaries from the best titles in this genre.
Showing 24 of 280 books

by Thomas Sowell
4.3(2,278)
Thomas Sowell explains how modern intellectuals, despite often being wrong, subtly influence democratic societies by shaping public opinion rather than directly advising rulers, making them a powerful but unaccountable force.

by Mike Davis
3.9(2,235)
Mike Davis chillingly forecasts a global future where cities, for billions, become Malthusian traps of 'perverse' growth, devoid of industry and development, threatening to transform the planet into an archipelago of ever-expanding slums.

by Nell Irvin Painter
4.0(2,229)
Nell Irvin Painter unearths the constructed and changing idea of 'whiteness,' showing its surprising origins and shifting limits throughout Western history and American identity.

by Oliver Stone
4.2(2,218)
Oliver Stone and Peter Kuznick expose the truth about American foreign policy, from unnecessary atomic bombings to supporting dictators and prolonging the Cold War, challenging the idea of American exceptionalism.

by Ha Jin
3.5(2,160)
As Tiananmen Square erupts, a fiancé grapples with the unsettling possibility that his stroke-afflicted mentor's delirious accusations are dangerous truths, exposing the perilous tightrope walked by those who speak or hear the truth in a volatile China.

by Bertrand Russell
4.1(2,146)
Bertrand Russell's essay presents his atheistic worldview, a stance so controversial it cost him a teaching position, yet it remains a clear look into his thought.

by Paul Hawken
4.1(2,091)
Paul Hawken's "The Ecology of Commerce" presents a new way for businesses to move from harmful practices to ones that restore the planet, showing that economic health and ecological well-being depend on each other.

by Leonard Wibberley
4.0(2,071)
When the tiny Duchy of Grand Fenwick tries to solve its money problems by losing a war against the United States for foreign aid, they win by accident, causing a global nuclear disarmament crisis.

by Carol Lynch Williams
3.7(2,041)
In an isolated, polygamous community, thirteen-year-old Kyra must defy a tyrannical Prophet and risk everything to escape a forced marriage to her sixty-year-old uncle, all while secretly devouring forbidden books and dreaming of a love she can choose.

by Erich Fromm
4.3(2,003)
Erich Fromm examines the 'pathology of normalcy' in Western capitalism, showing how societal sickness isolates individuals and suggesting radical community-based solutions for mental health, love, and freedom.

by Rebecca West
4.2(1,997)
Rebecca West travels through Yugoslavia before WWII, exploring its history, culture, and her own reflections to understand the Balkans' turbulent nature.

by Dina Nayeri
4.1(1,902)
Dina Nayeri exposes the emotional and political burdens refugees face, combining her own escape from Iran with stories of others seeking asylum.

by Arundhati Roy
4.0(1,877)
In post-nuclear India, Arundhati Roy uses her writing to expose power, politics, and the struggles of marginalized people in essays that mourn a lost world and champion the voiceless.

by Sebastian Barry
4.0(1,864)
Branded a traitor for joining the British-led police, Eneas McNulty flees a violence-wracked Ireland and the woman he loves, embarking on a lifelong odyssey of loss redeemed by a final, unexpected act of generosity.

by Karen Hesse
4.4(1,821)
In 1924 Vermont, the Ku Klux Klan shatters a quiet town, forcing a Black girl, a Jewish girl, and their neighbors to face hatred and find strength in unexpected friendships.

by Fletcher Knebel
4.2(1,818)
A Marine colonel uncovers a plot by a general to overthrow the U.S. government, leaving the President seven days to stop a military coup and save American democracy.

by Derrick Jensen
4.3(1,818)
Derrick Jensen connects early 20th-century American lynchings to modern South American death squads, showing the 'make-believe' that underpins our civilization.

by Jawaharlal Nehru
4.3(1,794)
From behind prison bars, Jawaharlal Nehru distills the epic saga of human civilization into a series of intimate letters, guiding his young daughter through the rise and fall of empires, philosophies, and figures that shaped our world.

by Winston S. Churchill
4.5(1,764)
Winston Churchill, with his unique voice and direct involvement, tells the story of the Second World War from tyranny's rise to victory and loss, creating both a historical record and a literary work.

by Adam Hochschild
4.3(1,682)
Twelve determined men in a London printing shop started the world's first grassroots movement, using boycotts and celebrity endorsements to end the British Empire's slave trade against strong opposition.

by Robert Axelrod
4.2(1,649)
Axelrod shows how cooperation can emerge and last, even among self-interested groups without a central authority, through the surprising success of 'Tit for Tat' in game theory.

by Leslie Wolfe
4.1(1,639)
When a rogue drone turns a Florida highway into a kill zone, an executive uncovers a conspiracy of corporate greed and poor leadership behind the very technology designed to protect, threatening to expose a deadly secret that reaches the highest levels of power.

by Amartya Sen
4.0(1,630)
Amartya Sen argues against seeking a perfectly just society, instead favoring a practical, comparative approach to justice that addresses real-world inequalities by considering diverse viewpoints.

by Harry Browne
4.1(1,587)
Harry Browne presents a radical path to personal freedom, arguing it is an internal state, not something granted by society.