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

by James Baldwin
4.5(57,842)
Baldwin's raw and revolutionary "letters" confront America with the urgent issue of racial injustice, demanding accountability for its past and a path toward a shared, fair future.

by Hillary Rodham Clinton
3.9(53,165)
Hillary Rodham Clinton removes her public persona to offer a raw, personal account of her 2016 presidential campaign, her defeat, and her thoughts on sexism, Russian interference, and a new political era.

by Curtis Sittenfeld
3.7(51,170)
Alice Blackwell goes from a quiet librarian in Wisconsin to First Lady to a charismatic, conservative president, navigating the contradictions of love and complicity as she faces the gap between her private conscience and public role.

by Rebecca Solnit
3.9(51,070)
With sharp wit, Solnit examines how men explain things to women, showing its roots in male power and its dangers for silencing female voices, from casual talks to urgent warnings.

by Philip Roth
3.8(48,003)
In an America where Charles Lindbergh becomes president and aligns with Nazi Germany, a young Philip Roth navigates the terrifying descent of his Jewish family and nation into an abyss of fascism and antisemitism.

by Tom Clancy
4.1(46,305)
After a devastating attack on the U.S. government, Jack Ryan becomes president and must navigate global chaos and domestic enemies exploiting America's weakness.

by L.J. Shen
4.0(45,962)
A woman promised to a mafia heir is taken by a powerful senator who blackmails her into marriage, forcing her to navigate a dangerous political world while her heart is torn between two rivals.

by Bill Clinton
3.7(43,964)
From his difficult Arkansas childhood to the White House and impeachment, Bill Clinton openly discusses his life, showing a charming but flawed man dealing with public successes, private struggles, and the constant effort of political maneuvering.

by Edmund Morris
4.2(43,546)
This book follows a privileged, asthmatic boy's journey to becoming the charismatic, trust-busting President who changed American power at the turn of the 20th century.

by Edmund Morris
4.2(43,076)
Edmund Morris's biography shows how Theodore Roosevelt's two-term presidency used 'big stick' diplomacy to handle corporate trusts, global conflicts, and conservation, shaping America as a rising world power.

by George Orwell
4.1(42,697)
Orwell's memoir details his experiences in the Spanish Civil War, exposing the brutal realities and political betrayals that shaped his lifelong commitment to democratic socialism.

by Jonathan Swift
4.0(39,952)
Swift's satirical essay suggests that impoverished Irish parents might sell their children as food to alleviate their suffering and enrich the Anglo-Irish gentry.

by Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
4.1(38,702)
Kurt Vonnegut hilariously and movingly examines the absurdities of modern life and the American mind, while also dealing with his own mortality and place in the world.

by Gore Vidal
4.2(37,958)
Gore Vidal strips away the myth to reveal Abraham Lincoln as a shrewd, melancholic political animal, navigating personal tragedy and a deeply divided capital to reluctantly emancipate a nation teetering on the brink of collapse.

by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
4.3(37,311)
In a Russian town, a charismatic nihilist leads well-meaning but deluded revolutionaries into violence and murder, a prophetic warning about ideological extremism.

by Joan Didion
4.2(37,039)
Joan Didion's 'Slouching Towards Bethlehem' examines the fractured American psyche of the 1960s, showing the unsettling truths beneath the counterculture's facade through personal disquiet and societal decay.

by George W. Bush
3.8(36,679)
George W. Bush recounts his presidency's defining choices, from 9/11's aftermath to the Iraq War and Hurricane Katrina, in the Situation Room and Oval Office.

by Jean-Jacques Rousseau
3.8(36,646)
Rousseau's work questions how governments are formed, arguing that people are truly free only when they agree to a 'social contract' that creates and is subject to sovereign power.

by Plato
4.2(36,381)
Before the Athenian court, Socrates, charged with impiety and corrupting youth, shows his commitment to truth and the examined life, a defense that seals his fate but makes his philosophy immortal.

by W.E.B. Du Bois
4.3(36,131)
W.E.B. Du Bois's important work examines post-Reconstruction America, asking for true equality and an end to the 'double consciousness' that limits Black people.

by Rachel Carson
4.0(35,740)
Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring" uncovers humanity's destructive use of pesticides, sparking a global awakening that created the modern environmental movement.

by Alexander Hamilton
4.1(35,282)
Hamilton, Madison, and Jay defended the new U.S. Constitution, explaining its structure and purpose to shape American governance.

by Sam Harris
4.0(35,172)
Sam Harris critiques fundamentalist Christianity, challenging its role in public life with arguments about science, ethics, and the link between faith and violence.

by Dalton Trumbo
4.2(34,329)
Blinded, deafened, and limbless, World War I casualty Joe Bonham is a prisoner in his own mind, a symbol of war's brutal cost and a soldier's ultimate sacrifice.