Lisanne Swart · The Bookshelf

Books by Author

Every writer, in one place.

These are authors I personally recommend — writers whose books I have read, reviewed, and think are worth your time. For each one, I have put together a dedicated page with my recommended titles, where to start, and what to expect. Not every book they ever wrote. Just the ones I would actually hand you.

By Lisanne Swart · 22 authors · personal recommendations · Updated June 2026
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01
Fiction Alasdair Gray

Scottish novelist, painter, and polymath. Best known for Lanark and Poor Things — both of which rewrote what a novel could be.

All books by Alasdair Gray
02
Fiction F. Scott Fitzgerald

The voice of the Jazz Age. The Great Gatsby is one of the most read and most misread novels in the American canon.

All books by Fitzgerald
03
Fiction William Golding

Nobel laureate and author of Lord of the Flies — a novel about what happens to boys, and people, when the rules are taken away.

All books by Golding
04
Fiction Virginia Woolf

Modernist giant. Mrs Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, A Room of One's Own. Nobody before or since has written the inside of a mind quite like this.

All books by Virginia Woolf
05
Poetry · Philosophy Rainer Maria Rilke

The poet of solitude, longing, and becoming. Letters to a Young Poet is one of the most re-read books on this shelf — for good reason.

All books by Rilke
06
Philosophy · Memoir Viktor Frankl

Psychiatrist, Holocaust survivor, and author of Man's Search for Meaning — a book about finding purpose in the most extreme circumstances imaginable.

All books by Viktor Frankl
07
Philosophy Marcus Aurelius

Roman emperor and Stoic philosopher. Meditations was written for no one but himself — which is exactly why it has been read by everyone for two thousand years.

All books by Marcus Aurelius
08
Philosophy · Spirituality Eckhart Tolle

Author of The Power of Now and A New Earth. Whether or not you agree with him, he articulates something about presence and attention that is worth sitting with.

All books by Eckhart Tolle
09
Nonfiction · Psychology Carol Dweck

Stanford psychologist and author of Mindset. Her research on fixed vs. growth mindsets is one of the most practically useful ideas in modern psychology.

All books by Carol Dweck
10
Nonfiction · Relationships Esther Perel

Belgian-American psychotherapist and the most compelling writer on desire and modern love. Mating in Captivity is the one to start with.

All books by Esther Perel
11
Nonfiction · Creativity Steven Pressfield

Author of The War of Art — a book about the internal resistance that keeps people from doing their best work, and what to do about it.

All books by Steven Pressfield
12
Memoir · Journalism Hunter S. Thompson

The father of Gonzo journalism. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas is less about drugs than it is about America eating its own mythology.

All books by Thompson
13
Memoir · Food Anthony Bourdain

Chef, storyteller, and the best food writer of his generation. Kitchen Confidential is about kitchens the way All Quiet on the Western Front is about war.

All books by Bourdain
14
Memoir · Journalism Louis Theroux

Documentary filmmaker and author of Gotta Get Theroux This. He is good at sitting with people who make you uncomfortable until they start making sense.

All books by Louis Theroux
15
Memoir Michelle Obama

Lawyer, former First Lady, and author of Becoming — one of the best-selling memoirs ever written. Lucid, warm, and more honest than the genre usually allows.

All books by Michelle Obama
16
Memoir · Activism Malala Yousafzai

Nobel Peace Prize laureate and author of I Am Malala. A book about education, courage, and what it costs to speak when silence is safer.

All books by Malala
17
Memoir · Nonfiction Oprah Winfrey

Media icon and the person who has sent more people to bookshops than any literary prize. Her own writing is candid and worth reading on its own terms.

All books by Oprah
18
Memoir · Nonfiction Primo Levi

Italian chemist and Holocaust survivor whose writing transformed testimony into literature. If This Is a Man is one of the most important books of the twentieth century.

All books by Primo Levi
19
Philosophy · Memoir Edith Eger

Psychologist and Holocaust survivor. The Choice is one of the most quietly devastating and ultimately hopeful books on this shelf — about freedom, forgiveness, and what we carry.

All books by Edith Eger
20
Philosophy · Spirituality Alan Watts

British philosopher who made Eastern thought legible to Western readers. The Way of Zen and The Wisdom of Insecurity remain as urgent as ever.

All books by Alan Watts
21
Fiction Kurt Vonnegut

American satirist and humanist. Slaughterhouse-Five is about Dresden, time, and the absurdity of war — told in the only way the story could be told.

All books by Vonnegut
22
Fiction Margaret Atwood

Canadian novelist, poet, and literary force. The Handmaid's Tale has never stopped being relevant — and her range across five decades goes far beyond it.

All books by Atwood
From the bookshelf

Find your next book — hand-picked, not algorithmically sorted.

If these authors interest you, the full bookshelf has more: personal recommendations, reading lists by theme, and notes on what is actually worth your time.

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