100 Most Important Books -
They aren’t just "good reads." They are: ✅ Mirrors that show us who we are (Dostoevsky). ✅ Maps that explain how we got here (Adam Smith, Marx, de Beauvoir). ✅ Weapons that challenge power (Douglass, Wollstonecraft, Solzhenitsyn). ✅ Windows into worlds we’ll never physically visit (García Márquez, Achebe).
Homer. Shakespeare. Tolstoy. Orwell. Arendt. Morrison.
But then I realized: the goal isn’t to finish the list. 100 most important books
Don’t ask “How many have I read?”
The goal is to understand why those 100 books survive . They aren’t just "good reads
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At first, I felt the familiar pang of inadequacy. I’ve only read about 30 of them. ✅ Windows into worlds we’ll never physically visit
Ask instead: 1️⃣ Which one shaped my thinking the most? (For me: 1984 ) 2️⃣ Which one am I intimidated by? ( Ulysses … still) 3️⃣ Which one doesn’t belong on the list? (Let the debate begin.)
Here’s a thought-provoking social media post designed for LinkedIn, Twitter, or Instagram. It focuses on why a list like this matters, rather than just listing 100 titles. A graphic of a towering, impossible stack of books. One small bookmark peeking out near the top. Text overlay: "The 100 Most Important Books. Read them all?"
It’s realizing that importance is subjective. A book that changed your life might not make the canon.
It’s noticing which voices were left out. (Only 15 women? Only 5 non-Western authors on that old list?)