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The Philosophy Bookshelf

Answering the one question: where do I start?

PHILOSOPHY BOOK GUIDE

The 5 Best Philosophy Books to Start With
——a reading order for absolute beginners

You're curious about philosophy. But standing in front of the philosophy shelf, you have no idea which book to pick up first — and the wrong first book ends up abandoned on page 30. This page answers that one question. The right first book is, without exception, one you'll actually finish. From an engaging novel about the whole history of philosophy, through a map of the West and an entry to Eastern thought, to a book that makes you do philosophy — five titles, in an order that won't defeat you.

This is the entry hall to our author-by-author sister shops (Descartes, Nietzsche, Schopenhauer) and to section-by-section close readings of primary texts. Once a philosopher clicks for you here, those shops take over. All links go to amazon.com.

RankingRANKING

Our recommended order. When in doubt, start at number one. Prices and availability are on the Amazon product page.

  1. 1 Sophie's World (jacket-style image of our own design) Start hereEntry

    Sophie's World

    Jostein Gaarder (tr. Paulette Møller)|Farrar, Straus and Giroux

    A teenage girl starts receiving mysterious letters — "Who are you?" and "Where does the world come from?" — and the entire history of Western philosophy unfolds as a novel. It has sold tens of millions of copies for one reason: it makes philosophy a page-turner without dumbing it down. The best first book there is.

    Kindle edition available/prices and availability on Amazon

    View on Amazon Read the review
  2. 2 A Little History of Philosophy (jacket-style image of our own design) Entry

    A Little History of Philosophy

    Nigel Warburton|Yale University Press

    Forty short, clear chapters walk from Socrates to Peter Singer, one big thinker at a time. Where Sophie's World tells a story, Warburton draws the map: crisp, reliable, and never longer than it needs to be. The ideal second book — the survey you keep on the shelf.

    Kindle edition available/prices and availability on Amazon

    View on Amazon Read the review
  3. 3 The Consolations of Philosophy (jacket-style image of our own design) Entry

    The Consolations of Philosophy

    Alain de Botton|Vintage

    Six philosophers enlisted against six everyday miseries — unpopularity (Socrates), not having enough money (Epicurus), frustration (Seneca), inadequacy (Montaigne), a broken heart (Schopenhauer), difficulty (Nietzsche). Proof that philosophy is a set of tools for living, not a museum. The book for readers who want it to be useful.

    Kindle edition available/prices and availability on Amazon

    View on Amazon Read the review
  4. 4 The Way of Zen (jacket-style image of our own design) Intermediate

    The Way of Zen

    Alan W. Watts|Vintage

    The West is not the whole of philosophy. Watts's classic traces Zen from its roots in Taoism and Indian Buddhism to its way of seeing, in prose that stays clear where the subject invites fog. The counterweight to a purely Western reading list — and still the most readable door into Eastern thought.

    Kindle edition available/prices and availability on Amazon

    View on Amazon Read the review
  5. 5 Think by Simon Blackburn (jacket-style image of our own design) Serious

    Think: A Compelling Introduction to Philosophy

    Simon Blackburn|Oxford University Press

    Not a tour of who-thought-what, but a workout in the questions themselves: knowledge, mind, free will, God, reasoning. Blackburn is a Cambridge philosopher writing for real beginners, and this is where you stop reading about philosophy and start doing it. Save it for last — then you're ready for the primary texts.

    Kindle edition available/prices and availability on Amazon

    View on Amazon Read the review

Compare at a glanceCOMPARE

The biggest worry when choosing a philosophy book is "can I actually read this?" Choose by difficulty and format.

Difficulty is the editorial room's assessment (as of 2026). Prices and availability are on the Amazon product page.
TitleDifficultyFormat / lengthTypeBest forLink
Sophie's WorldGaarder · FSG Entry ★☆☆ Novel, ~500 pp
~10 hours
Narrative history Just want one book that's genuinely a pleasure to read View on Amazon
Review
A Little History of PhilosophyWarburton · Yale Entry ★☆☆ 40 short chapters
~6 hours
Survey (map) Want a clear map of who thought what View on Amazon
Review
The Consolations of Philosophyde Botton · Vintage Entry ★☆☆ 6 essays
~5 hours
Practical essays Want philosophy that's useful for daily life View on Amazon
Review
The Way of ZenWatts · Vintage Intermediate ★★☆ ~250 pp
~7 hours
Eastern thought Want the list to reach beyond the West View on Amazon
Review
ThinkBlackburn · Oxford Serious ★★★ ~300 pp
~10 hours
Rigorous intro (doing philosophy) Want to argue, not just be told View on Amazon
Review

A reading order that won't defeat youROADMAP

There is really only one way to fail at starting philosophy: beginning with a "proper" book — a textbook history or a primary text — before you know why any of it is fun. First the pleasure, then the map, then the real thing. Three steps.

  1. STEP 1 ── Get hooked (first book)

    Let Sophie's World show you philosophy is a page-turner

    Read the story first and let the questions pull you along; the history sinks in almost by accident. If you already know you want philosophy to be useful, start instead with de Botton's Consolations — six philosophers against six everyday miseries.

    Sophie's World on Amazonor the Consolations review
  2. STEP 2 ── Draw the map and widen it (books 2–3)

    Warburton's Little History for the West, Watts for the East

    Now turn pleasure into orientation. Warburton's forty chapters give you the shape of the whole Western tradition; Watts's The Way of Zen makes sure your map isn't only Western. Take them in either order, whichever pulls you.

    A Little History on AmazonThe Way of Zen on Amazon
  3. STEP 3 ── Start doing philosophy (the goal)

    Blackburn's Think takes you from knowing to arguing

    With the stories and the map in place, Blackburn puts you to work on the problems themselves. Finish Think and the next book chooses itself — Descartes, Nietzsche, Schopenhauer. From there, the author-by-author sister shops take over.

    Think on AmazonRead the review

How we choseCRITERIA

Five criteria. First, currently in print and available on amazon.com — every title has a live product page from an established publisher (FSG, Yale, Vintage, Oxford). Second, the ladder must hold: pleasure → map → rigour, each step preparing the next. Third, not confined to the West — an entry to Eastern thought is included. Fourth, each book's character (a novel, a survey, practical essays, a rigorous workbook) and its limits are stated in its review. The editorial room also runs author-by-author sister shops and section-by-section close readings of primary texts, and selects with the same rule throughout: never let a beginner pick the wrong first book. Star ratings are our own; the basis (first-hand reading and bibliographic research) is stated in each review.

If you only buy oneCONCLUSION

If you've read this far and still can't decide, the answer is simple. Buy Sophie's World. A philosophy book that has sold tens of millions of copies has already had its readability proved by an army of readers. Get the one feeling — "philosophy is fascinating" — and the rest of the ladder climbs itself. Only if you want philosophy to be practical from day one, start with The Consolations of Philosophy instead.

Prices and availability are on the Amazon product page.