The Ten Best Adventure Books of All Time

Going on adventures by reading books is the cheapest way to go on adventures! All jokes aside, reading makes impossible adventures possible and great writing makes come to life in your head. We decided to list the ten best adventure books of all time to see which books deserve the title as the best of the best!

Choosing only ten seems unfair to all of the amazing books that won’t be able to compete with the classics. We created a list for the best adventure books of all time so they got their time in the spotlight. These are the ten best adventure books that have shaped the genre.

The Ten Best Adventure Books of All Time
The Ten Best Adventure Books of All Time

The Ten Best Adventure Books of All Time

Jules Verne Dominates the List

Jules Verne makes the list three times and that is just incredible. The crazy part is that there are some more Verne novels that could have made it here. This whole list can just be books by Verne and Robert Louis Stevenson and nobody would bat an eye.

Other notable mentions include The Call of the Wild by Jack London, Tarzan of the Apes by Edgar Rice Burroughs, and Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift. These are books that shaped the genre and who knows which direction adventure books would have gone without them.

Lastly, The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas, The Hobbit by J. R. R. Tolkien, and Life of Pi by Yann Martel are novels I loved a lot. Not only is it some of the best writing, but the adventures are as crazy as you can imagine!

Conclusion

These are the ten best adventure books of all time and I think they hold up well against any other list. I’m sure some other notable books were overlooked but that is just how these lists go. What books should have been on the list but weren’t? Let us know in the comments below. Until next time, happy reading!

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25 thoughts on “The Ten Best Adventure Books of All Time

    1. Robert says:

      Hmm, the title of the article is “The Ten Best Adventure Books of All Time.” I have to wonder… according to whom? The listed books are all excellent. But, to state that they are the greatest adventure novels of all time is quite arrogant if they are such simply because of the article authors preference. Sadly this trend in internet articles exists to get us to click on the article and be subjected to pages of clickbait.

      Reply
  1. Joyce Fredman says:

    Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass, Kidnapped, The Little Prince

    Reply
    1. Sarah Galdston says:

      I can’t believe that anything by Jonathan Krackauer didn’t make the list, most significantly “Into Thin Air” followed by “Into The Wild” Doesn’t specify fiction….

      Reply
  2. Diana J. Kennard says:

    The curse of Challion by Lois McMaster Bujold.

    Reply
      1. Dustin B. says:

        No The a Princess Bride? Boooooo lol

  3. Anonymous says:

    Robinson Crusoe should have definitely made the list. Endurance and The Martian are not classics but are my favorite adventure stories.

    Reply
    1. Anonymous says:

      I was going to mention Crusoe also. Great book

      Reply
  4. Dennis Grace says:

    Life of Pi? Seriously? What about The Martian by Andy Weir or Roger Zelazny’s magnum opus Lord of Light? And where is Melville’s Moby Dick? Or Mark Twain’s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn or A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court? All of these—every one—is vastly superior to Martel’s Life of Pi.

    Reply
    1. Joe says:

      Agreed. Haggard practically invented the lost civilization subgenre. If not for Haggard, we might never have had Tarzan.

      Reply
  5. Anonymous says:

    My comment was in response to Dennis Grace! Especially Melville.

    Reply
  6. Phil McCracken says:

    The Odyssey is just a poem but perhaps needs mentioning.

    Reply
    1. Ahaqir says:

      It’s in the best adventure books list. I didn’t want this to be all Greek mythology stuff.

      Reply
  7. Mike G says:

    No Kipling? Not “Kim” or “The Man Who Would Be King?”

    Reply
  8. ktc says:

    I like your list quite a bit and agree with most of it. What would I change? Endurance by Alfred Lansing! Even though it’s non-fiction, it is one of the most exciting books I’ve ever read—and I already knew how it ended! I’m also partial to Kidnapped by RLS so in my personal list I might put that on. I think the only one on your list I haven’t read is Gulliver’s Travels. I would maybe drop Life of Pi, though I did enjoy it.

    Reply
  9. 3foot1 says:

    The title, headline or subhead should indicate that the list includes only works of fiction. As is, it’s highly misleading.

    Reply
    1. Joyce Fredman says:

      Yes. Crazy for the Storm — just to name one — was fabulous and certainly outranks Life of Pi in terms of adventure. (And that boy was for real!)

      Reply
  10. Fran says:

    This list of classics would make any one hate reading.

    Reply

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