There are millions of books in the world and realistically, none of us will even scratch the surface of what is out there. Even the most dedicated readers only end up reading a tiny fraction of the books ever published. That is why choosing what to read feels so important.
Every reader wants to spend their time on books that actually leave an impact.
That is also why lists like these continue to be so popular. They help readers narrow down the endless options and point them toward books that have stood the test of time. Whether you fully agree with them or not, these lists always spark discussions about what books truly deserve to be called essential reading.
One thing I love about book lists is that no two are ever exactly the same.
Sure, there are always consensus picks that appear everywhere, but each publication usually throws in a surprise selection or two that completely catches readers off guard. Sometimes those unexpected picks become the most interesting part of the entire list.
That is definitely the case with Harper’s Bazaar’s list of 10 books to read in your lifetime.
Some of the novels included are undeniable classics that deserve their legendary reputations. Others are far more divisive and will probably leave readers questioning how they made the cut in the first place. That mixture is what makes lists like this fun to go through because everyone ends up having different opinions.
Here are Harper’s Bazaar’s 10 books to read in your lifetime and my thoughts on their selections.
Harper’s Bazaar’s 10 Books to Read in Your Lifetime
- To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
- The Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger
- Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
- Lord of the Flies by William Golding
- The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
- The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne
- Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
- Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë
- Lady Chatterley’s Lover by DH Lawrence
- The Great Gatsby by F Scott Fitzgerald
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
There was almost no chance this novel would be left off a list like this.
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee remains one of the defining works of American literature and continues to resonate with readers decades after its release. This is one of those books that almost universally appears on “must-read” lists because of how powerful its storytelling is.
For me personally, this was the novel that made me fall in love with reading.
What makes the book so memorable is the perspective Lee uses throughout the story. Instead of telling the narrative through the eyes of an adult, readers experience everything through Scout Finch, a child trying to understand the complicated and often ugly realities of the world around her.
That innocence gives the novel its emotional strength.
Even readers who do not normally enjoy classics tend to connect with this story because the writing feels approachable while still tackling incredibly important themes like racism, morality, justice, and empathy.
There is a reason this book continues to be taught and discussed today.
The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger
This is one of the most polarizing novels ever written.
Readers either completely connect with Holden Caulfield or spend the entire novel frustrated by him. There really is no middle ground when it comes to The Catcher in the Rye.
At first glance, the novel can feel repetitive and even annoying depending on how much patience you have for Holden’s narration. But underneath all of that is a story about grief, loneliness, alienation, and the fear of growing up.
That is what gives the novel its staying power.
The themes Salinger explores remain timeless even if parts of the book feel dated by today’s standards. It is also one of those novels where your age dramatically changes your reading experience. Reading it as a teenager feels very different from revisiting it as an adult.
Whether you love it or hate it, there is no denying the impact this novel had on literature.
Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
Charles Dickens is one of those authors that immediately comes to mind when people think about classic literature.
Great Expectations follows Pip as he navigates ambition, love, class, and personal growth in Victorian England. Like many Dickens novels, the book is filled with memorable characters and larger-than-life personalities that stay with readers long after finishing the story.
One thing Dickens does incredibly well is creating atmosphere.
Even though the novel was published in the nineteenth century, the emotional struggles within the story still feel relatable today. Pip’s desire to reinvent himself and climb socially is something readers can still connect with even now.
That said, Dickens can definitely feel overwhelming for modern readers. His novels are long, detailed, and often slower paced compared to contemporary fiction. But if you give the story time, the payoff is worth it.
Lord of the Flies by William Golding
This is one of the darkest books commonly taught in schools.
Lord of the Flies takes a simple premise and turns it into a brutal exploration of human nature. A group of boys becomes stranded on an island without adult supervision, and things slowly descend into chaos.
What makes the novel so disturbing is how believable everything feels.
Golding strips civilization away from the characters and examines how quickly fear, violence, and tribalism emerge when social order disappears. The book becomes less about survival and more about what humans are capable of when rules no longer exist.
It is not always an enjoyable read emotionally, but it is absolutely a memorable one.
The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale feels more relevant every single year.
The novel tells the story of a dystopian society where women lose control over their rights and identities under a totalitarian regime. What makes the book so effective is how grounded the world feels. Atwood does not rely on futuristic technology or fantasy elements to make the story terrifying.
Instead, the horror comes from how realistic the society feels.
The themes surrounding power, control, gender, and freedom continue to spark discussions decades after the novel’s release. It is one of the most influential dystopian novels ever written and remains incredibly important today.
Even readers who do not normally enjoy dystopian fiction often find themselves drawn into this story because of how emotionally intense and unsettling it becomes.
The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne
This is the one pick on the list that completely loses me.
I understand the historical importance of The Scarlet Letter, but I genuinely do not think it belongs on a “books to read in your lifetime” list aimed at general readers.
The core story itself is relatively straightforward, yet the novel stretches its themes and symbolism far beyond what many readers will find engaging. There are pages upon pages dedicated to analyzing the meaning of the scarlet letter itself, and for a lot of modern readers, the experience becomes exhausting rather than rewarding.
This is one of those classics that feels more important academically than it does emotionally.
I know many readers appreciate the symbolism and literary depth Hawthorne brings to the novel, but personally, this is not a book I would ever recommend to someone trying to fall in love with classics.
There are simply too many better options available.
Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
Lolita is one of the most controversial novels ever written, and understandably so.
The subject matter makes many readers uncomfortable, which is entirely the point. Nabokov wrote a novel that forces readers to confront manipulation, obsession, and unreliable narration in an incredibly unsettling way.
What makes the book so fascinating from a literary perspective is the writing itself.
Nabokov’s prose is stunningly crafted, and the contrast between the beauty of the language and the disturbing nature of the story creates an intentionally uncomfortable reading experience.
This is definitely not a novel for everyone, but its influence on literature is undeniable.
Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë
Few novels capture toxic obsession as intensely as Wuthering Heights.
Emily Brontë’s novel is dark, emotional, and chaotic in ways that still feel surprisingly modern. The relationship between Heathcliff and Catherine is not romantic in the traditional sense despite how often the book gets categorized as a romance novel.
Instead, it feels destructive and consuming.
That emotional intensity is what makes the novel unforgettable. The atmosphere throughout the book is incredibly bleak, and Brontë creates a world that feels isolated and emotionally suffocating in the best possible way.
This is not the easiest classic to get through, but it absolutely leaves an impression.
Lady Chatterley’s Lover by D.H. Lawrence
This was easily the biggest surprise on the list for me.
Before seeing Harper’s Bazaar include it here, I honestly had never really come across Lady Chatterley’s Lover. The novel was originally published in 1928 and became infamous decades later because of its sexual content.
It was even banned in several places and became the center of obscenity trials during the 1960s.
That controversy alone makes the book historically interesting because it highlights how much societal attitudes toward sexuality and censorship have changed over time.
From a literary perspective, the novel explores intimacy, class divisions, emotional connection, and relationships in a way that was considered incredibly bold for its time.
The fact that it caused such outrage now almost feels surreal considering modern standards.
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
There are very few novels as iconic as The Great Gatsby.
Fitzgerald’s novel perfectly captures wealth, ambition, illusion, and the emptiness behind the American Dream during the Roaring Twenties. Even readers who have never picked up the book are familiar with Gatsby himself because of how deeply embedded the novel became in popular culture.
What makes the story work so well is how deceptively simple it appears at first.
Underneath the glamorous parties and luxurious lifestyle is a deeply tragic story about obsession, longing, and the impossibility of recreating the past. Fitzgerald packs an incredible amount of meaning into a relatively short novel, which is part of why it remains so widely discussed today.
This is one of those classics that absolutely deserves the hype.
Classics and a Few Surprises
Overall, Harper’s Bazaar put together a strong list filled with some of the most influential novels ever written.
Most of the selections make complete sense. Books like To Kill a Mockingbird, The Great Gatsby, The Handmaid’s Tale, and Lord of the Flies have earned their reputations through decades of continued relevance and discussion.
But the list also includes a couple of surprising choices.
The Scarlet Letter is still a pick I cannot fully understand for a general “must-read” list, especially when there are so many stronger and more accessible classics available. On the other hand, Lady Chatterley’s Lover was an unexpected inclusion simply because it rarely appears on mainstream reading lists today.
That mixture of consensus classics and surprising additions is what makes lists like these interesting in the first place.
Conclusion
At the end of the day, lists like Harper’s Bazaar’s are always subjective.
Every reader will have books they believe deserve a spot and others they would immediately remove. That is part of what makes reading discussions so fun because no two readers experience books in exactly the same way.
Even with a couple of picks I disagree with, it is hard to argue against most of the novels Harper’s Bazaar selected. These books have shaped literature, influenced generations of writers, and remained culturally relevant long after publication.
That alone makes them worth discussing.
What did you think of Harper’s Bazaar’s 10 books to read in your lifetime list? Which books deserved their place and which ones would you replace? Until next time, happy reading! l
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You need to research things you don’t know about. Lady Chatterley’s Lover came out in 1928, not the 1960s.
Before you criticize someone, learn to read more carefully. The writer had said it came out in 1928 and was banned even in the 1960’s
You clearly know nothing about books if you don’t know Lady Chatterley.
If you haven’t heard of Lady Chatterley’s Lover, then you know nothing about books. You have business compiling such lists. Go back to school and learn about the history of English literature.
Yay! Another list of mostly old, dead white guys! Come on, HB, step beyond the syllabus from Brit and American lit survey courses from the 90s, please.
Yes to these authors. Add Melville’s Moby Dick.
Your comments about The Scarlet Letter, and the fact that you’ve never heard of Lady Chatterley’s Lover (!?) exhibit an ignorance that should bar you from publishing these kinds of essays. The Scarlet Letter is one of the most brilliant books ever written, and I read Lady Chatterley Lover by the time I was 17. The list needs to be greatly expanded to include authors beyond the dead white (mostly) male western canon. And I’d question the inclusion of Lolita, whose thin veil of disapprobation does not hide the authors lip-licking, salacious enjoyment of pedophilic fantasies.
Moby Dick was a great movie, but it was hard to keep reading at times
The Scarlet Letter most certainly belongs. This riveting psychological masterpiece with a woman in the central role is groundbreaking and unforgettable.
I applaud the fact that the writer states not having read DHLawrence and the fact they aren’t justifying themself. It’s refreshing to read their truth. Spread the joy of reading, discovery of new authors, encourage discussion/debate if applicable. There are masterpieces written for everyone even if everyone cannot write a masterpiece.
I am also pretty surprised that this person has not heard of D.H.Laurence. Probably not the person to be reviewing books.
I wish reviewers would include Middlemarch by George Eliot it is an amazing story, beautifully written and covering historical times.
No People of Color?
SMDH!
Reading various classics, Thomas Mann seems never to be mentioned. How about ..The Magic Mountain..among many others!
I personally would leave off “Lord of the Flies” and substitute another in that space like “The True History of the Elephant Man by Michael Howell and Peter Ford”, a poignant and searing account of Joseph Carey Merrick. It is unforgettable.
You need people of color on your team to direct you away from only white writers. Your list lacks diversity & excludes great books written in my lifetime.