Beneficial books
What are the most beneficial books of the past 250 years? Not the best, but the ones that changed whole societies for the better.
That’s a hard question to answer about recent books. Some might suggest Al Gore’s writing, although it seems to me that his winning of the Nobel Peace Prize merely shows how politicized the Scandinavian awards have become.
The further back we go, the easier it is to see benefits. For example, The Federalist Papers (Madison, Hamilton, Jay) and The Wealth of Nations (Adam Smith) were two books that influenced people to make political and economic changes that have proven beneficial. Reflections on the Revolution in France (Edmund Burke) was helpful in increasing understanding of what not to do.
All three of those books are often classified as “great,” but we should also note the big difference between “greatest” (or “best”) and “most beneficial.” For example, George Orwell’s 1984 and Animal Farm aren’t great novels, but they were certainly beneficial as the Cold War began in helping people see the dangers of Soviet totalitarianism.
Other books were also beneficial by pushing people to fight evil. I’m not aware of 19th and 20th century books that had a major impact in fighting Napoleon or Hitler, but Whittaker Chambers’ Witness was useful in helping Americans to understand the evil of Communism. Books by Alexandr Solzhenitsyn such as One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich also helped. Hayek’s The Road to Serfdom was the forerunner of many books that preserved the West from going further down the socialist path.
Lew Wallace’s Ben Hur, a Tale of the Christ, was not great writing, but in the late 19th century it helped lots of people to come to Christ. (Also, the movie’s chariot race is still pretty good.) And that leads me to another conclusion: Since the greatest benefit we can have comes through faith in God, I’d put C.S. Lewis books — especially the Narnia seven and Mere Christianity — on the list, and then add books by theologians such as Francis Schaeffer, J.I. Packer, and John Piper.














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back to top10 Comments to “Beneficial books”
The current books by the militant evangelical atheists are useful as object lessons of what not to believe if you want to be coherent.
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Obviously Uncle Tom’s Cabin and perhaps even The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn were important for changing people’s views on slavery. To Kill a Mockingbird seems to have had an impact in more recent times on people’s view of race.
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Origin of Species
Book of Baby and Child Care
Wealth of Nations
Silent Spring
General Theory of Relativity
Unsafe at Any Speed
Joy of Sex
Where the Wild Things Are
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#3 Travis,
What no Joy of Cooking?
Somehow the Bible missed your list as it did Marvin’s. This is of course the most published and greatest book, if ther is one, of all time.
I also like War and Peace, Atlas Shrugged and about 1,000 other great books I have read and forgotten.
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Llama,
The selection criteria is “most beneficial in the last 250 years”, so the Bible is ineligible.
Don’t laugh, I really did almost put Joy of Cooking on my list! I think I edited it out during Preview.
That damn Preview button. Nothin’ but trouble.
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I had a list of half a dozen influential books, but then I saw that you specified for the better. That’s hard, which in itself is rather sad.
Uncle Tom’s Cabin?
Rousseau’s Social Contract? 2012 will be 250 years for that. My how time flies.
I would add novels like Huckleberry Finn and some Dickens novels. Their social impact has been substantial, and they are beautiful which I hope counts for something.
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Chang and Halliday’s recent Mao – The Untold Story may end up on the list some day.
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1-
Some examples?
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The big picture is great, but it is only as good as the building blocks.
for strong families and Godly character, how about a look up close?
Why Does He DO That–Inside the Minds of Angry and Controlling Men-Bancroft
I went to conservative churches all my life. I was taught not to fornicate, but could not have told you what an abusive man was or a loving relationship!
FoolProofing Your Life–Silvious
Toxic Relationships
Crazy For God-Schaeffer
All to demonstrate the need for discernment at the “lower” levels of life because “Man looks on the outside, but God looks on the heart.” And “out of the heart, the mouth speaks.”
The list is long.
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Anything written by Al Gore and Marx and Engels would have to go down as the least beneficial… their ideas help promote the wholesale destruction of population (ie: people).
Solzhenitsyn’s book have to be up near the top of the beneficial list.
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