The ten best-selling books in history, and what I’m reading

March 31, 2026 • 8:15 am

I think the site below was suggested to me by Facebook, but at any rate one can subscribe for free. It’s called 1000 Libraries Magazine, and it specializes in news about books, which of course interests me.  Here, for example, is one of their latest articles whose title was catnip for me (click to read; you may have to give them your email and subscribe):

Now of course everybody knows at least one of these: the Bible. But can you guess the others? Some are obvious when you think about it, but others are not. I’ll list the top ten giving the number of copies estimated to have been sold. Text from the site is indented. I’ll also tell you if I’ve read them (total read: 8/10).

1.)  The Bible. 5 billion copies sold. 

Sitting firmly at the top, and likely forever unchallenged, is The Bible. With an estimated 5 billion copies sold, it’s the most distributed and translated book in human history.

What makes this even more remarkable is how it spread. Long before modern publishing, social media, or mass literacy. The Bible has been translated into over 3,000 languages, carried across continents by missionaries, scholars, and believers, and printed continuously for centuries.

I read this when I was writing Faith Versus Fact. It was a tedious exercise, and assertions that it’s a great work of literature are bogus. Parts of it are good, yes, but I always say that if there was only one copy of the book, sitting in a dusty “reduced price” bin somewhere, critics would claim it is boring—which it is.  Try reading how the Ark was constructed near the beginning!  It is considered a great work of literature only because it was influential, not because it was good. However, the King James translators did do a good job on the translation.

2.) The Little Red Book. 1.1 billion copies sold. 

This one surprises many people. Officially titled Quotations from Chairman Mao ZedongThe Little Red Book reached 1.1 billion copies sold, largely during China’s Cultural Revolution.

It wasn’t sold in the traditional sense. It was distributed, required reading, and a political tool. At one point, owning a copy wasn’t optional; it was a social expectation.

I haven’t read it.

3.) The Qur’an.  800 million copies sold. 

As the central religious text of Islam, the Quran has sold an estimated 800 million copies worldwide.

Muslims believe it to be the literal word of God, revealed in Arabic, which is why translations are often considered interpretations rather than replacements. Like the Bible, it’s recited, memorized, studied, and revered, not just read once and shelved.

Yes, I read it, also when writing Faith Versus Fact. It’s not only boring like the Bible, but filled with more animosity, bellicosity, and hatred than you can imagine. I was surprised that so few copies were sold: there are nearly as many Muslims as there are Christians on the planet, but their sacred book has sold less than 20% as much as the Bible.

4.) The Bhagavad Gita. 503 million copies sold. 

Part philosophy, part spiritual guide, part epic dialogue, The Bhagavad Gita has sold over 503 million copies.

Embedded within the Indian epic Mahabharata, this relatively short text explores duty, morality, devotion, and the nature of life itself. It has inspired thinkers from Mahatma Gandhi to modern self-help writers.

Yes, I read this, but simply because it was touted as a work of philosophy and because it had a big influence on India, a country I love. I thought it was definitely worth reading. I have not read the entire Mahabarata.

Robert Oppenheimer certainly read at least the Bhagavad Gita (and in the original Sanskrit!), for he gave a famous quote from it when the atomic bomb was successfully tested in New Mexico. Here’s what he said to NBC in 1965:

“I remembered the line from the Hindu scripture, the Bhagavad-Gita; Vishnu [a principal Hindu deity] is trying to persuade the prince that he should do his duty, and to impress him, takes on his multi-armed form and says, “Now I have become death, the destroyer of the worlds’. I suppose we all thought that, one way or another.”

5.) Don Quixote. 5oo million copies sold.

Often called the first modern novel, Don Quixote has galloped its way to 500 million copies sold since its publication in 1605.

Written by Miguel de Cervantes, this satirical tale of a delusional knight tilting at windmills is hilarious, tragic, and surprisingly modern. It pokes fun at idealism while also celebrating imagination, a tricky balance Cervantes somehow nailed, even way back then.

Yep, I’ve read it, and found it good but not great. My bad.

6.) A Tale of Two Cities. 200 million copies sold. 

“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times…” and apparently, it was also one of the most read. Set during the French Revolution, A Tale of Two Cities has sold 200 million copies, making it Charles Dickens’ bestselling novel.

Yes, I read it, but think there are better works by Dickens, like Bleak House or David Copperfield.

7.) The Little Prince.  200 million copies sold. 

The Little Prince has sold 200 million copies and remains one of the most translated works ever written. On the surface, it’s a children’s story. Underneath, it’s a poetic meditation on love, loneliness, and what really matters.

It’s the kind of book people reread at different stages of life, and somehow find something new each time.

Yes, I read it—twice, once when younger and once when I was over 40.  I didn’t find much new the second time, and thought it was sappy. Sue me.

8.) The Book of Mormon. 190 million copies sold.

With 190 million copies sold, The Book of Mormon stands as another major religious text with global reach.

Published in 1830, it forms the foundation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Its distribution has been driven largely by missionary efforts, making it one of the most actively shared books in modern history.

Yep, I read it, again while writing Faith Versus Fact. It’s a straight ripoff of the Bible, confected not by God but by Joseph Smith, who apparently loved the phrase, “And so it came to pass.” The only part worth reading are the two “testimonies” at the beginning, with 11 people swearing that they actually saw the golden plates. They were all lying. Here’s the second testimony (you can see the whole book here).  Given the fraudlent way the book came to be, I always question, the credibility of Mormons who think it’s true.

9.) The Lord of the Rings. 155 million copies sold.

One epic fantasy, three volumes, and 155 million copies sold.

J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle-earth saga didn’t just entertain readers; it redefined fantasy as a genre. Elves, hobbits, detailed world-building, invented languages… all roads lead back to The Lord of the Rings.

Of course I’ve read it—who hasn’t?  I watched part of one of the movies, and was not engaged, since I had the scenery and the characters in my mind from reading the book, and the movie didn’t match, though Gollum was good.  The Hobbit is also an essential part of the Tolkien experience. You have to admire Tolkien for creating an entire fantasy world, complete with its own language—all while he was a professor.

10.) The Alchemist. 150 million copies sold.

Rounding out the list is The Alchemist, with 150 million copies sold. It stands as proof that modern books can still join legendary company.

Paulo Coelho’s spiritual fable about following your dreams resonates across cultures and ages. It’s short, simple, and endlessly quotable, a book people gift, recommend, and return to when they’re feeling lost.

This, along with The Little Red Book, is one of the two out of ten that I haven’t read. In fact, I haven’t even heard of it until now, though it was published in 1988, so I looked it up on Wikipedia. Here’s part of what I read:

The Alchemist (Portuguese: O Alquimista) is a novel by Brazilian author Paulo Coelho which was first published in 1988. Originally written in Portuguese, it became a widely translated international bestseller. The story follows Santiago, a shepherd boy, in his journey across North Africa to the Egyptian pyramids after he dreams of finding treasure there. It has since been translated into more than 65 languages and has sold more than 150 million copies worldwide.  In 2009, Paulo Coelho was recognized by the Guinness World Records as the world’s most translated living author.

. . . The book’s main theme is about finding one’s destiny, although according to The New York TimesThe Alchemist is “more self-help than literature”. The advice given to Santiago that “when you really want something to happen, the whole universe will conspire so that your wish comes true” is the core of the novel’s thinking. Coelho originally wrote The Alchemist in only two weeks, explaining later that he was able to work at this pace because the story was “already written in [his] soul.”

The NYT take, archived, is here. where Will Smith, who likes the book, calls it “real metaphysical, esoteric nonsense.”  I don’t think I’ll be reading it: life is too short. But if you have read it, weigh in below. The author must be bloody rich!


I’ve recently finished three books, all recommended by my erstwhile editor at Viking Penguin, who knows her books. I enjoyed them all, and I’m reading another book now in preparation for travel (the last below):

We Don’t Know Ourselves:  A Personal History of Ireland Since 1958, published in 2021 Fintan O’Toole. I wouldn’t have thought I’d be engrossed by a history of modern Ireland, but this book did the job. O’Toole, a respected Irish journalist and drama critic, decided to recount the modern history of Ireland from the year he was born up to the time of publication, with each chapter encompassing a period of time.  As I said, I really liked the book and learned a ton, especially about the entangled and convoluted history of the Catholic Church and Irish politics during this period.  Even in O’Toole’s youth and young manhood, the Church was enslaving children and unwed pregnant mothers, engaging in financial misdealings with the government, and oppressing the Irish (condoms were legalized only for married people in 1979, and for the unmarried in 1985; while abortions were illegal until just seven years ago).  That the Irish came through all this shows their resilience.

Empire of the Sun, published in 1984 novel by the English writer J. G. Ballard. This is a “fictionalized biography” based on Ballard’s experiences as a youth in China when he was separated from his parents and interred in a Japanese prison camp near Shanghai for some years.  The resourcefulness of Ballard, insofar as his depiction is true, is amazing, and the book engrossing. I gather that it was turned into a very successful 1987 film with a screenplay by Tom Stoppard and directed by Stephen Spielberg. You can’t do better than that pair. I must see the movie. However, I found I have a bit of a problem with biography turned into fiction, as I get distracted trying to separate truth from imagination.  I should just let that endeavor go, but it somehow interrupts my reading.

Running in the Family by Michael Ondaatje, published in 1982. Ondaatje wrote the Booker-Prize-winning novel The English Patient, while Running in the Family is a somewhat fictionalized memoir of his youth in Sri Lanka and of two subsequent visits he made there as an adult. It seems to be more truthful than the two books above in terms of recounting what happened, and the characters are surely somewhat accurate, though bizarre. It suffers a bit in talking about only the rich, English-associated people of the country, so one doesn’t learn anything about the Sri Lankans (then “Sinhalese”) themselves. But as a portrait of upper-class “colonialist” life in the country it is colorful and absorbing.

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt (1994).  I am visiting Savannah in mid-April with some old friends, and was told to read this book as preparation. It’s another “nonfiction novel,” about which Wikipedia says this:

The book’s plot is based on real-life events that occurred in the 1980s and is classified as non-fiction. Because it reads like a novel (and rearranges the sequence of true events in time), it is sometimes referred to as a “non-fiction novel.”

The characters are unbelievably colorful and eccentric, but they were apparently like that in real life. So far I’ve read about 120 pages and haven’t gotten into the main plot, but already the setting has made me eager to go to a renowned and beautiful city that I’ve never visited.

This of course is also a prompt for readers to let us know what they’ve read lately, and whether they liked it (I get a lot of suggestions from such comments). Your turn.

20 thoughts on “The ten best-selling books in history, and what I’m reading

  1. I’m reading Every Living Thing by Jason Roberts. It is an absorbing compare and contrast biographical account of two individuals, born in the same year, who both described the natural world in very different ways. One of these figures is Carl Linnaeus, who in his Systema Naturae created the taxonomic system we use today. The other figure is George-Louis Leclerc de Buffon, whose Histoire Natural also described species of plants, animals, and inorganic materials, but with a different mindset that resisted placement of species into fixed discontinuous units. The book is a fascinating look into two towering intellects of the Enlightenment.

  2. Thanks for reminding me of the Fintan O’Toole book which I’ve had on my Kindle for a couple of years. I’ve read the other three, and liked them. In preparation for visiting Newfoundland in June, I just read Wayne Johnston’s The Colony of Unrequited Dreams, which is excellent! It’s about Joey Smallwood, who became Newfoundland’s first Premier when Nfld joined Canada as a province in 1949.

  3. I guess I am surprised that more copies of Lord of the Rings haven’t been sold. It would be interesting to know (but it would be unknowable) how many of the books on the list were sold (or distributed) and never read. Nothing I am reading at the moment is worth recommending; they are all too specialized.

  4. I just finished State of Wonder by ann Patchett. I picked it up because I’m a big fan of Heart of Darkness and because I am now writing a novel that has a similar mix of ‘science and fiction’ although I’d like to think I have created a more realistic — but perhaps less colorful — scientific world. I’ve read many of her books and always find her an engaging writer able to create beautiful imagery although sometimes I find her characters a bit flat. In this case the main protagonist, Marina, seems rather too passive — she maddeningly seems to go along with every request and doesn’t act in her own interest. I suppose she is supposed to be under the sway of first her boss/lover and then the enigmatic professor/mentor leading the expedition, yet neither of them seem charismatic enough to warrant this devotion. I would suppose this is the main point of this character but it is a hard POV to inhabit for an entire novel. Other than that it is definitely worth reading for some of the descriptions of the tropics alone although some of the passages about the (fictional, I believe) native peoples may be a bit cringey.

  5. Three book recommendations: Seymour Drescher: “Abolition: a history of slavery and anti slavery”. And if you haven’t read them, Kidnapped, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Kipling’s Kim.

    1. I don’t know the first; but I totally agree on Kidnapped and Kim.

      I was skeptical about Kim (Kipling, that old racist colonialist! Not so much …) but really loved it.

  6. As PCCE likes the word “Pecksniff,” he may be glad to know that I just finished Martin Chuzzlewit. I chose it because I’ve read all of Dickens’s great novels, leaving the not-so-great ones if I want to read the complete bibliography. It wasn’t bad, but it doesn’t rank with my 2 favorite from Dickens, Great Expectations and Bleak House.

  7. I just finished “Nagasaki” by M.G. Sheftall, a book about the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, focused on stories told by survivors. Together with his earlier “Hiroshima”, a fantastic, moving read. Also recommended in the same vein: the Barefoot Gen graphic novel series.

  8. I had somehow thought “The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne” by Gilbert White would make the list. I have been unable to find any estimate of the number of copies sold, but it has apparently gone through more than 300 editions since its first publication in 1789. Even if it didn’t sell 150 million copies, that is a lot of editions for a book on a seemingly fringe topic.

  9. “We Don’t Know Ourselves” is excellent. I lived in Ireland in 2014 and I wish I’d known recent Irish history before I went – the country has come a long way in the last 50-60 years. For a contrast, read Heinrich Boll’s “Irish Journal” (1957).

    I’m surprised you had never heard of “The Alchemist”. Awareness of this book seems to have been forced upon me from all directions for many years. (And, no, it’s not on my list to read.)

  10. bit of a twitter spat a while ago about some author surpassing jk Rowling in book sales. we’re talking about sales of over 600 million. but Agatha Christie has sold between an estimated 2 – 4 billion books.

  11. As it happens, The Silmarillion, Tolkien’s backstory. Bit of a slog, lots of “It came to pass…” Really only for nerds.

  12. The first book in the Harry Potter series sold 120 million copies. It could take the tenth spot in a few years.

  13. The Bible and the Qur’an are slogs, and rarely edifying. I simply cannot see how anyone can claim they are “great works of literature.” The Brothers Karamazov has much more depth and insight into morality and the nature of the divine.

    And when I reread the Bible several years ago, I was struck by how bizarre it is, particularly the New Testament. Not much of what Jesus says makes any sense unless you believe that the world is going to end soon. There is no philosophical argumentation, only assertion. His moral preachments are either restatements of the OT, or complete detachment and lack of concern around the material world (which again makes sense if one believes its all going to end soon.)

    In other words, Christianity is a very weird, impractical religion, and I can see why it was obscure for centuries after its founder died.

    1. The non-sloggy bits of the King James Version of the Bible are pretty good literature. Just ask Shakespear. Look up how may pithy expressions we still use came from it (mostly via Shakespear).

      Not a fan of either scripture; but the KJV has had a huge influence.

  14. I recommend Terry Pratchett’s Discworld novels to anyone who enjoys quirky fantasy novels with a touch of humor.

  15. Recent reads:

    I Seek a Kind Person by Julian Borger. Excellent Holocaust memoir. About children saved from Austria in 1938 by ads in UK papers.

    Deep River by Karl Marlantes, excellent novel of the Pacific Northwest and Finnish immigrants. (Also his Matterhorn about combat in Vietnam.)

    Notes on Being a Man by Scott Galloway, very good

    Berlin Diary by William Shirer. Recently re-read: Wonderful

    Gemini by Jeffrey Kluger, excellent book about a program no one remembers

  16. Hot take…many of the great American novelists are overrated. This year I read books by Sinclair Lewis (Babbitt), William Faulkner (Abasalom, Abasalom!), and I reread The Great Gatsby.

    Babbitt was dull, Faulkner’s writing style was “stream of consciousness”, which to me is a euphemism for “poorly organized”, and The Great Gatsby was about as subtle as a sledgehammer in its attempt at social commentary.

    To me, these books don’t come anywhere near A Tale of Two Cities, which several commentators have (correctly) pointed out is not even Dickens’ best work.

    So I’m switching back primarily to UK writers (it is their language after all) and also the great Russian novelists, who seem to be able to plumb the depths of the human condition in a unique way that stays with me long after I’d read the novel.

    But, I am not as well read as many here so happy to have recommendations of good American authors on the level of a Dickens, Nabokov, or Austen.

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