Best Books About Stoicism in 2026
Published 2026-06-30·2 min read
# Best Books About Stoicism in 2026
Stoicism has seen a massive revival in the past decade, and for good reason: its core ideas translate directly to modern challenges around stress, control, and resilience. These are the books worth reading.
## Meditations by Marcus Aurelius
The definitive Stoic text. Written as private notes, never intended for publication, it reads nothing like a self-help book. Marcus Aurelius was the most powerful man in the Roman Empire and spent his journals reminding himself that power and fame are meaningless, that death awaits everyone, and that the only thing worth controlling is your own judgment. The Gregory Hays translation is the most readable modern version.
## Enchiridion by Epictetus
Short, blunt, relentless. Epictetus was a former slave who became one of the most influential philosophers in history. The Enchiridion distills Stoicism to its core: some things are in your control, most things are not, and every problem in life comes from confusing the two. Readable in two hours. Worth returning to every year.
## A Guide to the Good Life by William Irvine
The best modern introduction to Stoicism as a practical life philosophy. Irvine translates ancient Stoic practices (negative visualization, the dichotomy of control, voluntary discomfort) into concrete modern habits. He does not just summarize the philosophy -- he builds an actual practice around it.
## The Obstacle Is the Way by Ryan Holiday
Holiday popularized Stoicism for a modern audience. Built around Marcus Aurelius's idea that obstacles are the path, this book uses historical examples to illustrate how turning adversity into advantage is a Stoic principle, not just a motivational cliche.
## Letters from a Stoic by Seneca
Seneca's letters to his friend Lucilius cover topics including death, friendship, time, wealth, and how to live. More personal than Meditations and more conversational than Epictetus.
## How to Think Like a Roman Emperor by Donald Robertson
Robertson is a cognitive therapist who draws parallels between Stoicism and modern CBT. Built around the life of Marcus Aurelius, the book mixes biography with practical exercises. The best book for readers who want structured exercises to apply Stoic thinking rather than philosophical reading.
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