Books I Wish I'd Read in My 20s

Book Recommendations · ⏱ 10 min read
The 8 books I wish I'd read in my 20s

I didn't start reading seriously until my early 30s. Now, over a decade later, I've read more than 300 books — and I've run into a few of them that made me think: damn, I wish I would have read these earlier. Not because they would have made me smarter, but because they would have changed the way I moved through the world while I was still trying to figure things out.

Your 20s is when you're figuring out your foundations — your habits, your worldview, your relationship with work, meaning, and other people. These eight books address exactly those things. All eight are books I rate 5 out of 5 or very close to that.

Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl

1. Man's Search for Meaning

Viktor E. Frankl
🎯 Why in your 20s: Every 20-something asks "what's the meaning of it all?" This book has the answer.

Viktor Frankl survived devastating Nazi concentration camps and came out on the other side with a simple, devastating insight: meaning isn't something you find — it's something you choose. Even in the darkest circumstances imaginable, purpose is available to anyone who's willing to look for it.

If you're grappling with the big questions for the first time — career, identity, why any of it matters — Frankl offers no platitudes. He offers proof that meaning can exist anywhere, even in suffering. This is the book that crushes nihilism at its root. I've read it several times.

💬 "If a man in Auschwitz can find meaning, what's your excuse?"

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Flow by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi

2. Flow

Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
🎯 Why in your 20s: A lot of people are looking for happiness in the wrong places. This reframes it entirely.

Csikszentmihalyi studied what makes people enjoy what they do and found that the most important ingredient is how you engage with an activity. It's more important how you do something than what you do. Flow is a state of complete involvement — no ego, total focus, time disappearing — and it can be cultivated in any activity.

The insight that stuck with me: turn everything you do into a game. It's easy for me to say because I'm a game developer, but it makes sense. The things that make video games addictive — clear objectives, immediate feedback, clear challenges — are the same things that make life satisfying. Think of life as a vast RPG and you're leveling up your character. This book will guide you how to do it.

💬 "Stop chasing happiness. Chase engagement instead."

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The Denial of Death by Ernest Becker

3. The Denial of Death

Ernest Becker
🎯 Why in your 20s: Most people don't confront their mortality until they hit their midlife crisis. Getting there early changes everything.

We all know that we are going to die. This is the unique problem of the conscious animal. We know it, but we don't feel it — because we need to repress that truth in order to function in normal life. So what do we do? We build what Becker calls "the vital lie" — something that transcends us. Some system of ideas that makes the terror manageable. A flag, a cause, a career, a religion.

Becker's insight is that we are "gods with anuses." We have these godlike minds that can imagine almost anything that is boundless — and then we have these animalistic and very limited bodies. This paradox drives human behavior in all sorts of ways, from our need for heroism to our fear of being ordinary.

I started this book as one person and came out on the other side as another person. It takes you through Kierkegaard, Freud, Jung, Maslow, and Fromm. Each chapter demanded a period of reflection afterward. And here's the thing your 20-year-old self needs to hear: anxiety is the possibility of freedom. A challenging book, but an important book nonetheless.

💬 "The book that made me a different person."

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A Guide to the Good Life by William B. Irvine

4. A Guide to the Good Life

William B. Irvine
🎯 Why in your 20s: The most accessible on-ramp for Stoicism — and your 20s is when you need it the most.

Your 20s is when life is full of drama: career stress, breakups, social comparison, financial anxiety. Stoicism is the antidote, and this book is the best way in. Irvine doesn't throw you in the deep end — he translates the ancient Stoics, the Senecas and the Marcus Aureliuses of the world, into very practical things you can use in modern life.

You'll learn about negative visualization, the dichotomy of control, how to deal with setbacks, insults, and desire. These aren't abstract philosophical exercises — they're tools you can start using today. Once the Stoic framework clicks, everything becomes easier. Rejections, bad bosses, failures, uncertainty — all of it.

One of my favorite books of all time. I wish I read it earlier.

💬 "The ancient philosophy that made me unbreakable."

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Turning Pro by Steven Pressfield

5. Turning Pro

Steven Pressfield
🎯 Why in your 20s: A kick in the ass to stop dabbling and start committing.

Pressfield draws a sharp line between the amateur and the professional. The amateur is addicted to comfort. The professional shows up every day, does the work, and doesn't wait for inspiration. Inspiration won't be there every time you need to get things done — you need to be ready to just sit down and do the work.

This book really got me into that mindset. Sometimes I don't want to make videos and book recommendations. I'd rather sit back on the balcony and have a piña colada. But I'm committed to this, and I do it every week regardless of how I feel. That's what I learned from this book — creativity is actually more about routine and commitment than having the muses on your side.

You can read it in an afternoon, but you'll feel it for years. One of the most important and impactful books I've read.

💬 "Are you still an amateur? This book will fix that."

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Atomic Habits by James Clear

6. Atomic Habits

James Clear
🎯 Why in your 20s: Your habits in your 20s literally build the person you become in your 30s.

The compound effect of tiny changes is the most powerful force in personal development — and in your 20s is when the runway is longest. Clear's framework is simple and elegant: make your good habits accessible, attractive, easy to do, and satisfying. Do the opposite to your bad habits and design your environment so that it's easy to do the right thing and hard to do the bad thing.

The compound effect is real. Tiny changes each day make for compounding effects that make you unable to recognize yourself in a couple of months and years. Atomic Habits is the best habit book on the market. It has stood the test of time.

"You don't rise to the level of your goals — you rise to the level of your systems."

Read this and build good systems in your life.

💬 "The one book you have to read and implement."

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The Almanack of Naval Ravikant

7. The Almanack of Naval Ravikant

Eric Jorgenson (compiling Naval Ravikant)
🎯 Why in your 20s: A treasure trove of wisdom on wealth, happiness, and finding your edge.

When I first heard about this book on social media, I thought it would be another mediocre book of some CEO who just wanted to boost their ego. But in fact, this is just a treasure trove of wisdom and insights.

Naval's concept of specific knowledge changed how I think about career building: what feels like play to you but feels like work to others? Answer that question and that's your edge. For me, it was game development and books. For you, it might be something entirely different. The point is to stop competing and start being authentically, undeniably yourself.

This book has so much when it comes to how to build relationships, how to build wealth, how to be a lifelong learner. It's a small investment of your time to read it and the payoff is just great.

💬 "The book I almost skipped that changed how I think about money and happiness."

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Influence by Robert Cialdini

8. Influence

Robert B. Cialdini
🎯 Why in your 20s: This book should be mandatory in schools.

This book shows you how people influence you — and how you can influence people. Every day you're bombarded with people trying to influence you. If you learn about the cognitive biases, the heuristics, the shortcuts your brain takes and how they can be exploited, you can actually protect yourself because you can identify people trying to manipulate you.

It's also an entertaining book. It's fun to read. The examples are amazing. If you don't know all your cognitive biases, read this book. It's going to help you for the rest of your life.

Five out of five. Mandatory reading. I wish I read it earlier — you have the chance to do it now.

💬 "The book that teaches you how the world really works."

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⭐️ The Common Thread

Looking at this list, there's a pattern: meaning, engagement, mortality, resilience, discipline, systems, authenticity, and self-defense against manipulation. These aren't the "Top 8 Bestsellers" — these are the books that rewired how I think, and I wish I'd had that wiring a decade earlier.

Pick the one that speaks to where you are right now. If you're lost — start with Frankl. If you're anxious — start with Irvine. If you're lazy — start with Pressfield. They'll find you when you need them.