Best Nonfiction Releases β€” April 2026

The most interesting nonfiction books coming out this month

πŸ“… April 2026

April covers purpose and meaning, the neuroscience of attachment, American philosophy, the science of belief, and maybe the most important question you can ask yourself β€” what to do with a life. Five books. Deep stuff.

I'm Bjorn β€” I've reviewed 300+ nonfiction books over the last 10 years on YouTube (16k subscribers) and X (43k followers). Every month I dig through all the new releases so you don't have to. These are my honest picks.

β–Ά Watch the full video breakdown on YouTube

What to Make of a Life by Jim Collins
01
What to Make of a Life
Jim Collins
Self-Development / Philosophy April 7

You probably know Jim Collins from Good to Great β€” but this isn't a business book. Collins spent a decade studying what to do with a life. He follows remarkable people through what he calls "cliffs" β€” those moments when life gets fractured and you have to reinvent yourself. Two rock musicians losing their band, two public figures rebuilding after scandal, two suffragists who achieved their goal and then faced the question: what now? He studies these turning points side by side, looking for what separates the people who rebuild from those who don't. For the first time, Collins also shares his own life story.

πŸŽ™οΈ Bjorn's take: "I didn't really connect with Good to Great, but this new one sounds very different β€” it's personal, not business. I love that Collins is asking the big question: what do you do with a life? This book resonated with me because I'm at a turning point myself. At work, we're launching a project in April and it's the do-or-die moment for us. I might have to reinvent myself if it doesn't work out. That's exactly why this book caught my eye."
Read if:
  • You've ever faced a major life transition and wondered "what now?"
  • You loved Good to Great and want Collins on life, not just business
  • You're interested in how people sustain purpose across decades
Buy on Amazon β†’
Secure by Amir Levine
02 ⭐ Pick of the Month
Secure: The Revolutionary Guide to Creating a Secure Life
Amir Levine, MD
Psychology April 14

The long-awaited follow-up to Attached β€” it's been 15 years. Dr. Amir Levine is back with a bigger promise: anyone can learn to create a secure life. And it's not just about relationships this time. Levine takes the attachment framework and expands it to everything β€” your health, your career, how you handle social media, even how you deal with job searching. People who operate in "secure mode," as he calls it, are healthier, more resilient, less susceptible to consumerism, and better at navigating the digital world. The bold claim: security isn't something you're born with β€” it's something you can learn.

πŸŽ™οΈ Bjorn's take: "I read Attached several years ago and it fundamentally changed how I look at relationships. It opened my eyes to things I couldn't see before β€” and now I see them everywhere. I can really use the tools from that book to navigate relationships, whether it's romantic, relatives, or even your annoying in-laws. If the science in this book is as good as Attached β€” and I think it will be β€” this might be one of the most important psychology books you read this year. If you like books by Johann Hari, Robert Sapolsky, or Gabor MatΓ©, this is for you."
Read if:
  • You read Attached and want the next level
  • You're interested in the neuroscience of emotional security
  • You want practical tools, not just theory
Buy on Amazon β†’
The Emerson Circle by Bruce Nichols
03
The Emerson Circle
Bruce Nichols
Philosophy / History April 28

A vivid journey into the world of the Transcendentalists β€” America's first public intellectuals. In 1840s Concord, Massachusetts, a small town became home to some of the most revolutionary writers in history: Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Louisa May Alcott. They clustered into literary meetings known as the Emerson Circle, debating democracy, equality, individualism, and what it means to think for yourself. Nichols brings these thinkers to life with their tensions, frustrations, and moments of brilliance β€” reimagining how the power of ideas can change the world.

πŸŽ™οΈ Bjorn's take: "I've been getting deeper and deeper into philosophy, and this just sounds like a really solid book. Not a dry and heavy textbook, but something that can spark your imagination and teach you a thing or two about these thinkers. I've read books about the existentialists, but the Transcendentalists are people I need to explore more. Even though I've read Walden and Civil Disobedience, I want to know more β€” and this is the book I'd pick up for that."
Read if:
  • You're interested in philosophy, individualism, and the history of ideas
  • You loved narrative approaches to intellectual history
  • You want to understand where American idealism came from
Buy on Amazon β†’
The Meaning of Your Life by Arthur C. Brooks
04
The Meaning of Your Life: Finding Purpose in an Age of Emptiness
Arthur C. Brooks
Psychology / Philosophy March 31

Millions of people describe a growing sense of emptiness β€” a lack of purpose and significance. Social scientist and happiness expert Arthur C. Brooks argues there's a reason: rapid cultural, economic, and technological changes have rewired our brains, reducing their ability to perceive depth and purpose. Drawing on cutting-edge science, the great philosophers, and the world's faith traditions, Brooks offers practical, evidence-based strategies for breaking free of the trends and habits that dull your focus on the why of your life. This isn't just a self-help book β€” it's a philosophical handbook for a meaning crisis.

πŸŽ™οΈ Bjorn's take: "Arthur C. Brooks had From Strength to Strength about finding success and meaning in the second half of life β€” it was one of those books that had you rethink how you spend your life. This one goes even deeper. I get a little bit of a Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl vibe from this one. It's also a strong pairing with Collins's book β€” both are about those crossroads where we really have to choose our path wisely."
Read if:
  • You loved Man's Search for Meaning or From Strength to Strength
  • You're interested in the intersection of science, philosophy, and purpose
  • You've ever felt that nagging "is this it?" feeling
Buy on Amazon β†’
The Infinity Machine by Sebastian Mallaby
05
The Infinity Machine: Demis Hassabis, DeepMind, and the Quest for Superintelligence
Sebastian Mallaby
Technology / Biography March 31

A revelatory portrait of the visionary behind Google DeepMind and the race to control the future. Even in a tech world crowded with visionary leaders, Demis Hassabis is recognized as a special case. Born to working-class immigrant parents in North London, a chess prodigy by five, a wizard coder in his teens, he turned down a seven-figure job offer from a video game studio to study science at Cambridge. Not long after, he started the groundbreaking company DeepMind β€” obsessed with the belief that AI would solve the world's hardest problems, change life and work as we know it, and maybe even unlock the secrets of the universe.

πŸŽ™οΈ Bjorn's take: "We are heading into the singularity. I have to cover these books because this will impact everyone's life regardless of what you think about the AI craze. I don't know much about Demis Hassabis myself β€” it's actually the first time I hear about him. But I love the origin stories of these big companies that are now everywhere in the news and actually changing the world as the vision foretold. It feels like part biography, part history of DeepMind β€” and this is an important company. If you want to pick up one AI book this month, I think this is it."
Read if:
  • You're interested in AI, the singularity, and the people building it
  • You loved The Sovereign Individual or Superintelligence
  • You want to understand the origin story of DeepMind
Buy on Amazon β†’

Browse Other Months

πŸ“… January 2026 πŸ“… February 2026 πŸ“… March 2026 πŸ“… May 2026 πŸ“š Great Books List