Best Nonfiction Releases — June 2026

The most interesting nonfiction books coming out this month

📅 June 2026

June is stacked. The first global financial crash and its eerie echoes today. The longevity industry exposed as a fraud. The cable that wired the world. Animal civilizations. Identity in the age of social contagion. And the origin of the culture wars. Six picks, zero filler.

Bookshelf

I'm Bjorn — 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.

🔥 Hype Check — Vote on each book below. Are you pre-ordering, curious, or passing? Your votes help other readers and show authors what the community thinks.

1873 by Liaquat Ahamed
01
1873: The Rothschilds, the First Great Depression, and the Making of the Modern World
Liaquat Ahamed
History / Economics June 2

From the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Lords of Finance — the story of the first truly global financial crisis. A railway-bond bubble that crashed Vienna, Wall Street, and the Bank of England, killed Reconstruction, and sparked decades of populism and antisemitism. Sound familiar? Reviewers are already drawing direct parallels to today's AI boom. If you've read The Bitcoin Standard or Sovereign Individual, this is the origin story of the cycles those books describe. Named Most Anticipated 2026 by LitHub. The first global financial bubble — and everything it unleashed.

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Morbid by Saul Justin Newman
02
Morbid: Debunking Modern Longevity Science
Saul Justin Newman
Science / Health June 9

This is going to blow up. Oxford research fellow and Ig Nobel winner Saul Justin Newman pulls apart the entire longevity industry — and what he finds is darkly hilarious. Blue Zones? Debunked. The world's oldest people? Many of them turn out to be dead — on paper, anyway. Anti-aging science is awash in dubious billionaire money and outright fraud. Endorsed by Mary Roach. This is the kind of provocative, contrarian takedown backed by serious science that makes you question everything you thought you knew about living longer. The world's oldest man is a fake. Hundreds of thousands of the world's oldest people are actually dead.

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Lightning Beneath the Sea by James M. Tabor
03
Lightning Beneath the Sea: The Race To Wire the World and the Dawn of the Information Age
James M. Tabor
History / Technology June 9

The 19th-century moonshot that wired the world. Cyrus Field's obsessive quest to lay the first transatlantic telegraph cable — an engineering gamble filled with disasters, rivalries, and visionary risk that created the first global communications network and birthed the information age. Before the internet, before radio, before the telephone — someone had to physically drag a cable across the Atlantic Ocean. The story is thrilling, the parallels to today's AI and connectivity revolutions are obvious, and the sheer audacity of the enterprise is humbling. For readers who loved The Beginning of Infinity.

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The Hidden Nations of Animals by Ryan Huling
04
The Hidden Nations of Animals: A Grand Tour of Earth's Wild Civilizations
Ryan Huling (illus. Oliver Uberti)
Nature / Science June 2

Humanity doesn't have a monopoly on civilization. An around-the-world odyssey through animal civilizations — Canada's beaver belt, Argentine ant armies, sub-Saharan tunnel complexes, animal metropolises. Illustrated by former National Geographic senior design editor Oliver Uberti, endorsed by Joaquin Phoenix and Dan Buettner. This is civilization through a new lens — the kind of perspective-shifter that makes you see the natural world completely differently. For the Beginning of Infinity corner of the audience.

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The One and the Ninety-Nine by Luke Burgis
05
The One and the Ninety-Nine: Forging Identity in the Age of Social Contagion
Luke Burgis
Psychology / Culture June 16

From the author of Wanting: The Power of Mimetic Desire in Everyday Life — a deep exploration of how mimetic desire, imitation, and social contagion shape identity, tribes, and belonging in the social media era. The real crisis of our time isn't just polarization — it's a crisis of identity forged in social contagion. How do you form an authentic self when everything around you is designed to make you imitate? Burgis builds directly on René Girard's mimetic theory to explore how to break free toward deeper selfhood. For readers who loved Haidt's work on moral psychology and cultural fragmentation.

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The Perfect Moment by Isaac Butler
06
The Perfect Moment: God, Sex, Art, and the Birth of America's Culture Wars
Isaac Butler
History / Culture June 23

Today's culture war started with a single photograph in 1988. Isaac Butler (author of the acclaimed The Method) traces the modern culture wars back to a specific moment: Pat Buchanan stirring moral panic over Robert Mapplethorpe's photographs. Origin-story nonfiction at its best — understanding where something began helps you understand what it actually is. Same DNA as Haidt's Coddling of the American Mind but historical, provocative without being partisan. If you want to understand why everyone is fighting about everything, start here.

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