1. Man's Search for Meaning
Viktor E. Frankl · 1946
A psychiatrist survives the camps and emerges with one claim: meaning, not happiness, keeps people alive.
Half memoir of Auschwitz, half introduction to logotherapy. Frankl’s observation (those who had a why survived the how) has carried this book through nearly eighty years and dozens of languages. Between stimulus and response there is a space, and in that space is your freedom. Short enough to read in two sittings. Stays with you for decades.
Read it if: anyone facing suffering they can't change, which is eventually everyone
Skip it if: nobody. If one book on this site is unskippable, it's this one.








