Lindy List: 8 Money Books That Survived 20+ Years

Updated July 8, 2026 · 8 books

A money book still in print after 20 years has passed the only review that matters: time. This list collects eight that survived at least two decades of market cycles, from Clason’s 1926 parables to Stanley’s 1996 millionaire study.

The logic is the Lindy effect. New bestsellers tell you what sounds good this year. Books that outlived their authors tell you what worked through depressions, inflations, booms, and busts. When advice keeps selling for 50 years, it’s because generations of readers tested it with real money and came back for more.

Read these before the new releases. Most new money books are these books, reworded.

Quick Comparison

#BookAuthorBest for
1The Intelligent InvestorBenjamin Grahamserious investors ready to learn value investing from the sourceAmazon
2The Richest Man in BabylonGeorge S. Clasonbeginners who learn better from stories than spreadsheetsAmazon
3Think and Grow RichNapoleon Hillreaders who want the source material behind nearly every modern success bookAmazon
4Common Stocks and Uncommon ProfitsPhilip A. Fisherlong-term investors who want to evaluate business quality, not just priceAmazon
5One Up On Wall StreetPeter Lynchinvestors who want to pick individual stocks and need a sane frameworkAmazon
6Your Money or Your LifeVicki Robin & Joe Dominguezanyone questioning whether the earn-spend-repeat cycle is worth itAmazon
7The Millionaire Next DoorThomas J. Stanley & William D. Dankoanyone who believes wealth looks like a lifestyle upgradeAmazon
8A Random Walk Down Wall StreetBurton G. Malkielinvestors who want the academic case for index funds explained clearlyAmazon

The Books

The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham book cover

1. The Intelligent Investor

Benjamin Graham · 1949

Warren Buffett calls it the best book on investing ever written. He's not wrong.

Seventy-five years old and still the foundation of value investing. Graham gives you two ideas worth the whole book: Mr. Market, the manic business partner you should exploit rather than follow, and margin of safety, the discipline of buying below value. The Jason Zweig commentary in the revised edition translates 1949 examples into modern terms. Chapters 8 and 20 alone justify the price.

Read it if: serious investors ready to learn value investing from the source

Skip it if: you want a quick, easy read (it's dense, and beginners should start with simpler books)

Full verdict: The Intelligent Investor →

The Richest Man in Babylon by George S. Clason book cover

2. The Richest Man in Babylon

George S. Clason · 1926

Pay yourself first. A century of personal finance advice traces back to this little book of parables.

Every rule in modern personal finance appears here first: save a tenth of what you earn, avoid debt, make your gold work for you, don’t chase schemes. The Babylonian parable format is a gimmick, but it’s the reason people remember the lessons 100 years later. Two hours to read, a lifetime to apply.

Read it if: beginners who learn better from stories than spreadsheets

Skip it if: the faux-ancient "thee and thou" prose annoys you (it wears on some readers fast)

Full verdict: The Richest Man in Babylon →

Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill book cover

3. Think and Grow Rich

Napoleon Hill · 1937

The original success book. Flawed, dated, and still selling a million copies a year.

Hill’s research claims are questionable and the mystical parts haven’t aged well. Read it anyway if you’re curious where the entire self-help genre came from: definiteness of purpose, the mastermind group, and persistence as a system all start here. Treat it as a historical document with useful bones, not gospel.

Read it if: readers who want the source material behind nearly every modern success book

Skip it if: you need evidence-based advice (Hill's claims about his interviews don't hold up)

Full verdict: Think and Grow Rich →

Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits by Philip A. Fisher book cover

4. Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits

Philip A. Fisher · 1958

The growth investing classic Buffett says shaped him almost as much as Graham did.

Fisher’s fifteen points for finding outstanding companies and his “scuttlebutt” method (ask customers, suppliers, and competitors what they think) are still how the best quality investors work. Buffett describes himself as mostly Graham plus a meaningful dose of Fisher. Dry in places, permanent in substance.

Read it if: long-term investors who want to evaluate business quality, not just price

Skip it if: you're new to investing (start with Graham or an index fund book first)

Full verdict: Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits →

One Up On Wall Street by Peter Lynch book cover

5. One Up On Wall Street

Peter Lynch · 1989

The everyday investor's edge, explained by the man who ran the best fund of his era.

Lynch ran Fidelity Magellan to 29% annual returns and wrote the friendliest serious investing book ever. Buy what you know, do the homework anyway, and know which of his six stock categories you’re holding. Some examples aged out. The discipline (understand the story before you buy the ticker) never will.

Read it if: investors who want to pick individual stocks and need a sane framework

Skip it if: you've decided on index funds (Lynch himself would say that's fine)

Full verdict: One Up On Wall Street →

Your Money or Your Life by Vicki Robin & Joe Dominguez book cover

6. Your Money or Your Life

Vicki Robin & Joe Dominguez · 1992

Money is life energy. The book that quietly started the FIRE movement.

The exercise at the heart of this book (calculate your real hourly wage, then price every purchase in hours of your life) permanently changes how you see spending. The nine-step program feels dated in places and the investment advice needed its later revisions. The philosophy doesn’t age: financial independence is about buying back your time.

Read it if: anyone questioning whether the earn-spend-repeat cycle is worth it

Skip it if: you're happy with your career and just want better investment returns

Full verdict: Your Money or Your Life →

The Millionaire Next Door by Thomas J. Stanley & William D. Danko book cover

7. The Millionaire Next Door

Thomas J. Stanley & William D. Danko · 1996

Real millionaires drive used cars and live below their means. The data behind the cliché.

Stanley and Danko surveyed actual millionaires and found frugal business owners, not flashy spenders. The finding that high income and high net worth are barely related still surprises people thirty years later. The book repeats itself and the data is dated, but the core lesson (wealth is what you don’t spend) survives untouched.

Read it if: anyone who believes wealth looks like a lifestyle upgrade

Skip it if: you want investment tactics (this is a study of behavior, not a how-to)

Full verdict: The Millionaire Next Door →

A Random Walk Down Wall Street by Burton G. Malkiel book cover

8. A Random Walk Down Wall Street

Burton G. Malkiel · 1973

Fifty years of editions, one conclusion: you probably can't beat the market, so own all of it.

Malkiel walks through every strategy people use to beat the market (technical analysis, stock picking, market timing) and shows why each fails for most people most of the time. Updated constantly since 1973, and each edition’s new bubble chapter proves the old chapters right. The intellectual foundation under the entire index fund movement.

Read it if: investors who want the academic case for index funds explained clearly

Skip it if: you want a short read (it's comprehensive, which means long)

Full verdict: A Random Walk Down Wall Street →

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a Lindy book?

A book whose expected future life grows with its age, named after the Lindy effect. A money book still selling after 50 years has survived depressions, bubbles, and fad cycles. That survival is evidence its ideas work across conditions, not just in one era.

What is the oldest personal finance book still worth reading?

The Richest Man in Babylon, published in 1926. Save a tenth of your income, avoid debt, make your money work for you. A century of finance advice since has mostly been footnotes to it.

Are old investing books still relevant?

The durable ones are more relevant than new releases, because they teach principles rather than products. Markets change, human behavior doesn't. Graham's Mr. Market metaphor from 1949 explains crypto manias perfectly.

Is Think and Grow Rich legit?

It's historically important and genuinely motivating, but read it with skepticism. Hill's claimed research doesn't hold up. It's on this list because 90 years of continuous sales is data, even if his citations aren't.

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