The Best Nonfiction Books of 2025
Every item on this page was chosen by an ELLE editor. We may earn commission on some of the items you choose to buy.
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As featured in ELLE’s best books of spring 2025: “I’ll be honest: I did not anticipate that a book about a hare would land at the top of my TBR list this year. I can understand if you feel the same way. (There’s so much else going on.) But, of course, that’s exactly the appeal of Chloe Dalton’s memoir, Raising Hare, the reading of which feels like stepping through a cottage doorway into a slower, more meaningful way of existing with the world. (Another way to put it: Reading this memoir feels a lot like touching grass.) As she relays her experience raising an injured hare from infant to adult, returning the leveret to the wild only to find the animal willingly returning to her doorstep, Dalton follows a time-honored tradition of man-and-beast nature writing. But she also provides us with a refreshing gift: a taste of fragility, grace, and trust in a world otherwise drunk on corruption and haste. If you’re in desperate need of a deep breath, this is the first book I’d recommend.”—LPP
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As featured in ELLE’s best books of spring 2025: “Bernice L. McFadden, known for her celebrated novels including Praise Song for the Butterflies and The Book of Harlan, takes an inward approach with her latest book, the memoir Firstborn Girls. Recounting her own history (from her second birthday to the publication of her novel Sugar) as well as her ancestors’ (starting with her enslaved great-grandmother in the mid-1800s), McFadden traces the patterns that have cycled through each generation of her family’s firstborn women, and in doing so, draws parallels to the larger historical context around them. She accomplishes this seemingly straightforward task with a sharp instinct for narrative—and a profound appreciation for Black lives and Black art. McFadden’s voice is sincere and moving, both on the page and in the audiobook, which the author narrates herself. This memoir is a
treasure.”—LPP
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“Matriarch is a rare look into the Knowles family. Over the years, fans have treasured snippets of their lives, from the briefest footage of Beyonce and Jay-Z’s 2008 wedding shown in the video for ‘All Night’ to her memorable pregnancy reveal during the MTV Music Video Awards in 2011. But with her first book, matriarch Tina Knowles gives us a full picture of her Southern childhood, witnessing her daughters’ blooming talents, and her rocky marriage.”—AG
As featured in ELLE’s best books of spring 2025: “In the beginning of The Hollow Half, Sarah Aziza offers readers a jarring snapshot of self-assessment. She scrolls through photos of herself on her iPhone, the device repeatedly asking, ‘Is this you?’ She understands the confusion: The images vary wildly, depicting her at different points in her worsening eating disorder. Eventually, she is hospitalized for anorexia and narrowly revived from the brink of death. In this superb debut memoir, Aziza recounts how her difficult recovery tore down the curtain between her present and her past—particularly a past that took place long before she was born. The daughter and granddaughter of Gazan refugees, she knits together a history of violent displacement that casts a shadow well into her modern-day life in Brooklyn. With painstaking devotion, Aziza assembles memories to reconnect with the resilience of her people—and to imagine a better future for herself and her loved ones. The Hollow Half is a powerhouse of a memoir.”—LPP
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As featured in ELLE’s best books of spring 2025: “Sophie Gilbert, an Atlantic writer and Pulitzer Prize finalist, looks back on the culture of a recent generation and illuminates its ugly consequences. As much as we readers might claim to understand the damage wrought by early-aughts diet culture or the media’s invasive approach to young women of the era, Gilbert’s recollections provide a renewed sense of shock. Mixing in her own memories of being a teen and young adult in the 2000s, Gilbert expertly examines how feminism got to this point—and where it might go from here.”—AG
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“Virgil Abloh reached a new level of fashion stardom when his unexpected death in 2021 shocked the world. Trained as an architect, Abloh rose through the ranks in a way that had never been done before. The path took him to Louis Vuitton, where he became the company’s first Black artistic director and one of the few Black people leading major fashion houses. Abloh’s gift came from being able to look at standard objects and see them in all new ways. In Make It Ours, Robin Givhan renders a vivid and compassionate portrait of the young artist. As my colleague Véronique Hyland put it, the book chronicles ‘the intersection of a man and a moment, a time of disruptive change in the fashion industry, and a figure who was uniquely primed to seize that opportunity.’”—AG
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As featured in ELLE’s best books of summer 2025: “I’m a long-time reader of Maris Kreizman’s work at Literary Hub and beyond, so it was a pleasure to get her takes on issues that have less to do with publishing in particular and more to do with America writ large. I zipped through I Want to Burn This Place Down, her new book of essays, impressed by how much ground Kreizman manages to cover in such a slim volume. Although these pieces are far from comprehensive—nor do they claim to be—they effectively critique many of the liberal beliefs she once accepted without challenge. (These beliefs included, among others, that labor organizing is ‘impractical’ and that cops are uniformly heroic.) Kreizman chronicles her own identity shift from ‘good Democrat’ to a more enlightened one, doing so with humor and a righteous anger that feels present on the page. Charged yet earnest, I Want to Burn This Place Down makes the reader feel Kreizman’s rightful frustrations as their own.”—LPP
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As featured in ELLE’s best books of summer 2025: “A Marriage at Sea was such an emotionally vivid portrait of a couple in isolation that I was shocked it wasn’t fiction. How could a writer get so deeply into the minds of two real people in such extraordinary circumstances? Elmhirst’s incredible account traces the story of Maurice and Maralyn Bailey, a 1960s couple who set off from Britain for an around-the-world sail to New Zealand but become stranded after a whale hits their boat. Their harrowing period lost at sea is so brilliantly depicted that it’s almost too painful to read.”—AG
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