Stoicism is having a renaissance. The ancient Greco-Roman philosophy — which teaches that the path to a good life runs through virtue, reason, and focusing only on what is within your control — has found an unlikely home in Silicon Valley boardrooms, professional sports locker rooms, and military academies.
The reason is practical: Stoicism is a philosophy of action, not withdrawal. It doesn't ask you to feel less — it gives you a framework for acting well despite what you feel. For people navigating high-pressure environments, that turns out to be exactly what they need.
On GurusReads, Stoicism books appear across more diverse recommender profiles than almost any other philosophy. Founders recommend them alongside finance and strategy. Athletes cite them alongside sports science. The cross-pollination suggests these books contain something durable.
How We Chose
Every book here was recommended by multiple verified thought leaders in public sources tracked on GurusReads. We listed both the ancient primary texts and the modern guides — reading both teaches you the source and gives you the application at the same time.
The Ancient Texts
1. Meditations — Marcus Aurelius

The most recommended Stoic text on GurusReads by a significant margin. Marcus Aurelius, Roman Emperor and the most powerful man on earth during his reign, wrote these private notes to himself — never intending them to be published — as a daily practice of reminding himself how to live.
The book has no chapters. It's a collection of maxims, many of them repeated in different forms: you control only your thoughts and actions; everything external is indifferent; practice makes the virtuous response automatic; memento mori.
Why it's been recommended for 1,800 years: The concerns Marcus writes about — ego, distraction, impatience, attachment to outcomes — haven't changed. Reading it feels like reading something written last week.
Key passage: "You have power over your mind — not outside events. Realize this, and you will find strength."
Recommended by:
Joe Rogan • Lex Fridman • Sam Altman • Naval Ravikant • Ryan Holiday • Jack Dorsey • Chip Conley • Anna Kendrick • Austen Allred • Jason Ferruggia
2. Letters from a Stoic — Seneca

Seneca's letters to his friend Lucilius are the most readable introduction to Stoic ideas. Where Marcus Aurelius is terse and dense, Seneca is conversational and funny. He covers practical topics — how to deal with illness, how to use time, how to think about death — with warmth and wit.
The letter "On the Shortness of Life" is one of the most compelling arguments for intentional living ever written: it's not that life is short, Seneca argues, but that we waste most of it.
Recommended by:
Tim Ferriss • Naval Ravikant • Ryan Holiday • Jerzy Gregorek
3. Discourses — Epictetus

Epictetus was born a slave and became one of the most influential Stoic teachers. His core distinction — between what is "up to us" (our judgments, desires, actions) and what is not — is the foundational principle of Stoic practice.
The Enchiridion (the handbook, a condensed version of the Discourses) is 52 brief passages that can be read in an hour and practiced for a lifetime.
Recommended by:
Peter Thiel • PewDiePie • John Piper
The Modern Guides
4. The Obstacle Is the Way — Ryan Holiday

Holiday's book started the modern Stoicism resurgence. He translates Marcus Aurelius's practical philosophy into contemporary examples — athletes, generals, entrepreneurs — to show how the Stoic framework (perception, action, will) applies to modern challenges.
Adopted by the New England Patriots, the Seattle Seahawks, multiple military units, and executives across industries. Bill Belichick has reportedly given copies to his coaching staff.
Key insight: The impediment to action advances action. What stands in the way becomes the way.
Recommended by:
Tim Ferriss • Aubrey Marcus • Casey Neistat • Chris Do • Christopher Sommer • George Raveling • James Altucher • Patrick Bet-David • Steven Pressfield • Michael Sartain
5. Ego Is the Enemy — Ryan Holiday

In some ways the more useful companion to The Obstacle Is the Way. Where Obstacle focuses on external adversity, Ego focuses on internal sabotage. Holiday traces how ego — the need to be recognized, validated, praised — kills careers, relationships, and creative work at every stage.
Particularly useful reading before early success (when ego causes overconfidence) and after failure (when ego causes catastrophizing).
Recommended by:
Aubrey Marcus • Danny Miranda • George Raveling • Mark Manson • Peter Thiel
6. A Guide to the Good Life — William Irvine

The most systematic modern introduction to Stoicism, written by a philosophy professor rather than a journalist. Irvine focuses on practical exercises: negative visualization (imagining loss to appreciate what you have), the dichotomy of control, and Stoic advice on fame, wealth, and relationships.
Recommended for readers who want the academic grounding before diving into the primary texts.
Recommended by:
Marc Andreessen • David Heinemeier Hansson • Derek Sivers • Jodie Cook • Mr. Money Mustache • Phil Libin • Tobi Lütke • Austen Allred • Jason Fried
7. Lives of the Stoics — Ryan Holiday & Stephen Hanselman

Biographical profiles of every major Stoic thinker from Zeno (founder) to Marcus Aurelius. More than a history — it shows how each philosopher lived (or failed to live) their philosophy, which is instructive in itself.
Where to Start
Total beginner: Start with The Obstacle Is the Way — it's the fastest entry point with modern examples.
Ready for the source: Read Meditations next. Then Letters from a Stoic for Seneca's warmth.
Complete picture: Add Discourses (Epictetus) and A Guide to the Good Life (Irvine's synthesis).
Browse every book from this list and see who recommends them on GurusReads.
