6 Books to Read After Grad School
You read all the time in graduate school because you had to. Now you have the luxury of reading for pleasure. Unsure where to start? Take a look at our list of 6 must-reads that every graduate should read. Pick one, curl up, and dig in.
- Master Studies

Youβve graduated. Congratulations! Now what?
Fret not, graduate! You can still have a vibrant literary life after grad schoolβyou might even find that you miss all that time you had for reading. From common knowledge, to life lessons and novels, find something to whet your palate and dig in.
Take a look at these six reading suggestions that are sure to engage your brain. Kick back and gobble up one of these delights.

1. Common Knowledge
Bill Brysonβs A Short History of Nearly Everything offers science snippets that you may have forgotten, or maybe didnβt have the chance to explore in graduate school. In his quest to explain βnearly everything,β he delves into the history of civilization, the Big Bang, and arcaneβbut fascinatingβquestions from archaeology, anthropology, mathematics, philosophy, science, and, well, a taste of βnearly everythingβ else.

2. The Novel
If you havenβt read Jeffrey Eugenidesβs Pulitzer Prizer winner The Marriage Plot, now is the time. Follow three Ivy-leaguers as they negotiate writerβs block with their theses, tangled romantic relationships, spiritual crises, and the decisions that most of us face at some point in time. Think youβre the only one going through it? Think again. You wonβt be able to put this one down.

3. Office Life
Joshua Ferrisβs National Book Award Finalist Then We Came To The End charts office lifeβthe good and the bad. How well do you really know those with whom you work? What is it about gossip, practical jokes, and coffee breaks that makes office life soβ¦ officey? Ferris offers his readersβand especially new tradsβa poignant and funny look at office life in the 21st century.

4. Dystopia
This genre has had a great resurgence with all of the global political upheaval recently. Hereβs one you should try, especially as a recent grad: Dave Eggers The Circle. Going for one of those high-powered tech jobs at a global company? Just how connected do you really want to be to your colleaguesβreal, virtual, and otherwise? Big Brother, of Orwellian fame, makes an ideological cameo in this one. What are the limits of human knowledge? Of human privacy? Find out. Youβre in for a treat.

5. Organization
Laura Vanderkamβs What the Most Successful People Do Before Breakfast: A Short Guide to Making Over Your Morningsβand Life shows us that mornings are the key to unlocking successful days. She tracks real-life stories and scientific research that shows us why the earliest hours of the day are the most important. Unsure how to structure your day now that youβre out of school? Want to be successful at your new job? Read this book, take control of your mornings, and off you go.

6. Life Problems
Grieving the loss of her father, and her lack of family, job, and home, Helen MacDonald wrote H is For Hawk. Part memoir, part philosophy, and part history of falconry, H is For Hawk takes an original look at what it means to be an outsider, how it feels to be a misfit, and what it means to follow your instinctsβall in the face of lifeβs daily complications.
Inspired? You always have something to learnβand you can usually learn it from a good book. Immerse yourself. Youβll be thankful you did.