1945 Books
From bestselling novels to critically acclaimed works, 1945 was filled with captivating stories that have stood the test of time. In this list, we highlight the most popular books of 1945, celebrating the titles that topped the charts and won the hearts of book lovers everywhere.
Animal Farm
Written by: George Orwell
Outline: The animals on a farm revolt against their mistreatment, aiming to establish a utopia of progress, justice, and equality. However, their revolution devolves into a totalitarianism as oppressive as the previous regime, serving as a scathing satire on the abuse …
The Glass Menagerie
Written by: Tennessee Williams
Outline: Tennessee Williams's The Glass Menagerie has captivated the American public and launched the acclaimed career of the renowned lyric playwright. This iconic play, featuring legendary performances, is now available in a new edition with a reappraisal by the editor of …
Cannery Row (Cannery Row, #1)
Written by: John Steinbeck
Outline: The book is a character-driven narrative that explores the lives of the diverse inhabitants of the Cannery Row district in Monterey, California, where a group of resourceful, unemployed men, known as Mack and the boys, reside in a converted fish-meal …
Stuart Little
Written by: E.B. White
Outline: E.B. White's classic novel follows the extraordinary journey of Stuart Little, a mouse born to a human family in New York City, as he embarks on a thrilling adventure to find his missing bird friend, Margalo. Despite his shy and …
A History of Western Philosophy
Written by: Bertrand Russell
Outline: Lord Russell's work, first published in 1945, has been universally acclaimed as the outstanding one-volume work on the subject, unparalleled in its comprehensiveness, clarity, erudition, grace, and wit. In seventy-six chapters, it traces philosophy from the rise of Greek civilization …
Black Boy
Written by: Richard Wright
Outline: "Native Son" is a renowned American autobiographical work that chronicles Richard Wright's transformative journey from naivety to maturity in the Jim Crow-era South. This enduring narrative explores the profound experiences of a young man's coming-of-age, serving as a pivotal text …
The Aleph and Other Stories
Written by: Jorge Luis Borges
Outline: Borges's stories explore philosophical puzzles and supernatural surprises, delving into the minds of diverse characters, from a Nazi to a Mayan priest. Additionally, this volume includes Borges's haunting vignettes on literary imagination and personal identity, written as his eyesight and …
What happened in 1945?
Discover what the world looked like in 1945: