Jeffrey Archer's Top 8 Reads

Acclaimed novelist, playwright and peer in the House of Lords, UK, Jeffrey Archer has spent an illustrious 50-year-long writing career creating bestsellers. In January 2026, he announced that his upcoming novel Adam and Eve would be his last. Here he lists his all-time favourite reads

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Acclaimed novelist, playwright and peer in the House of Lords, UK, Jeffrey Archer has spent an illustrious 50-year-long writing career creating bestsellers. In January 2026, he announced that his upcoming novel Adam and Eve would be his last. Here he lists his all-time favourite reads

Beware of Pity by Stefan Zweig, Pushkin Press

This book is a marvellous combination of writing and storytelling. Zweig was one of the most successful authors in the world in 1938, and then went out  of print, and has now come back to be a bestseller again.

 The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas, Rupa Publications

This is a masterpiece. It’s too long by modern standards, of course. If Dumas was around today, he’d write books of 400 pages. With no television, no other distraction, he wrote books of 1,500 pages. And the staggering thing is that he wrote The Count of Monte Cristo and The Three Musketeers in the same year! You couldn’t do that today!

 The Scapegoat by Daphne du Maurier, Virago Modern Classics

A very clever idea: one man taking over the life of another; of them swapping their lives. And well-written too: She’s a fine storyteller. The Scapegoat combines her amazing talent for observation with good writing.

A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles, Windmill Books

This is the last book I...

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