| Title | Author |
| On the Shortness of Life | |
| Meditations | |
| Confessions of a Sinner | |
| The Inner Life | |
| The Prince | |
| On Friendship | |
| A Tale of a Tub | |
| The Social Contract | |
| The Christians and the Fall of Rome | |
| Common Sense | |
| A Vindication of the Rights of Women | |
| On the Pleasure of Hating | |
| The Communist Manifesto | |
| On the Suffering of the World | |
| On Art and Life | |
| On Natural Selection | |
| Why I Am So Wise | |
| A Room of One's Own | |
| Civilization and its Discontents | |
| Why I Write | |
| The First Ten Books | |
| The Art of War | |
| The Symposium | |
| Sensation and Sex | |
| An Attack on an Enemy of Freedom | |
| The Revelation of Saint John the Divine and the Book of Job (type: 'Don't Know') | |
| Travels in the Land of Kublai Khan | |
| The City of Ladies | |
| How to Achieve True Greatness | |
| Of Empire | |
| Of Man | |
| Urne-Burial | |
| Miracles and Idolatry | |
| On Suicide | |
| | Title | Author |
| On the Nature of War | |
| Fear and Trembling | |
| Where I Lived, and What I Lived For | |
| Conspicuous Consumption | |
| The Myth of Sisyphus | |
| Eichmann and the Holocaust | |
| In Consolation to his Wife | |
| Some Anatomies of Melancholy | |
| Human Happiness | |
| The Invisible Hand | |
| The Evils of Revolution | |
| Nature | |
| The Sickness Unto Death | |
| The Lamp of Memory | |
| Man Alone with Himself | |
| A Confession | |
| Useful Work versus Useless Toil | |
| The Significance of the Frontier in American History | |
| Days of Reading | |
| An Appeal to the Toiling, Oppressed and Exhausted Peoples of Europe | |
| The Future of an Illusion | |
| The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction | |
| Books v. Cigarettes | |
| The Fastidious Assassins | |
| Concerning Violence | |
| The Spectacle of the Scaffold | |
| Tao Te Ching | |
| Writings from the Zen Masters (type 'Various') | |
| Utopia | |
| On Solitude | |
| On Power | |
| Of the Abuse of Words | |
| Consolation in the Face of Death | |
| An Answer to the Question: 'What is Enlightenment?' | |
| | Title | Author |
| The Executioner | |
| Confessions of an English Opium Eater | |
| The Horrors and Absurdities of Religion | |
| The Gettysburg Address | |
| Revolution and War | |
| The Grand Inquisitor | |
| On a Certain Blindness in Human Beings | |
| An Apology for Idlers | |
| Of the Dawn of Freedom | |
| Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid | |
| Decline of the English Murder | |
| Why Look at Animals? | |
| The Tao of Nature | |
| Of Human Freedom | |
| On Conspiracies | |
| Meditations | |
| Dialogue Between Fashion and Death | |
| On Liberty | |
| Hosts of Living Forms | |
| Night Walks | |
| Some Extraordinary Popular Delusions | |
| The State as a Work of Art | |
| Silly Novels by Lady Novelists | |
| The Painter of Modern Life | |
| The Wolfman | |
| The Jewish State | |
| Nationalism | |
| Imperialism | |
| We Will All Go Down Fighting to the End | |
| The Perpetual Race of Achilles and the Tortoise | |
| Some Thoughts on the Common Toad | |
| An Image of Africa | |
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