Your dad doesn't read. Except for that one time he couldn't put downInto the Wild. Or when he talked aboutLone Survivorfor six months straight. Or the biography of a coach that sat on his nightstand and was clearly not gathering dust.

He doesn't read books that feel like books. He reads books that feel like experiences. That's a completely different category, and once you know it exists, finding him the right one gets a lot easier.

These are the books for dads who don't read: gripping, propulsive, impossible to quit mid-chapter. No literary pretension. No slow builds. Just stories that grab you by the collar. If your dad claims he's not a reader, one of these will make him a liar.

Also on the site:Book Gifts for Someone Who Doesn't Read— the broader version of this list if you're buying for someone other than your dad.

Unbrokenby Laura Hillenbrand

For the history dad, the dad who likes WWII, the dad who needs proof that human beings are more resilient than seems possible. Louis Zamperini survived a plane crash, 47 days adrift in shark-infested Pacific waters, and years as a POW under a sadistic Japanese guard — and Hillenbrand writes it all with the momentum of a thriller. Your dad will not put this down at bedtime.

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The Boys in the Boatby Daniel James Brown

For the sports dad, the dad who loves underdogs, the dad who won't pick this up and then won't stop talking about it. Nine working-class kids from the American West go to the 1936 Berlin Olympics and have to row against Hitler's team. It should not work this well as a book. It works unbelievably well.

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Say Nothingby Patrick Radden Keefe

For the dad who likes crime, history, or both. This is a true story about a murder in Northern Ireland during the Troubles, but it reads like a novel — tightly constructed, full of characters you can't stop following, with a final act that lands like a punch. Now an FX limited series, so if your dad watched it, he'll want the full story. And if he didn't, this is even better.

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Killers of the Flower Moonby David Grann

One of the most shocking true stories in American history — the systematic murder of Osage Nation members in 1920s Oklahoma after oil was discovered on their land — written with the precision of a great thriller. Your dad will finish this and want to talk to everyone he knows about it. The Scorsese film is good; the book is better.

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Greenlightsby Matthew McConaughey

For the dad who likes a good laugh, a road trip story, and philosophy delivered without any hint of a lecture. McConaughey narrates his own audiobook in a voice that is exactly what you'd expect from Matthew McConaughey. Funny, surprisingly wise, genuinely weird in the best way. This one works especially well on a long drive.

Get it from:Bookshop.org|AmazonListen:Audible← the audiobook version is genuinely special
Into Thin Airby Jon Krakauer

For the outdoors dad, the hiking dad, the dad who watches survival documentaries at 11pm. Krakauer was on the Everest expedition in 1996 when a sudden storm killed eight climbers. He wrote this book from firsthand experience, and the dread builds with every page as you watch decisions that seem reasonable at the time lead to catastrophe. One of the most gripping nonfiction books a reluctant reader will ever encounter.

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Shoe Dogby Phil Knight

For the entrepreneur dad, the dad who watchesShark Tank, the dad who has opinions about Nike. Knight wrote this memoir about building the company from a $50 loan and a car trunk full of shoes into a global empire — and he's honest in a way that CEOs almost never are, including about the many moments he nearly lost everything. Bill Gates called it one of his five favorite books of the year. If your dad has ever started anything, he'll recognize himself in this.

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The Wagerby David Grann

The other Grann book on this list, and it earns its spot. In 1741, a British naval vessel wrecked off Patagonia. The survivors — starving, freezing, falling apart — eventually made it back to England, where two factions accused each other of mutiny and murder. The court martial that followed had stakes that could end in execution. Short, tightly written, impossible to quit.

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The Bomber Mafiaby Malcolm Gladwell

Short enough to read in a weekend, interesting enough that your dad will be bringing it up for months. Gladwell tells the story of a group of idealistic American airmen who believed they could win WWII through precision bombing — and the horrifying way that dream collided with reality. This is the kind of history that makes you see something familiar in a completely new way.

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Friday Night Lightsby H.G. Bissinger

For the football dad, the dad who grew up in a small town, the dad who has complicated feelings about both. This is not a book about football — it's a book about what a community pins on high school kids, about race and class and economic decline in 1980s Texas, and about the absurdity and beauty of caring so much about a game. Still as relevant as when it was written. The TV series is great. The book is the real thing.

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Catch and Killby Ronan Farrow

For the dad who follows the news, the dad who likes investigative journalism, the dad who wants to read something that feels like it actually matters. Farrow's account of breaking the Harvey Weinstein story is gripping in the way that the best thrillers are — but every bit of it is real, including the surveillance, the fixers, and the editors who killed the story more than once. It's about power and who gets to keep it.

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I Am Pilgrimby Terry Hayes

The one thriller on this list, and it belongs here because it is genuinely excellent and almost no one has heard of it. A former intelligence operative. A murder that should be impossible to solve. A bioterrorism plot that could kill millions. At 600 pages, it's long — but it moves at a sprint from the first chapter. For the dad who says he doesn't read books, this is the book that turns him into someone who reads at every red light.

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He doesn't read. Until he does. One of these books will be the one — the proof that it was never about reading, just about finding the right story.

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