A long flight has very specific book requirements. You want something you can fall into immediately — no slow burns that take 80 pages to ignite. You want something that makes you irritated when the flight attendant interrupts. And you want something you can actually finish, or at least get so far into that you spend the rest of the trip wanting to get back to it.
These are books to read on a long flight: propulsive, gripping, impossible to put down, and all of them the right length. No 700-page doorstoppers that you’ll abandon at page 200 when you land. Nothing that requires you to look things up or maintain a family tree. Just stories that move.
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid
This is the gold standard of long-flight reading. Evelyn Hugo, an aging Hollywood icon, finally decides to tell the full story of her life — all seven husbands, all the secrets, all the sacrifices. It’s a complete world: glamorous, scandalous, genuinely moving, with a final act that reframes everything before it. The book is 400 pages and it will feel like 200. Start this on your first flight and you’ll be devastated when you land.
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Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir
A scientist wakes up alone in a spacecraft with no memory of how he got there, and slowly pieces together that he is humanity’s last hope against an extinction-level threat. The science is accurate and Weir explains it in a way that’s genuinely exciting rather than boring. It’s also funny, and the relationship at its center is one of the most surprisingly tender things in recent science fiction. Perfect for flights because every chapter ends on something that makes you need to read the next one.
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Daisy Jones & The Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid
Told entirely in the format of a documentary — interviews with every member of a fictional 1970s rock band — this book moves faster than almost anything else you’ll read this year. The oral history format means you’re constantly switching perspectives, and the mystery of what happened on the last night of their final tour keeps you turning pages. Great for flights because you can pick it up in the middle and immediately be back inside it.
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Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn
Two unreliable narrators, a missing wife, and a marriage that is nothing like it looks from the outside. Gone Girl is one of the best airplane books ever written — it’s compulsive, it’s twisty, it moves at a clip. Flynn’s prose has a dark humor that makes even the most disturbing sections readable. If you haven’t read it yet, a long flight is the perfect place to read it for the first time. If you’ve read it, read it again — the second reading is its own experience.
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Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier
An unnamed young woman marries a wealthy widower and goes to live in his grand estate — where his first wife’s presence is still everywhere. Du Maurier published this in 1938 and it has not aged a day: it’s still one of the most tightly plotted, atmospherically precise, genuinely unnerving books in the English language. It reads quickly for a classic, and the ending is one of the best in all of fiction. Start this at the gate.
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The Lincoln Highway by Amor Towles
In 1954, eighteen-year-old Emmett Watson is released from juvenile prison and finds two unexpected passengers have hitched a ride home with him — which sets off a ten-day road trip that keeps expanding in the best possible way. Towles is one of the most propulsive writers working today, and this book has the quality of a story that keeps opening outward. Big enough to occupy a full international flight, controlled enough that every page earns its place.
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All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr
A blind French girl and a German soldier in World War II, their paths converging toward a single diamond and a single city. It’s Pulitzer Prize-winning fiction and reads like a thriller — chapters are short (sometimes a page or two), time jumps in both directions, and the suspense accumulates slowly and then overwhelms you. This is the book you read if you want a flight to feel literary and still be unable to stop. Best for longer international flights where you want something with real weight.
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The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman
Four retirees in a sleepy English village meet weekly to solve cold cases — and then a real murder drops into their lap. Osman is funny in the best way: dry and warm at the same time. This is a perfect palate cleanser if you want something lighter and propulsive after the heavier picks on this list. You’ll read it quickly and immediately want the sequel, which exists.
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Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman
Eleanor is methodical, socially strange, and deeply, carefully hiding something. This book rewards the undivided attention of a flight in a way it might not get at home — there’s a slow-building revelation that you want to be fully present for. Honeyman’s pacing is perfect: you’re engaged from the first page, but the emotional gut-punch is saved for the right moment.
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The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins
A woman on a daily commuter train watches the same couple from her window every morning, constructing a life for them in her imagination — until one day she witnesses something that changes everything. The Girl on the Train is designed to be consumed in transit, which is fitting. Fast, structurally clever, and genuinely difficult to pause.
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A Man Called Ove by Fredrik Backman
The only book on this list that might make you cry on the plane, quietly, with your reading light on while everyone else is sleeping. Ove is a grumpy, meticulous Swede who has decided he is done with life — and then his neighborhood keeps not letting him be. It’s funny and genuinely moving and 330 pages that feel like exactly 330 pages. Read this on the red-eye when you want something that makes you feel human.
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The best flight book is the one that makes you look up and realize you’re already descending. All of these qualify.
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