Aldous Huxley
Envisioning a chillingly plausible dystopia built on pleasure, conformity, and technological control.
Biography
Aldous Huxley was a British writer and philosopher born in Godalming, Surrey in 1894 into one of England's most distinguished intellectual families. He is best known for Brave New World, his 1932 dystopian masterpiece that envisioned a society controlled through pleasure rather than pain. Over his career, Huxley published nearly 50 books spanning novels, essays, poetry, and philosophy, evolving from satirist to mystic. He died on November 22, 1963 β the same day as President Kennedy's assassination.
Best Starting Book
Brave New World
A short, propulsive dystopian novel that remains startlingly relevant β the essential Huxley and one of literature's great thought experiments.
Reading Order
Brave New World
One of the most important novels of the 20th century β a dystopia that feels more prescient with every passing year.
Island
Huxley's final novel and the utopian counterpart to Brave New World β the society he wished we'd build.
Point Counter Point
His most ambitious literary novel, a polyphonic portrait of 1920s London intellectuals.
The Doors of Perception
A short, electrifying account of his mescaline experience that influenced an entire counterculture.
Brave New World Revisited
A non-fiction reassessment of his own prophecies β fascinating to read alongside the original novel.