Most best-of book lists have the same flaw. They list thirty titles in no particular order, mix serious scholarship with pop paperbacks, and leave you to guess which one to open first. Two new ranked reading orders on Skriuwer fix that for two heavily searched niches, and both are arranged so the foundational book comes before the deep dives.
Best Dark Psychology Books
"Dark psychology" is a marketing label, not an academic field, which is exactly why the genre is full of thin, repetitive paperbacks. The honest version of the subject already exists in clinical and social psychology, and it is far more useful. The new Skriuwer guide separates the credible books from the filler.
The reading order starts with Robert Hare's Without Conscience, the book that defined how psychopathy is actually measured, then moves to George Simon's In Sheep's Clothing for the everyday manipulation tactics, Jon Ronson's The Psychopath Test for the journalistic tour of the diagnosis, and Robert Greene's The Laws of Human Nature for the wider patterns of influence. One section also covers what these books cannot do for you, because no paperback turns you into a human lie detector.
Read the full guide: Best Dark Psychology Books
Best Books About Witch Trials
The witch trials are usually flattened into Salem, but Salem was small and late. The European hunts killed tens of thousands across two centuries, and the machinery of accusation, confession under torture, and neighbour turning on neighbour is the part worth understanding.
The new Skriuwer guide ranks the strongest titles and sorts them by region and reading level: Stacy Schiff's The Witches for Salem itself, Malcolm Gaskill for the English and Scottish hunts, and Brian Levack's standard survey for the European picture. A closing section explains how the trials actually ended, which most lists skip entirely.
Read the full guide: Best Books About Witch Trials
Why Reading Order Matters
Both subjects reward reading the framework before the cases. Read Hare on psychopathy before the manipulation memoirs and every later book lands harder. Read Levack's survey of the European hunts before the Salem narrative and Salem stops looking like an isolated American oddity. Skriuwer ranks every book by verified reader review count rather than editorial mood, so the order reflects what readers actually return to. For more curated reading orders, browse the Skriuwer psychology collection and the dark history collection.
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