• Home
  • Features
  • Writers
  • Readings
  • Book
  • Library
  • Podcasts
  • Top Ten
  • Reviews

When autocomplete results are available use up and down arrows to review and enter to go to the desired page. Touch device users, explore by touch or with swipe gestures.

April 26, 2018 by Madelyn Chen

Top 10 Wikipedia Entries of Top 100 Bestsellers of All Time (According to Wikipedia)

Along with such classics like War and Peace and Catcher in the Rye, esteemed literature like What Would Jesus Do? and Как закалялась сталь dominate Wikipedia’s bestsellers list. Even more illuminating are the entries for these time-tested masterpieces, which, unlike Sparknotes or exhaustive Wikipedia entries, won’t make you feel like you’ve read the entire book in a few minutes for an exam or essay. Scroll through these Top 10 worst Wikipedia entries of top bestsellers for a pinch of salt and abundant hope that your next novel can sell millions of copies.

  1. You Can Heal Your Life

Author: Louise Hay

Bestseller Rank /Approximate Sales: 27 / 50 million

Summary of Wikipedia entry: Using tools like mirror work and affirmations, diseases can be healed by emotional thought patterns.

Fun fact from the Wikipedia entry: “The theories described in this book have been criticized as groundless by proponents of evidence based medicine. Specific passages within Hay’s book appear to violate established medical fact… Hay has also been criticized for ‘blaming the victim’ by suggesting that AIDS sufferers are causing their own illness due to poor mental attitude. It is noteworthy that despite claiming for decades that positive attitude can defeat AIDS, she has not been able to demonstrate any examples of this happening.”

  1. In His Steps: What Would Jesus Do?

Author: Charles M. Sheldon

Bestseller Rank /Approximate Sales: 60 / 30 million

Summary of Wikipedia entry: The title gives away the plot—a congregation asks themselves “What would Jesus do” before every action.

Fun fact from the Wikipedia entry: “[The sequel Jesus is Here’s] recurring phrase, used in description of Jesus, is: ‘Like an average man. Only different.’”

  1. Think and Grow Rich

Author: Napoleon Hill

Bestseller Rank /Approximate Sales: 23 / 60 million

Summary of Wikipedia entry: How to think and grow rich.

Fun fact from the Wikipedia entry: “While the book’s title and much of the text concerns increased income, the author insists that the philosophy taught in the book can help people succeed in any line of work, to do and be anything they can imagine.”

  1. The Late, Great Planet Earth

Author: Hal Lindsey, C. C. Carlson

Bestseller Rank /Approximate Sales: 56 / 35 million

Summary of Wikipedia entry: A treatment of “literalist, premillennial, dispensational eschatology.” Translation: analyzes prophecies about the end times.

Fun fact from the Wikipedia entry: “Lindsey also predicted that the European Economic Community, which preceded the European Union, was destined (according to Biblical prophecy) to become a “United States of Europe”, which in turn he says is destined to become a “Revived Roman Empire” ruled by the Antichrist.”

  1. The Celestine Prophecy

Author: James Redfield

Bestseller Rank /Approximate Sales: 73 / 23 million

Summary of Wikipedia entry: Discusses psychological and spiritual ideas rooted in ancient Eastern traditions.

Fun fact from the Wikipedia entry: “Redfield originally self-published The Celestine Prophecy, selling 100,000 copies out of the trunk of his Honda before Warner Books agreed to publish it.”

  1. The Purpose Driven Life

Author: Rick Warren

Bestseller Rank /Approximate Sales: 64 / 30 million

Summary of Wikipedia entry: A blueprint for Christian living in the 21st century, with daily inspiration.

Fun fact from the Wikipedia entry: “NFL legend Ray Lewis gave the book to 23 time Olympic goal medalist Michael Phelps when he went to rehab. Phelps read the book daily while in rehab.”

  1. The Ginger Man

Author: J. P. Donleavy

Bestseller Rank /Approximate Sales: 39 / 50 million

Summary of Wikipedia entry: A novel describing sexual encounters that was originally banned in Ireland and America for obscenity.

Fun fact from the Wikipedia entry: “In his 1994 autobiography The History of The Ginger Man, Donleavy wrote, ‘I smashed my fist upon its green cover format, published as it was in the pseudonymous and pornographic Traveller’s Companion Series, and I declared aloud, ‘If it’s the last thing I ever do, I will avenge this book.’”

  1. Как закалялась сталь (How the Steel Was Tempered)

Author: Nikolai Ostrovsky

Bestseller Rank / Approximate Sales: 52 / 36.4 million

Summary of Wikipedia entry: A fictionalized autobiography of the author’s life—in real life, the author fought with the Red Army and lost his right eye during the Russian Civil War.

Fun fact from the Wikipedia entry: “In China, the novel was adapted into a television series of the same title in 2000; all the members of the cast were from Ukraine.”

  1. Your Erroneous Zones

Author: Wayne Dyer

Bestseller Rank /Approximate Sales: 55 / 35 million

Summary of Wikipedia entry: Self-help book with no plot summary, only a section for criticism and an accusation of plagiarism.

Fun fact from the Wikipedia entry: “Ellis admonishes Dyer for unethically and unprofessionally not giving Ellis credit as the book’s primary source, but expressed overall gratitude for Dyer’s work.”

  1. Vardi Wala Gunda

Author: Ved Prakash Sharma

Bestseller Rank /Approximate Sales: 14 / 80 million

Summary of Wikipedia entry: Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name.

Fun fact from the Wikipedia entry: “Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name”

Previous articleTop 10 podcast Episodes Worth Listening ToNext article (Top) 10 Sketches of Ohio

Could Have Sworn

Could Have Sworn is a literary magazine dedicated to the present: we publish a range of works across a variety of media: we are unapologetically eclectic.

Recent Posts

Summer Reading List!~!June 7, 2018
Personal Summer Reading List- Polly AlarconJune 7, 2018
Things I May or May Not Read This SummerJune 7, 2018

Categories

  • Interviews
  • Post
  • Reviews
  • Summer Reads
  • Top Ten
  • Uncategorized

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Tags

Agency Apollo13 bird environment humor i'm ready Information life list tbh list music philosophy poetry pop culture Popular reading reading list reviews summer summerreadinglist summer reading list top ten WordPress

Could Have Sworn

Could Have Sworn is a collectively produced literary magazine originating in Los Angeles in 2018.

We are committed to eclectic approaches to the literary in the present.

Recent Posts

Summer Reading List!~!June 7, 2018
Personal Summer Reading List- Polly AlarconJune 7, 2018
Things I May or May Not Read This SummerJune 7, 2018
Rife Wordpress Theme. Proudly Built By Apollo13

Could Have Sworn

Could Have Sworn is a literary magazine dedicated to the present: we publish a range of works across a variety of media: we are unapologetically eclectic.

Recent Posts

Summer Reading List!~!June 7, 2018
Personal Summer Reading List- Polly AlarconJune 7, 2018
Things I May or May Not Read This SummerJune 7, 2018

Categories

  • Interviews
  • Post
  • Reviews
  • Summer Reads
  • Top Ten
  • Uncategorized

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org