white and blue printer paper

June Reading List: 4 Best Books I Read in June 2025

Each month I share what I’ve been reading—books that help me think more clearly, work smarter, or just unwind. Here’s what I read in June:

Poor Richard’s Almanack by Benjamin Franklin

Poor Richard’s Almanack is over 200 years old, yet its insights feel surprisingly fresh. Franklin shares short witty proverbs about money, friendship, marriage, ethics, and human nature–principles that still hold up today. The book is quick, quotable, and packed with wisdom.

Other American Revolution books to check out include: 

American Assassin by Vince Flynn

Mitch Rapp was a gifted college athlete with a bright future–until tragedy struck. After a terrorist attack claimed the life of his girlfriend, along with 270 others, Rapp doesn’t want comfort. He wants retribution.

As the CIA scrambles to counter a rising wave of Islamic terrorism, veteran spymaster Thomas Stansfield taps his protégée Irene Kennedy and Cold War operator Stan Hurley to build an off-the-books team of clandestine operatives. Rapp is their first recruit.

What follows is six months of grueling training and a series of deadly missions across Europe. From Istanbul to Hamburg to Beirut, Rapp eliminates key players behind the attack—but the enemy is watching. The hunter is about to become the hunted.

American Assassin is fast, ruthless, and addictive (or at least I think so)—what I’m learning to be classic Vince Flynn. Mitch Rapp, like Gabriel Allon in Daniel Silva’s series, is quickly becoming one of my favorite fictional characters.

The Tao of Warren Buffett by Mary Buffett & David Clark

The Tao of Warren Buffett distills Buffett’s best quotes—he’s got no shortage of quotable wisdom—into quick, insightful lessons. It’s sharp, practical, and full of “why didn’t I think of that” style wisdom. What I loved most is how it makes investing (and life) feel less intimidating.

More Buffett/Munger books I enjoyed reading include:

Kingfish U: Huey Long and LSU by Robert Mann

No one shaped LSU, Louisiana, or national politics quite like Huey P. Long. In just four short years, the larger than life governor (and later senator) turned LSU from a sleepy state school into his pet project–rewriting the fight song, funding buildings, and firing football coaches who didn’t win enough. Long was obsessed, and maybe a little over-the-top. Kingfish U is a fascinating case study on how ego, ambition, and politics collided on LSU’s campus–and how Long tried to turn a university into a monument to himself. Read Kingfish: The Reign of Huey P. Long for a deeper dive in Huey Long.

June Reading List: Final Thoughts

June felt like one of those months where my curiosity pulled me in every direction—and my reading list shows it. I bounced between pithy sayings (Poor Richard’s Almanac), high-stakes espionage (American Assassin), mental models from one of the best investors ever (The Tao of Warren Buffett), and a deep-dive into ego and legacy in Louisiana politics (Kingfish U).


Scroll to Top
Michael McHugh
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.