Bookshelf · TV HeroinesLive list

Carrie Bradshaw.

Sex and the City · 1998–2004

A columnist in Manolos with a Smith Corona. Carrie’s shelves run from Didion to Dominick Dunne — late-90s downtown literary New York, distilled.

"I couldn’t help but wonder…" — usually mid-paragraph.

6 booksCurated · cited · cross-referenced

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The shelf, decoded

Why this list.

Carrie Bradshaw writes a single-column dating dispatch in the New York Star and lives the rest of the week as if she has just put down the world’s smartest paperback. The bookshelf in her apartment changes set-to-set, but the titles that recur are the late-90s downtown New York canon: Didion essays, McInerney novels, the kind of slim hardback you carry to a Magnolia Bakery counter and pretend not to read while pretending not to be alone.

The reading list

6 books for Carrie.

  1. Cover of Slouching Towards Bethlehem by Joan Didion
    No. 01On screen

    Slouching Towards Bethlehem

    Joan Didion

    The patron saint of Carrie-as-columnist. Didion is who Carrie is trying to be in every voiceover, and the show’s writers know it.

    CitationVisible on shelf, multiple episodes

  2. Cover of Bright Lights, Big City by Jay McInerney
    No. 02Creator cited

    Bright Lights, Big City

    Jay McInerney

    The 80s Manhattan novel that hangs over every Carrie-and-Big monologue. McInerney was even cast on the show — the homage runs deep.

    CitationEpisode 4x10 cameo

  3. Cover of Love Letters of Great Men by Ursula Doyle
    No. 03On screen

    Love Letters of Great Men

    Ursula Doyle

    The book Big reads, that Carrie steals, that becomes the franchise’s most quoted prop. Anthology of romantic correspondence as plot device.

    CitationSex and the City: The Movie (2008)

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  5. Cover of The Way We Live Now by Anthony Trollope
    No. 04Character fit

    The Way We Live Now

    Anthony Trollope

    A Charlotte recommendation that Carrie pretends to read and partly does. Trollope on debt, status, and bad marriages — almost too on-the-nose for a Wall Street boyfriend arc.

    CitationSeason 5

  6. Cover of Just Kids by Patti Smith
    No. 05Character fit

    Just Kids

    Patti Smith

    Published after the show ends, but the spiritual prequel to every "young woman moves to New York with three dollars and a typewriter" beat Carrie ever wrote.

    CitationCharacter-fit

  7. Cover of Vogue: The Editor’s Eye by Conde Nast
    No. 06On screen

    Vogue: The Editor’s Eye

    Conde Nast

    The kind of coffee-table book whose entire purpose is to be photographed next to a martini. Carrie owns multiple.

    CitationSet design, Carrie’s apartment

Closing note

Carrie is not, strictly, a heavy reader on screen. But she is the reason a generation thought a column was a literary form. The list reads like the syllabus for a graduate seminar on "writing about yourself, glamorously."

Your turn

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