
Meditations
Marcus Aurelius
A small green hardback that recurs across seasons 4 and 5. Don is not a Stoic, but the book is what he reaches for the morning after every betrayal he commits.
CitationSeason 4, Episode 7 onward
Mad Men · 2007–2015
Mid-century Madison Avenue’s most reluctant reader. The books we see in Don’s hands — Marcus Aurelius, Frank O’Hara — are the only place he is honest.
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Don Draper is not, by his own account, a reader. But Matthew Weiner is, and the books that pass through Don’s hands across seven seasons are the show’s most precise emotional cipher: a 1959 Marcus Aurelius gifted in a divorce, a Frank O’Hara collection read aloud over a Manhattan, an Exodus paperback dropped into a beach bag the morning he lies to Megan again. The list below is the eight books actually held, named, or read on screen.

Marcus Aurelius
A small green hardback that recurs across seasons 4 and 5. Don is not a Stoic, but the book is what he reaches for the morning after every betrayal he commits.
CitationSeason 4, Episode 7 onward

Frank O’Hara
The most famous reading scene in Mad Men. Don buys it after seeing a man read it in a bar, then mails it to Anna Draper. Voiceover-read in the season 2 finale.
CitationSeason 2, Episode 1 + 13

Leon Uris
Don reads it on the SCDP California trip, paperback dog-eared. The pitch he later writes for Israeli tourism is half-Uris, half-confession.
CitationSeason 2, Episode 11
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William Faulkner
Visible in the Draper-Francis library. Period-appropriate, character-fit: Don reads American novels about decaying men.
CitationSet design

Dante Alighieri
Season 6 opens with Don on a Hawaiian beach reading Dante — the show’s most explicit announcement that this is a man in mid-life damnation.
CitationSeason 6, Episode 1

Mary McCarthy
Megan reads it. Don picks it up. The bestseller of 1963 about smart college women — a book Don finds threatening for reasons he cannot name.
CitationSeason 6

Ayn Rand
Bert Cooper recommends it. Don reads it. The early Mad Men universe is shaped, structurally, by men who have just finished Atlas Shrugged and decided it explained everything.
CitationSeason 1, Episode 8

Rona Jaffe
The 1958 novel about Madison Avenue secretaries. Don has read it. So has every woman on the show. They have all read it differently.
CitationCharacter-fit / period
Don reads when he cannot say what he means. The list is, in that sense, Don himself — the only honest version.



Wall Street’s most-quoted aesthete reviews Genesis, Whitney Houston, and (somewhere on the shelf) Donald Trump’s Art of the Deal. Read alongside the satire, not against.



Soap, philosophy, and a paperback in the back pocket. Tyler reads anti-consumerist canon, anarchist theory, and a Bible he doesn’t much trust.



A media empire built on biography, biography, biography. Logan’s shelves are Churchill, Murdoch, and the histories his children will never finish.
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