
Whether you love interiors, architecture, plant life, or Britpop, there’s a coffee-table book for everyone’s taste. They’re also a good option for a last-minute gift (whether for a friend with a new home, or a hard-to-shop-for relative). We’ve rounded up 24 of our favourites, including some from the Strategist archives. While most of these books are available on Amazon, we’ve found some options elsewhere, too, for those who like to shop around.
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For the friend with a carefully curated kitchenscape of Bornn, Milo Made, and HK Living ceramics, this book would bring a lot of joy.
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A tribute to the international community of Black photographers, this book uses powerful images from artists like Campbell Addy to Tyler Mitchell (the first Black photographer hired to shoot a cover story for American Vogue).
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Fishing can be an expensive hobby (not to mention the steep learning curve). If you have an uncle or teen cousin who yearns to cast a line upon a lake, this book of photography would be a nice place to start.
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This book is about appreciating the nature hidden in and among our cities — so gift it to your kid sister in her first Zone 3 flatshare. It draws inspiration from an 18th-century book, Floral Londinensis, which set out to record every wild plant in London (even now, in 2020, it remains surprisingly relevant). Curated with help from Kew Gardens’ horticulture expert Helena Dove, The Botanical City features reproductions of the original’s ultra-detailed illustrations, as well as modern recipes, contemporary medicinal uses, and unusual facts.
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This technicolour book by the Victoria & Albert Museum explores colour in all its guises— from the decorative to the symbolic. Chapters are organised by colour, so if you’re feeling particularly blue (or green, or red), you can bury your nose in the appropriate section.
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If you have a friend who finished The Vanity Fair Diaries in a single weekend then they’ll undoubtedly be familiar with Annie Leibowitz’s work for the magazine. This book features some of her most well-known portraits, such as those of Kendrick Lamar, Stephen Hawking, and even the Queen.
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This book documents London’s architecture, landmarks, and irreverence through a series of photographs spanning decades. Sculptor Megan Dingwall told us it was a great source of inspiration, so consider gifting it to a friend from your fiction-writing course or your colleague who takes their DSLR everywhere.
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This beauty bible for women of colour, authored by British Vogue contributing editor Funmi Fetto, is packed with useful tips and over 200 hero products across skin care, hair care, and makeup. Fetto’s favourite products, like lipstick or foundation, are shot on striking-coloured backgrounds, and the jewel-green cover with foil lettering would look particularly nice arranged on a coffee table with a vase of fresh flowers. If you have a big sister who just got the keys to her first home, this would be a far more discerning choice than buying her a new toaster.
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Another beauty book they may like is this one by Sali Hughes. It traces the history of products like Johnson’s baby oil and NARS Orgasm blusher, explores their “icon” status, and examines how these products have shaped the beauty world.
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This best-selling book on the Bauhaus movement was made in collaboration with the Bauhaus-Archiv/Museum fur Gestaltung in Berlin — the world’s largest collection on the history of the famous art school. It features 575 illustrations, including architectural plans, photographs, and sketches, and is considered the “definitive” book on Bauhaus, including the work of Josef Albers, Marianne Brandt, and Walter Gropius. Perfect for a niece or goddaughter who dreams of being the next Zaha Hadid.
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With a foreword by Pharrell Williams, photography by Juergen Teller, and contributions from Raf Simmons, this book celebrating the ubiquitous white tennis shoe (and the tennis champion it is named after) would make a nice gift for a sneakerhead cousin or a fashion-y friend with impeccable taste.
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If your maidenhair fern is struggling in your kitchen, or you haven’t a clue where to hang your macramé-housed pothos, consider Hilton Carter’s book. It features 12 homes tastefully decorated with plants, and is full of advice on figuring out the optimal plants for your space.
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Carter’s books also came recommended to us by Mawusi Plants founder Stacey Rockliffe – she said that the “eye-catching cover” would compliment any living space — and it contains lots of useful advice. If you have a friend whose string of pearls isn’t thriving, consider gifting them this book.
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Mirei Shigemori had a huge impact on the development of Japanese landscape architecture in the 20th century, designing 240 gardens and founding the Kyoto Garden Society in 1932. The book looks at his influences, while also showcasing detailed illustrations of 17 of his gardens.
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Released in 2019 to mark 50 years since the Stonewall riots, this book combines curated photographs from decades of protests with extensively researched narrative — and would make a great gift for a younger queer relative or friend.
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If you know someone who loves hip-hop — maybe they can’t work unless they’ve got Ebro Darden’s Apple Music show on in the background — then this book would be right at home on their coffee table. Curated by culture journalist Vikki Tobak, it features four decades of photography, and outtakes from over 100 shoots — including Nicki Minaj, Tyler, The Creator, Biggie Smalls, and Outkast. It also includes essays from DJ Premier, RZA, and renowned hip-hop journalist Bill Adler.
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This book features over 850 brutalist buildings across nine continents, including both the well-known (such as the Barbican estate) and the less famous (such as Preston central bus station). The atlas has useful symbols denoting each buildings’ condition, whether it’s in use or abandoned, and whether it has heritage status or not.
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Lou Stoppard (who writes for FT Arts and The New Yorker) has written the ultimate tribute to the pool, filled with curated photographs and essays about all aspects of pool life. It’s even waterproof, should you want to take it to the lido with you.
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The allure of the swimming pool is also captured in this book of photography, which includes work by Abbas Attar, Henri Cartier-Bresson, and Peter Marlow. Perfect for anyone already planning their first international holiday of 2022.
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If someone you know couldn’t make it to the Barbican’s Masculinities exhibition, then this coffee-table book would make a thoughtful gift. It includes the work of more than 50 artists over a 60-year period, and seeks to explore the changing attitudes to what masculinity “is” — from Arnold Schwarzenegger’s bodybuilding shoots from the 1970s to the hypermasculine images of militarism in Nazi Germany.
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Immerse yourself in the glory days of the ’90s (including the kind-of-cool-again haircuts). This book features hundreds of photographs taken by Kevin Cummings, who was the chief photographer at NME for a decade.
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Assembled by the editors of New York Magazine (a.k.a. the Strategist UK’s big brother) with contributions from Jerry Saltz, Rebecca Traister, Christopher Bonanos, and many more, The Encyclopedia of New York is part deep dive into hidden histories and part city field guide covering the origins of things invented in New York City (for instance, the game of Scrabble was born in Jackson Heights in 1931).
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