I present to you the cornerstone of my book collection on UX: 19 highly recommended books on User Experience by UX professionals. If you are looking for books about user research, interface design, information architecture or UX strategy, you will find a book to your liking.
I love to read about User Experience. My book shelves are completely packed with UX books. To save you some time and money, I’ve created a small book collection on the matter! I believe that this book collection on UX is suitable for both the aspiring UXers as the UX professional and it includes a wide variety of UX disciplines. I will update this page regularly with new books!
A must-read which is an accessible, up-to-date and concise guide of UXD techniques and principles from a professional’s perspective, full with practical advice. UX professionals however will already know most of its contents. You can also read the full review.
A great and practical book written by Lukas Mathis where he’s not only explaining the why but also the how. Nice read!
Designing Web Usability, written by the world’s leading expert on Web usability, is considered being the Bible of every UX-designer. Although published back in 1999, it still covers most of the ux issues of the present day.
If you’re looking for a fantastic practical guide to help you design user experiences for your next project, it would be “A Project Guide to UX Design”. If you’re interested, read the entire book review.
I just ordered this book because I heard so much positive feedback about it. I will let you all know my two cents once I finished it.
This book is frequently recommended for UX practitioners through the UX Book Club movement. The content is full of interesting stories and rich examples of user experience design in real life.
Usability guru Krug, with years of on-the-job experience, explains the usability principles and the do’s and don’ts that will determine your Web sites’ succes.
Few books in the field of human-computer interaction offer such a comprehensive, logical overview of contemporary methods and processes like this one. Pardha S. Pyla did an excellent job of distilling HCI techniques into a form that is digestible for newcomers to the field; showing where, when, why, and how requirements gathering, design, prototyping and evaluation should be done.
In my opinion it’s a bit pricy but you get a lot in return!
Seductive Interaction Design will give you a great insight into the psychological aspect of design and user experience. It focuses on finding out what would engage your customers and every point is backed up by psychological principles and well chosen examples. An absolute must read
Building upon the Persona concept of Alan Cooper, this book explains why Personas are such an important tool. Steve Mulder talks in a very practical way how personas should be created, how you should use them in your next project and how to promote them within your team or company.
Effectively measuring the usability of any product requires the right metric, applying it, and effectively using the information it reveals. Thomas and William explore each metric and shows you how to collect, analyse and present the data.
Yet another best-seller by Steve Krug! A handbook for putting usability principles into practice, focusing in particular on user testing.
Garrett’s book is a perfect introduction for someone who is just getting into the field of user experience design and want to understand its core ideas.
User Experience Designer Robert Hoekman has written many wonderful books but Designing the Obvious is definitely the one you should read. Don’t buy it if you’re only interested in mobile applications because that chapter is pretty thin.
A great book that explores all kind of interface patterns into detail. Really usable material for interaction designers. I even wrote a little review of Designing Web Interfaces a while ago because I think it’s really worth reading!
A complete overview of usability testing from someone steeped in both the academic and business worlds.
The title is a bit misleading because 2/3 of this book consists of details on UX Project Management. All in all a very good introductory book!
Although published in 2002, The Design of Everyday Things is still an excellent guidebook (and a classic) for the understanding of basic user-centric design in products, fixtures, software, and the everyday things that make up our world. I’ve written a more extensive review of this book.
In short: Creating a satisfying user experience is the key to maximizing search effectiveness and getting conversions. Nice read!
You can also have a look at Amazon’s Best Sellers. They often have great reductions on the best books out there. If you have read books other than the ones in this book collection on UX, let us know!
If you are more into ebooks, you must have a look at my collection of free ebooks about User Experience and Interface Design.
Editorial note: Most of the links on this page are affiliate links, which means that when you decide to buy something from this list, I will earn a small commission. These earnings keep the website going.
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i'm surprised that two key UX strategy books aren't here:
The Inmates are Running the Asylum and Subject to Change.
@Joe Sokohl: Thanks for the recommendation Joe. I haven't got the chance to read them yet, which is why they're not included in the list. I will have those books standing in the bookcase pretty soon and will update the article once I have read them. Cheers.
some of those books are classics of ux. like don't make me think. Common word, known sugestions. nothing new for expert. so, to whom you recomed these books? experts? noobs?
Measuring ux is good book. a lot of practice and 20% theory.. if you like to copy without understanding what you are doing, then this book is for you
@igorskys: I recommend these books to everyone who is interested in UX. As I have said in the intro, I believe both the aspiring UXers and the UX professionals could benefit from this list. I do realise that most books are "classics" in the field of UX - and therefore could be considered less interesting for UX pro's - but I believe that even they can find new insights, thoughts and inspiration.
I consider this collection an eye opener for noobs and a great reference for UX professionals.
I think you are spot on with your review of "Measuring the User Experience". Although the authors show you step by step how to set up an Excel sheet I found little explanation about the statistical methods being used.
Hello Paul,
What if i ask you to suggest me only 2 books to pick and read among the ones which you mentioned above ?. Can i go according to the order you specified and start off with the first two books. You advise is much appreciated.
I've gone through Smashing Magazine UX Design by Jesmond Allen, James Chudley until now.
@Krishna: It all depends what you are looking for of course but I tried to divide this book collection into groups of interest.
If you are looking for an introduction into User Experience, I would suggest to start with "Don't make me think", "Designing the Obvious" or "The Elements of User Experience".
If you are interested in a more practical approach of Usability testing and User Experience Design, you should go for "Handbook of Usability Testing", "Measuring the User Experience" or "Sketching User Experiences".
For a more psychological approach you can't beat "Seductive Interaction Design".
I hope this will help your decision making.
Hi, Paul,
Lots of good material on your list. A more recent, easy to read, work that I've also found indispensable is Hartson, R. & Pyla, P. (2012). The UX book: Process and guidelines for ensuring a quality user experience. Waltham, MA: Morgan Kaufmann. It appears to sum up just about everything in the books on this list, plus adds value of its own. Hope you get a chance to read it too.
Best,
Teri
Hi Teri, thank you for the tip. I'm working on a second article with more UX books and I believe your suggestion would be a nice addition to the list! Cheers!
*cough* er, 'The Design of Everyday Things' was published in *1988*, albeit under the different title of 'The Psychology of Everyday Things' (to Norman's chagrin, it got put in bookshops under psychology, hence the name change!)
Other good ones are 'A Project Guide to UX Design' (thorough and practical, I lend it to people a lot) by Russ Unger Carolyn Chandler and Kim Goodwin's good reference book 'Designing for the Digital Age'.
Hi Vicky, in the extensive review of 'The Design of Everyday Things' I got things right, but thanks for letting me know.
I haven't heard of 'Designing for the Digital Age' yet, but it is on my to-do list now. Care to write a review about it? :)