There are so many words in English.
And there are so many vocabulary books to help you learn those words.
Let me help you select the best English vocabulary books.
Here are my 11 favourite ones. I love these! And I hope youโll love them too!
1. โShort Stories In Englishโ By Olly Richards

I couldnโt start this list of best English vocabulary books by not mentioning this book I wrote for you.
Okay, technically, this isnโt a workbook where youโll just find word lists and exercises.
But itโs a book that will expose you to a great amount of language.
Language exposure is crucial for learning as it helps you absorb and assimilate vocabulary.
The book comes in two levels โ beginner and intermediate โ and gives you:
- Eight stories in a variety of exciting genres, from science fiction and crime to history and thriller โ making learning fun, while you gain a wide range of new vocabulary.
- Controlled language at your level, including the 1000 most frequent words, to help you progress confidently.
- Authentic spoken dialogues to help you learn conversational expressions and improve your speaking ability.
- Pleasure! It's much easier to learn a new language when you're having fun, and research shows that if you're enjoying reading in a foreign language, you won't experience the usual feelings of frustration โ โIt's too hard!' โI don't understand!'
- Accessible grammar so you learn new structures naturally, in a stress-free way.
I can guarantee that in โShort Stories in Englishโ youโll not only find plenty of words in context but also narratives that will make learning English easier, fun and more effective.
You can get โShort Stories In Englishโ on Amazon.
2. โAny Language You Want: 18 Lessons For A New Kind Of Language Learnerโ By Fabio Cerpelloni

This is a collection of contradictory true personal stories in answer to โWhat's the best way to learn a language?โ
Itโs written by my colleague Fabio, a highly qualified English language teacher from Italy.
Fabioโs first language is Italian. He had to learn English. In โAny Language You Wantโ he tells you everything he did to master his second language.
Each of Fabioโs stories tells you whatโs the best way to learn a language. But each story disagrees with the next.
One chapter tells you to hire teachers and take classes โ just like Fabio did while learning English in London. The next one argues you should do everything on your own. Take no courses, hire no teachers. Do what Fabio did when he was living in Australia.
Which chapter tells the truth? Which story is right? All of them.
Fabio wrote these 80 pages to inspire you and show you that thereโs no one single right way to learn a language.
โBut where are the vocabulary exercises?โ you may ask.
There are none.
โNone? So how can I expand my vocabulary?!โ
Letโs see what Fabio has to say about this. In chapter 4 โ titled โLearn Unconsciouslyโ he says this:
โ[W]hen you are reading or listening to something in the language youโre learning, focus only on understanding the main message and proudly ignore everything that looks or sounds unfamiliar.
Donโt worry about that noun you have never seen before. Ignore that mysterious verb the actress in the movie has just used. Pretend you didnโt hear it or quickly try to guess its meaning and then move on.
Keep reading. Keep listening. Never press pause. Never interrupt a story to look up a word in a dictionary. If you are enjoying the content, you are doing fine. If you are struggling because itโs all too hard, stop and go find something easier.
Learn without being aware youโre learning.โ
Thatโs how youโll learn vocabulary.
You can get โAny Language You Wantโ on Amazon.
3. โActive Listening Workbookโ By Cara Leopold

Would you believe me if I told you thereโs a book that helps you learn vocabulary while you binge Netflix and improve your listening skills at the same time?
I didnโt believe that until Cara Leopold, one of the most skilled English teachers of listening I know, wrote the โActive Listening Workbookโ.
This is a book that will help you catch fast dialogue and learn new vocabulary as you watch movies.
You'll get:
- details on how to create listening and writing exercises using your favourite movies and TV shows.
- space in the workbook to do your own dictation exercises, reflect on your progress and note down new vocabulary.
โHey, wait I second. Before you said you agreed with Fabio. You said I should never press pause and learn passively. Now youโre suggesting that I use an active workbook to note down new words while watching a movie?!โ
Thatโs right, my dear reader. Learning a language involves both active and passive work. And if youโre into movies and TV series, Caraโs book is a must.
4. โEnglish For Everyone: English Vocabulary Builderโ By DK Publishing

Iโve already talked about the popular โEnglish for Everyoneโ series in my post about the 20 top English grammar books.
โEnglish Vocabulary Builderโ is part of that series and itโs a unique combination of language reference and practical workbook.
It contains 3,000 of the most useful words and phrases in English, audio recordings for every word, and interactive exercises. Itโs got an accompanying app too.
But what I love the most about this book is that words and expressions are illustrated through images and other types of visuals to help you understand their meanings.
โEnglish Vocabulary Builderโ is worth having if you love โlearning by seeingโ
5. โEnglish Vocabulary In Useโ By Raymond Murphy and Felicity Ann OโDell

The Cambridge โIn Useโ is a series I canโt recommend enough.
โEnglish Vocabulary in Useโ is organised in well-structured vocabulary units that present words, phrases and expressions in context.
Word meaning is explained using simple terms, images, and lots of examples, and each unit has practise exercises too.
Everything is clear and easy to follow. No wonder the โIn Useโ series is one of the most popular self-study books for learners of English.
There are different levels: Elementary, Pre-Intermediate Intermediate, Upper-Intermediate, and Advanced, so you can choose the one thatโs most suitable for you.
Just make sure you buy the one with the answer keys, so you can self-check your answers.
You can find โEnglish Vocabulary In Useโ on Amazon.
6. โ4000 Essential English Wordsโ By Paul Nation

This is a six-book series written by Paul Nation, an internationally recognized scholar in the field of linguistics and teaching methodology whoโs been studying vocabulary acquisition for decades.
Trust me; this book is like no other.
โ4000 Essential English Wordsโ focuses on practical high-frequency words.
All the vocabulary youโll be studying covers a large percentage of the words youโll find in many spoken or written authentic texts from the real world.
These words have been carefully selected so rest assured youโll only study vocabulary that you actually need to know in order to understand what you read and listen to.
In each unit, youโll find:
- 20 words defined and used in sample sentences.
- Activities designed to present the words in different uses so you can see how theyโre used.
- A story (yes!) that contains all the 20 target words
There are six different levels, from beginner to advanced. So you can start where you are and work towards learning advanced English vocabulary.
7. โEnglish Collocations In Useโ By Raymond Murphy And Felicity Ann OโDell

When learning vocabulary, itโs useful to learn combinations and groups of words that are often found together. In other words, itโs useful to learn what we call collocations.
So, for example, instead of just learning the word โdog,โ itโll be more useful to learn โwalk the dog,โ โhave a dog,โ โfeed a dog,โ and so on.
Learning collocations can help you speak more fluently because you learn bigger groups of words as if they were just single ones.
โEnglish Collocation in Useโ, another great vocabulary book from the โIn Useโ series, helps you do just that.
Check out the intermediate version here.
8. โWork On Your Phrasal Verbsโ By Jamie Flockhart and Cheryl Pelteret

Get up, find out, look up to, calm down โ we have so many phrasal verbs in English.
And this book presents the 400 most frequently used ones showing you how to use them effectively.
Youโll find clear examples followed by practice exercises.
Each unit is 4-page long and contains, among other things, helpful study tips on learning and remembering phrasal verbs.
Suitable for B1-C2 learners.
9. โThe Language Journalโ By Lara Donadello

Lara is an English teacher and polyglot from Italy.
โEnglish Vocabulary Booster,โ the podcast where, in each episode, she tells you a funny story and teaches you 5 expressions, was for years one of the top 10 most listened podcasts in India.
Lara doesnโt need to learn new words. Her English is nearly better than native speakers.
But sheโs in love with learning vocabulary so she created a language journal to help her learn and memorise new words.
She uses it when watching her favourite TV series in English. Always.
This journal is 190 pages and inside you will find:
- a consistency tracker to keep you accountable and motivate you to study daily.
- 10 vocabulary sections (with enough space to write down โ and never forget โ a total of up to 300 new expressions/words).
- 10 review sections to go over what you're trying to learn.
- Several dotted pages for you to customize and use however you want.
- Useful tips on language learning
Lara says this is not a phrasal book, so you won't find a list of random expressions. Rather, this is a tool to help keep all your vocabulary language notes in one place, so you can easily access them and review what you learn.
The Language Journal is not well-known but itโs definitely something for you if youโre serious about expanding your vocabulary.
10. โ101 Conversations In Simple Englishโ By Olly Richards

This is another book I wrote for you.
It contains exactly what the title says: 101 conversations in simple English that will immerse you in the language at a level you can easily understand and reproduce.
The book includes over 15,000 words of dialogue that include expressions real people use on the street.
Each conversation is limited to around 15 lines (150 words) to help you master the expressions more quickly and keep you moving toward the finish line.
Iโve also included vocabulary lists and chapter summaries to guide you through the stories.
If youโre a beginner or an intermediate student, this is a great book that will help you not only learn conversational vocabulary but also speak with confidence.
11. โRnR Stories To Save the Worldโ By Martin Johnston

Martin Johnston is one of the funniest English teachers I know.
He has a podcast called โRockโn Roll Englishโ where he invites his friends, teachers and students to share the craziest stories.
Martin has a community of learners of English too. He calls them the โRnR Familyโ.
In this book, youโll find 25 true short stories that Martin and his communityy put together.
Real stories that are, in Martinโs own words, โtrue, funny, shocking, disturbing, disgusting, inspiring and many more things, butโฆthey are NOT boring.โ
The e-book includes:
- 25 real stories from real people (Martinโs learners).
- A vocabulary section where youโll find explanations of some of the expressions from the story.
- Dedicated podcast episodes where youโll hear Martin tell the stories.
The title is โRnR Stories to Save the Worldโ.
Why โSave the Worldโ? Because by buying this book youโll be helping families in Ukraine. All the money goes to them.
You can find this on Martinโs website.
Best English Vocabulary Books
I hope youโve found this guide to the best English vocabulary books useful. What do you think? Are there any books you canโt wait to get?
After reading this list, you may think that the best way to learn and expand your vocabulary is to sit down and read a book.
Thatโs partly true. Using books is one of the best ways to improve, not the best one.
Other great ways include:
- Having conversations.
- Watching movies in English.
- Using flashcards.
- Working with dictionaries.
- Listening to podcasts.
โฆand of course, stories!
But Iโm sure you know that by now
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