The Alchemist
Pages
197
Year
1988
Difficulty
Easy
Themes
self-discovery, destiny, spirituality, following dreams
Santiago, a young Andalusian shepherd, has a recurring dream about treasure hidden near the Egyptian pyramids. He sells his flock and sets out across North Africa, meeting a Gypsy fortune teller, a self-proclaimed king, and eventually an alchemist who teaches him to listen to his heart and read the language of the world.
Why Start Here
The Alchemist is the book that made Coelho a global phenomenon, and it remains the purest expression of everything he cares about: the courage to follow a personal calling, the idea that the universe conspires to help those who pursue their dreams, and the belief that wisdom comes not from books but from paying attention to the world around you.
At under 200 pages, it reads in a single sitting. The prose is stripped of everything unnecessary. There are no subplots, no digressions, just a young man walking toward something he cannot name, learning from every person he meets along the way. It works like a parable: simple enough for a teenager, layered enough to reward rereading at forty.
If you respond to this book, you will find more of the same in Coelho’s other work. If you don’t, his other novels are unlikely to change your mind. Either way, this is where to start.
What to Expect
A short, allegorical novel that reads like a fable. The tone is earnest and spiritual without being preachy. Santiago’s journey is both literal and metaphorical, and Coelho trusts the reader to carry both levels simultaneously. Some readers find it life-changing; others find it too neat. The best way to know which camp you fall into is to give it an evening.
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