For Fans of Inventing Anna

A woman in a red dress with a headscarf and sunglasses stands in front of a body of water on a sunny day.

The Netflix limited series Inventing Anna tells the (mostly) true story of fake heiress Anna Delvey (aka Anna Sorokin). If you’re left wanting more after the ninth and final episode, we have you covered. Below, we’ve rounded up a list of books containing the same high-end con artistry that made Anna infamous.

Cartoon of a smiling man with a large mustache, short dark hair, wearing a teal jacket and a white turtleneck.
Jon
Marketing Coordinator
Cover of "Billion Dollar Whale" by Tom Wright and Bradley Hope, showcasing floating money and poker chips.

Billion Dollar Whale by Bradley Hope

Two Pulitzer-finalist Wall Street Journal reporters document the true story of how a young social climber orchestrated one of history’s biggest financial heists, exposing the secret nexus of elite wealth, banking, Hollywood and politics.

The cover of "Confident Women" featuring stylized illustrations of women's heads, all wearing dark sunglasses.

Confident Women by Tori Telfer

The acclaimed author of Lady Killers returns with a new collection about notorious female con artists and their outrageous scams, from Jeanne de Saint-Rémy who scammed jewelers in 1700s Paris to Roxie Ann Rice who scammed the NFL in 1975.

Book cover: "Charlatan" by Pope Brock with a goat on a black background and red decorative elements.

Charlatan by Pope Brock

Recounts the career of America’s most infamous con man, John Brinkley, who, despite having no medical training, parlayed sales of worthless patent cures into a career as a famed surgeon specializing in the restoration of male virility, and details the decades-long efforts of Morris Fishbein, editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association, to bring him down.

Book cover of "The Queen" by Josh Levin, featuring an image of a fur-wearing woman and a synopsis about Linda Taylor.

The Queen by Josh Levin

Provides an account of the life of one of America’s most notorious welfare cheats, who committed much darker crimes and who became the figure behind the myth of the “welfare queen.”

Book cover for "My Friend Anna" by Rachel DeLoache Williams, showing a woman's face fragmented by orange stripes.

My Friend Anna by Rachel DeLoache Williams

Tells the true story of Anna Delvey, a young con artist posing as a German heiress in New York City—as told by the former Vanity Fair photo editor who got seduced by her friendship and then scammed out of more than $62,000.

Cover of the book "Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup" by John Carreyrou, labeled as a national bestseller.

Bad Blood by John Carreyrou

Recounts the story behind Theranos, the medical equipment company that misled investors to believe they developed a revolutionary blood testing machine, detailing how its CEO perpetuated the lie to bolster the value of the company by billions.

Cover of "The Ultimate Book of Impostors" by Ian Graham with graphics of glasses, mustache, and text detailing the content.

The Ultimate Book of Impostors by Ian Graham

From Mata Hari to D. B. Cooper, history is littered with people pretending to be someone else. Some go undetected for years, cultivating their false identities so skillfully, even their spouses don’t know. Other frauds go up in flames after one misstep. The Ultimate Book of Impostors presents the astonishing true stories behind over one hundred of the craziest and funniest phonies in history.

Cover of "Blood Will Out" by Walter Kirn, featuring bold black and red typography on a black background.

Blood Will Out by Walter Kirn

Describes the author’s fifteen-year relationship with eccentric New Yorker Clark Rockefeller, his discovery that Rockefeller was a serial imposter and murderer, and how his old friend’s murder trial made him face hard truths about himself.

Book cover for "Catch Me If You Can" by Frank W. Abagnale, featuring silhouettes of a man and airplane on a blue background.

Catch Me If You Can by Frank W. Abagnale

A former confidence man and master impostor recounts his crimes, capture, imprisonment, and current career as a highly paid crime consultant, in a new edition of his best-selling, firsthand account of his international exploits.

Book cover of "The Professor and the Parson: A Story of Desire, Deceit, & Defrocking" by Adam Sisman.

The Professor and the Parson by Adam Sisman

The National Book Critics Circle Award-winning author of Boswell’s Presumptuous Task describes his investigation into the true life of fraudulent priest Robert Parkin Peters and how he cheated his way through bigamous marriages, religious posts and academic positions.

Book cover for "The Adversary" by Emmanuel Carrère, showing a blurred human figure and the text "A true story of monstrous deception.

The Adversary by Emmanuel Carrère

The true story of a man who spun a web of lies around his life ventures into the mind of a psychotic murderer who managed to convince thousands of people that he was a successful, credentialed physician.

Book cover of "Greed in the Gilded Age" showing portraits of a man and woman, a mansion, and text by William Elliott Hazelgrove.

Greed in the Gilded Age by William Hazelgrove

Recounts the true story of Cassie Chadwick, who, breaking through boundaries of class, education, and gender, conned at least 2 million dollars, equivalent to about 60 million today, from unsuspecting bankers simply by claiming to be the illegitimate daughter and heir of steel titan, Andrew Carnegie.

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