Reading order
| # | Title | Published | Author | Buy on Amazon |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | An Enemy of the People | - | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 2 | The Man Who Had All the Luck | 1940 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 3 | All My Sons | 1947 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 4 | Death of a Salesman | 1949 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 5 | The Crucible | 1953 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 6 | A View from the Bridge | 1955 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 7 | A Memory of Two Mondays | 1955 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 8 | The Misfits | 1961 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 9 | After the Fall | 1964 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 10 | Incident at Vichy | 1964 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 11 | The Price | 1968 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 12 | The Creation of the World and Other Business | 1972 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 13 | The Archbishop’s Ceiling | 1977 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 14 | Playing for Time | 1981 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 15 | The American Clock | 1981 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 16 | Some Kind of Love Story | 1983 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 17 | The Ride Down Mt. Morgan | 1991 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 18 | Broken Glass | 1994 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 19 | The Last Yankee | 1994 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 20 | Mr Peter’s Connections | 1998 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 21 | Elegy For a Lady. | 1998 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 22 | Resurrection Blues | 2006 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
| 23 | Everybody Wins | 2007 | Arthur Miller | Buy |
Arthur Miller wrote more than twenty plays across six decades. His early masterpieces, All My Sons, Death of a Salesman, and The Crucible, established him as the American theater’s moral conscience. All My Sons deals with a manufacturer who sold faulty airplane parts during the war, Death of a Salesman follows the collapse of Willy Loman’s American Dream, and The Crucible uses the Salem witch trials to critique political paranoia.
His later plays, including After the Fall, The Price, and Broken Glass, continued to explore American guilt, family obligation, and the gap between ideals and behavior. Some, like The Misfits (adapted from his screenplay for the Marilyn Monroe film), crossed between stage and screen. Miller’s complete dramatic output is one of the most significant bodies of work in American theater.