![]() |
Anybody recommend any good books?
Or magazines?
Or sites w/ solid reading material? |
What's your favorite thing you've read recently?
|
The book of 5 Rings - Miyamoto Musashi(The greatest samurai in the history of japan)
Anything by Sun Tzu The Manifesto of the Communist Party - Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. In the Shadow of leaves - Yamamoto Tsunetomo(Considered founder of the first "texted" Bushido Philosophy) Ninja Death Touch Lucid Dreaming for Beginners High Times Inquire for more |
THE ROAD - CORMAC MCCARTHY
READ IT AND CRY MAN TEARS |
Quote:
|
McCarthy is better than Nietzsche. People read Nietzsche to try and be well rounded and seem smart and shit. Plus his name is hard as fuck to type. Just read The Road and be done with it.
|
Quote:
|
I don't have a preference, just like expanding my tastes & learning new stuff
Not really looking for lessons, just interesting shit to sink my teeth into |
Cormac McCarthy isn't a bad choice, then.
My favorite author going right now is Jeffrey Eugenides. He only has three novels: The Virgin Suicides, Middlesex and The Marriage Plot. All deal with families. All are great. I probably lean toward The Virgin Suicides because I'm a broody motherfucker who relates to The Catcher in the Rye more than a 26-year-old probably should. |
I never liked Catcher in the Rye, even reading it as high schooler. A Clockwork Orange was that book in High School, tbh.
CERTAIN, RECOMMEND ME GOOD BOOKS I HAVE FOREGONE READING IN THE LAST FEW YEARS TO DRINK AND LEARN. |
william faulkner my dude if you havent read him yet
|
A Clockwork Orange was my favorite book at one point in high school, too. It's probably the only great book where the movie did it justice. I read a lot more essays and feature stories than books, but here are a few good books for anyone looking:
Vladimir Nabokov, Lolita: Shoutout to @TYSON. This is probably my favorite book ever, though. Tom Wolfe, Bonfire of the Vanities: If you've never read Wolfe, you should read Wolfe, even if it's just one of his essays. Jonathan Franzen, The Corrections: The plot is pretty slow-moving, but this probably is the most well-written book I've read. Paul Auster, The New York Trilogy: Three novellas usually put into one volume now. Jeffrey Eugenides, The Virgin Suicides: Again, this is my favorite of his three great novels. |
I've read The Corrections and the other notable book by Franzen. Freedom. I actually preferred Freedom, both were amazing reads though.
Thanks for the recs. |
what were your thoughts on neitschze?
|
Quote:
|
He's like a magical magician.
But word. I'm going to check out Lolita. Appreciate the recs. |
Quote:
|
Enders game
|
Faucaults Pendulum
|
Quote:
|
Oryx n crake
best book I've read attwood is great |
The Secret Teachings of All Ages by Manly P. Hall has a ton of info. The concluding chapter is beast mode.
|
L.A. Requiem
Probably my favourite book. |
Quote:
|
shantaram
|
|
Quote:
|
Word at Faulkner. Also John Steinbeck. Fitzgerald.
If you're more into philosophy, try Schopenhauer. Not for everyone, but he has some unique views, that certainly get you thinking. |
I like sarte the most for Philo
|
the book of lies
the book of the law both by aliester crowley |
The road is great indeed.
I'm reading oil! right now. It's the novel 'there will be blood' was based on. Haven't made much headway but its pretty good thus far, have not seen the movie so idk what to expect. Also word to shantaram, that's on my to-read list. |
The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera
Challenging Nietzsche’s concept of eternal recurrence (the idea that the universe and its events have already occurred and will recur ad infinitum), the story’s thematic meditations posit the alternative; that each person has only one life to live, and that which occurs in life occurs only once and never again — thus the “lightness” of being. In contrast, the concept of eternal recurrence imposes a “heaviness” on our lives and on the decisions we make (to borrow from Nietzsche's metaphor, it gives them "weight".) Nietzsche believed this heaviness could be either a tremendous burden or great benefit depending on the individual's perspective. The "unbearable lightness" in the title also refers to the lightness of love and sex, which are themes of the novel. Kundera portrays love as fleeting, haphazard and perhaps based on endless strings of coincidences, despite holding such significance for humans. |
Thanks for the recommendations
Just woke up, grabbing a coffee & on my way to the book store |
buy some jeffrey deaver books ther dope!
|
I have much to say about this....
Covert persuasion 33 strategies of war pimpology watership down the birds of paradise I could go on. |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:49 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.5
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
User Alert System provided by
Advanced User Tagging (Lite) -
vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.