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Bruce's literature club

multiman
Haha, Bruce, go read Witcher books :D Reason? Because it is good and Geralt is king of the sarcasm xD
ffdreamer
Sep 20, 19 at 12:24pm
Pic
Bro, don't test me. I am buying it right now >_<
multiman
Pic
Haha now or never :D
marcus_k
Sep 20, 19 at 3:02pm
Used to be a fan of Peterson, grew out of him over time. I'd seriously reccomend The Myth of Sissyphus by A. Camus philosophy-wise, imo it counters existentialism quite well.
tabris
This account has been suspended.
marcus_k
Sep 21, 19 at 1:23am
Aleph? You got something that counters absurdism? Or was that 'mmm' at JP or something else? xD
wasistdas
I am introducing one of my favorite books. I wrote a Facharbeit about this so I can tell pretty much about it. Unfortunality my english is not that good so I do it quite simple. I am introducing Sofies Welt https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51a8TrYtq1L._SX319_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg Its from Jostein Gaardner and this book should be a kids book. The story was also simple. A little girl gets messages from a mysterious man who knows Sofie and telling him the Evolution of Philosophie step by step. Asking many question about life, quality, whats wrong and whats right and how the human thinking about till today unsolved question were tried to answere. In this book you learn the history of philosophy easily explained, it gives questionable problems Sofie should solve but also you- the reader himself- followed with a little side story about Sofies life and why the youth of today acting like they are acting. As I said it should be a kids book but the intelectuall masterpiece of this book attracted many adults and it was a worldwide hit. Translated in 50 languages and got one meh movie in 1999. I had the feeling I was smart as fuck after I finnished this book. Everything were so clear. This book changes you on a way you never thought of.
marcus_k
Sep 21, 19 at 8:59am
Sounds pretty intriguing
frenesi
Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon Pynchon is an author that you can read multiple times and keep getting more out of his works. His works never progress in a linear fashion and are full of twists and turns down multiple rabbit holes. It is encouraged to go to wiki's about his books. Gravity's Rainbow is about entropy and the protagonist Tyrone Slothrop in England and Germany during WWII. For more info, here's a review written in 1973: https://thomaspynchon.com/rocket-power-gravitys-rainbow-reviewed-by-richard-poirier-1973/
tabris
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