help me to read and be more smarterer
I recently moved to a new city and don't have cable or fast enough internet to do much streaming so I'm finding myself with a lot of free time. I've been putting off reading books for a long time due to laziness and video game/internet/tv overstimulus so I figure now is as good a time as any to get to it. It's especially important since I want to be more interesting to potential friends/dates that I meet, since my friend circle here is so small.
So, what books will make me smarter and more interesting person? I'm open to anything - Ta-Nehisi Coates on race relations, Slavoj Zizek and philosophy, books on fascinating and important historical events or times, even fiction that makes you think. I'm all ears.
The only thing I'm not particularly interested in at the moment is genre fiction or any plot driven stories for the purpose of entertainment, any "action movies" of books.
any thoughts?
maybe i'm streaming terrible dj right now if i am its
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The March of Folly is a great book on history also.
A People's History of the United States by Howard Zinn.
1984 by George Orwell. One of the classics.
Some starting places:
Dostoevsky: Crime and Punishment ( ); Notes from Underground (novella/fast read, very ideological/thought-provoking, so much delightful spite)
---worth knowing, btw, that Dostoevsky did not, at the time of writing these ones, remotely share the points of view of his protagonists and was a really conservative dude...gives interesting perspective. If you like these, there are many more Dostoevsky books waiting.
Bulgakov: Master and Margarita--if you are into close reading and thinking about themes and symbols and parallels this will absolutely make you think, especially if you get an edition with footnotes explaining references. It's genre fiction, although it's the sort of genre book that is so very literary that it escapes the genre designation, usually.
Nabokov (debatably Russian literature, especially since I'm recommending one of his American books): Pale Fire. Nabokov is a writer who gleefully sends you to the dictionary. Pale Fire is full of puzzles and symbols and clever verse and again isn't so much ideologically thought-provoking as it is a book demanding close and thoughtful reading.
I wouldn't. Žižek is difficult to understand at the best of times, and arguably most of what he writes is bollocks (or actually brilliant, who knows).
In general I recommend philosophy books that deal with a subject and theories about it, rather than the works about theories by known philosophers themselves. As in, it's smarter to read a book about Kant than a book by Kant. Or like Philosophy for Dummies or Histories of x philosophy, or Ethics of [X]. This is less of an issue with analytical philosophy (as opposed to continental philosophy), because analytical philosophy emphasizes argumentative clarity. But even then it's good to know what the stakes are, and why a philosopher is doing what he does.
Once you have a good basis of knowledge you can expand on it by delving into more.
Also I second local history books, and stuff like Bill Bryson. Often fun to read, and it makes you learn about stuff you see every day.
If you want some interesting anecdotes this book has them. It's a biography of John Brinkley whose biggest claim to fame was sewing goat testicles in to people as a cure for pretty much anything. For a con man he had a relatively large influence on America in a lot of areas.
Alexander Solzhenitzyn should probably be read as well.
There is an excellent Translation of In the First Circle that just came out not to long ago.
but they're listening to every word I say
Edit: Dammit this thread makes me miss reading something that isn't legal textbooks.
(In any case, What Hath God Wrought, Battle Cry of Freedom, and Reconstruction are all Pulitzer Prize winners about US history and worth reading even if you don't feel like digging through old blog posts. What Hath God Wrought in particular covers a time period that I had always gotten the impression of being relatively uninteresting, but man my teachers did a bad job apparently, and there are some parallels between then and today.)
They will change the way you think about people's behavior, and help you understand others and yourself. Plus they are very interesting and great to talk about with others.
http://www.amazon.com/Predictably-Irrational-Revised-Expanded-Edition/dp/0061353248
http://www.amazon.com/Honest-Truth-About-Dishonesty-Everyone---Especially/dp/B00E29BJUK/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1445363308&sr=1-2&keywords=the+honest+truth+about+dishonesty
but they're listening to every word I say
and
http://www.amazon.com/Last-Lion-Churchill-Defender-1940-1965/dp/0345548639/ref=sr_1_3?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1445367150&sr=1-3&keywords=Churchill
My two favorite nonfiction books, and realistically the only nonfiction I've read that I didn't hate. If you like biographies at all, I'd recommend those two pretty highly.
Here's Arch's recommended reading list for fun and profit (but mostly knowledge)
READ THE FOLLOWING
The Tangled Bank by Carl Zimmer- good introduction to evolutionary biology, but a bit textbook-y
Parasite Rex, Planet of Viruses- both also by Zimmer. These are short and sweet, and are mostly just fun books to learn about weird things in the world.
Your Inner Fish by Neil Shubin -or- Endless forms Most Beautiful by Sean Carroll. Both fill similar niches in learning about how body forms have evolved over time, and how we use similar gene networks to build vastly different forms
Edible by Daniella Martin. I don't like the weird bits where she shits all over vegetarianism, but the rest of the book is solid.
The Infested Mind by John Lockwood. This book is written by an entomologist who actually has entomophobia, and it explores the evolutionary history and psychology of insect fear. One of my favorite books- I've read it about five times now.
Animal Weapons - by Doug Emlen. This book describes how the different weapons different animals possess have originated and evolved, and compares it to parallels in human weaponry. Bonus is that I'm in the acknowledgements of this book, because Doug is on my dissertation committee.
For fiction I recommend the book trilogy Parasite by Mira Grant, or The Passage trilogy by Justin Cronin.
ANYWAY YEA MAN GET SMART AND DUNK ON PEOPLES