Rupetta by N A Sulway is a little-known but excellent book. From the back:
Four hundred years ago, in a small town in rural France, a young woman creates the future in the shape of Rupetta. Part mechanical, part human, Rupetta’s consciousness is tied to the women who wind her. In the years that follow she is bought and sold, borrowed, forgotten and revered. By the twentieth century, the Rupettan four-fold law rules everyone’s lives, but Rupetta—the immortal being on whose existence and history those laws are based—is the keeper of a secret that will tear apart the world her followers have built in her name.
Dominic Sanders
Seriously try some books by Robert Anton Wilson.
Noah Carter
There are lots, so it gets repetitive. The ones that hold up are the big ones like the mark of the four, or the baskersville's hound
Henry Smith
>the baskersville's hound
Michael Nelson
War and Peace DESU
Jack Lopez
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovitch taught my edgy teenage self to despise my teachers a bit less and generally impacted my life a lot, 10/10 for me.
Nathan Robinson
wuthering heights
Connor Hall
I also loved Bartleby the Scrivener and The Stranger I was a real depressed edgy moron, that being said, Mark Twain's short stories are really good, plus for me Moby Dick until they get on the boat. After that I got distracted and quit.
Kayden Carter
> The Iliad
My nigga. It feels like everyone else is too busy complaining about the lists and ship catalog that they don't ever really come to appreciate the poem for the power it truly has. It made me cry by the end.
Landon Green
You're probably not allowed outside without permission I bet.