3 books you would recommend

3 books you would recommend

>Memoirs of Hadrian

>War and Peace

>The best of Shakespeare

To whom?

>The best of Shakespeare

Nigga this aint a CD

Ok.

So: Hamlet, Macbeth, Othello, King Lear, A Midssumer Night Dream, The Tempest, Henry IV parts 1 and 2, Julius Caesar, Anthony and Cleopatra and Romeo and Juliet.

>not just recommending 'The Collected Works of William Shakespeare'

Fucking cuck

Infinite Jest
Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
1984

The Iliad
Crime and Punishment
Don Quixote

which edition

Amsterdam Stories
Labyrinths
Confusions of Young Torless

Newton
Bacon
Locke

Pedro paramo
Book of the new sun
a confederacy of dunces

Siddhartha
Crime and Punishment
Ecclesiastes

too vague.

no one book is right for everybody.

I prefer to be more specifically helpful.

Hunger
The Master and Margarita
Dubliners

N O R T O N
O
R
T
O
N

why norton over others?

The Antichrist
An Essay on Criticism
The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch

>Il deserto dei Tartari - Buzzati
>The Plague - Camus
>Galjot - Jančar

JR
Pale Fire
Point Omega

Maybe not in that order.

Funny that the plague and tartar steppes have similar atmospheres and for that same reason as good (masterful in the case of buzzati) they are I wouldn't want to reread them for a very long time, much too claustrophobic of atmospheres.

ⴳⵀⵔⴼⵏⵛⵣ
ⵀⴳⴽⵔⵓ
ⵜⵀⴻ ⵎⵢⵙⵜⵔⵢ ⵄⴼ ⴷⵉⵄⵙ

ah fuck sry
crime and punishment
no longer human
le Myth de Sisyphus

Shakespeare complete works
Don Quixote
Ulysses

omg how is it in the desert

baka i live in north of Tunisia
ps: view from my room is it /lit?

forgot pic

Tamazight is the weirdest shit ever.

tfw can speak 5 language and write in 3 alphabet still bad at writing

Smh...

-Petersburg
-The human condition
-gravity's rainbow ( it's actually great, if you manage to keep the pace of the book. Great reflexions and fun to read. Definitely worth. )

Fuck off space niggers, we're full

wittgensteins mistress
paradise lost
civilwarland in bad decline

yeah, you're right there, the desert of the tartars made such an impact on me, i couldn't take my mind off it for months.
i've noticed that works (films, books) that compress or summarize character's whole life, from young age to death, have a funny impact on me. Although im probably not the only one

Mason and Dixon
Infinite Jest
Malazan Book of the Fallen

Crime and punishment
Blood meridian
Twelve night

Dubliners
Roadside Picnic
Something Wicked This Way Comes

harry potter and the unnecessarily long title
fault in our shakespeare references
finnegan's wake

Wind Sand and Stars
Peace
Bridge of Birds

Atlas Shruggged
The God Delusion
The Way of Men

The Holy Bible
The Complete Poetry and Prose of William Blake
Complete Works of William Shakespeare

:^)

Tor Ulven - Replacement
Julian Rios - Larva
Christina Brooke-Rose - Textermination

Einstein's Dreams

Time and Western Man

The Bias of Communication

Recommend to whom?
Anyway:
Hugo - Ninety-Three
Voltaire - Candid
Gogol - Dead Souls

Infinite Jest
Ishmael
Lord of the Rings

Mein Kampf - Adolf Hitler
Hunter - Andrew MacDonald
The International Jew - Henry Ford

For My Legionaries - Codreanu
This Time the World - Rockwell
Anton Reiser - Moritz

Metamorphoses
Divine Comedy
Cantos

Gravity's Rainbow
The Stranger
Paradise Lost

The Tanners by Robert Walser. This is the book equivalent of a loving hug. It follows a group of siblings as they deal with life (its implied they had negligent parents). Simple story, but its dealt with in such a beautiful way. Trust me, do yourself a favour and read this.

The Islandman by Tomas O'Crohan. A memoir written by an Irish farmer about his life on the Blasket Islands. Beautifully written and almost surreal, read this and learn what hard work looks like.

Selected Poems, 1923-1958 by E.E. Cummings. Clumsy, drunken poems of joy and pain in which the words are falling over each other. Absolute delight