In what order should I read Nietzsche ?

In what order should I read Nietzsche ?

Front to back, top to bottom, right to left

start to finish

birth of tragedy, human, all too human, wanderer and his shadow, the gay science, zarathustra, beyond good and evil, geneology of morals, twilight of the idols, the anti-christ then ecce homo. in other words chronologically

ya but dont forget his minor works n essays

I heard someone say you should read it as :
1: GoM, BoT, Ecce Homo
2: TGS, TSZ, BG&E
3: Twilight, AntiChrist, Human All Too Human

As phases of his thinking

Why would you recommend chronologically over this?

t. UnterMenschën with das Slave mortality

>Slave mortality
what did he mean by this?

was the right-to-left part too subtle for you?

Is there anything that is of particular interest to you already?
How do you know you'll like Nietzsche enough to read all of his works?

Chronological, you fucking retard.

Thus Spoke Zarathustra
Beyond Good and Evil
On the Genealogy of Morals

and then stop

why ? are those 3 redpilled ?

please kill yourself

sad fuck is mad because i am smarter, hehe

Yes.

Why though?

I assume you asked this because you want to make sure you understand everything. Thing is, if you really want to get as much as possible out of the books you'll have to re-read them, anyway.
So why bother with the order in which you're reading his works to begin with?

I just got done reading about the atrocities committed by Nietzsche's sister.
I know there's a novel about Nietzsche's life called When Nietzsche Wept, but does it capture the whole tragedy surrounding his life and death?
I'm referring to the disservice his sister did to his legacy, to the misappropriation by the Nazis, to his mental decline.

Because that is the most accurate way to see how his thought developed over time, and thus the most accurate way to understand his thoughts. This shit isn't rocket science.

Start with: The Portable Nietzsche.

fpbp

Begin and end with The Gay Science.

"God is dead." He was only half right. Man thinks [ergo] God is dead.

Kek