• You are currently viewing our forum as a guest, which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community, you will have access to additional post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), view blogs, respond to polls, upload content, and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free, so please join our community today! Just click here to register. You should turn your Ad Blocker off for this site or certain features may not work properly. If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us by clicking here.

Books that changed your life

ptgatsby

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,476
MBTI Type
ISTP
I've mentioned them to friends before, and nobody knows what I'm talking about!

I picked up the first Bunnicula book at one of those RIF (Reading Is Fun!) things that came through school... It was way better than the next year's Beverly Cleary (though I'll own up to having liked Ralph S. Mouse).

Funny, I'm in the same boat... even down to the school event (though we probably had a different version of it...) That's interesting - I wonder why it never became larger. I just saw one of them at the local bookstore over the weekend, in the discount bin. Seeing that... well... a small part of me died. I nearly bought it to save it from being outcasted.

Then my GF smacked me. Obviously she'd never read it either.
 

Geoff

Lallygag Moderator
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
5,584
MBTI Type
INXP
This sounds like a throwaway response, but I mean it. Every book I've read has changed my life. Even if the book doesn't stick with me for the long haul, it's impacting my life at that moment.

Atlas Shrugged caused me to end a relationship when my ex said he wouldn't read a book that long. Superfudge made me want to be a writer. The Cat Ate My Gymsuit was given to me by the author, Paula Danziger, at a Young Authors' Conference, and it was like I'd met the Beatles. Beowulf was the first book I hated, and I loathed that feeling. The next time I read it, I fortunately thought it was brilliant. Billy Budd taught me that great literary works just sometimes aren't so great (and that you can write an A essay stealing bits about "light and dark imagery" from the Cliff's Notes). Even Scarlett, by Alexandra Ripley, was a truly horrid book, but it still had such lush descriptions of Ireland, it inspired me to pay a visit.

If you're really asking me to pick the greatest literary work, then I don't know. I guess I'm not willing to choose.

Really? I dont hold books in such... life changing ways. I wish I did.. but it's just a communication medium. I can remember them teaching me things as a child, and enjoying them since, but it's no different to me than a TV documentary, a discussion with a professor, attending a lecture, a good website.

-Geoff
 

Rajah

Reigning Bologna Princess
Joined
Apr 23, 2007
Messages
1,774
MBTI Type
ENTP
Enneagram
7
Funny, I'm in the same boat... even down to the school event (though we probably had a different version of it...) That's interesting - I wonder why it never became larger. I just saw one of them at the local bookstore over the weekend, in the discount bin. Seeing that... well... a small part of me died. I nearly bought it to save it from being outcasted.

Then my GF smacked me. Obviously she'd never read it either.
Those were definitely unique. They were kids' books, but never talked down to kids. And they had a more sophisticated sense of humor.

I often wondered the same. Shit, I've got to go buy the series this week. My originals are probably pretty nasty now.
 

Rajah

Reigning Bologna Princess
Joined
Apr 23, 2007
Messages
1,774
MBTI Type
ENTP
Enneagram
7
Really? I dont hold books in such... life changing ways. I wish I did.. but it's just a communication medium. I can remember them teaching me things as a child, and enjoying them since, but it's no different to me than a TV documentary, a discussion with a professor, attending a lecture, a good website.

-Geoff
It's difficult to explain, and I'm sure it comes across as a little lot odd.

I don't remember a time when I couldn't read. Books were companions before I was old enough to make friends.

For me, a book is different from other media. It's being able to walk around in someone's mind, but put my own visual spin on it. If I want to escape, I can. If I want to be instructed, I can be. It's constant and comforting.
 

nottaprettygal

New member
Joined
May 1, 2007
Messages
1,641
MBTI Type
INTj
For me, a book is different from other media. It's being able to walk around in someone's mind, but put my own visual spin on it. If I want to escape, I can. If I want to be instructed, I can be. It's constant and comforting.

Yes, this makes perfect sense. I often use the same words to describe porn.
 

Geoff

Lallygag Moderator
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
5,584
MBTI Type
INXP
It's difficult to explain, and I'm sure it comes across as a little lot odd.

I don't remember a time when I couldn't read. Books were companions before I was old enough to make friends.

For me, a book is different from other media. It's being able to walk around in someone's mind, but put my own visual spin on it. If I want to escape, I can. If I want to be instructed, I can be. It's constant and comforting.

Nah, not odd. I've heard this a lot from introverted intuitives... they hold a book in special regard over other mediums.

It's a barrier to being disturbed by others or uncomfortable when read in public, too...?

-Geoff
 

Totenkindly

@.~*virinaĉo*~.@
Joined
Apr 19, 2007
Messages
50,238
MBTI Type
BELF
Enneagram
594
Instinctual Variant
sx/sp
As others have said, you can't really narrow things down to a handful easily. I have hundreds of books and/or have read thousands in my life, and they've all become part of who I am.

Ironically, I skimmed all the posts and there's very little "literal/data" oriented stuff. Information is information, and useful, but it seems like the stuff that impacted people all had very human elements to it, the integration of information with living (i.e., applied knowledge).

Anyway, some gems on my list [i.e., books that I actually reread every so often, if not regularly]:
  • The Bible -- I can't help it, it's one of the books I was first acquainted with, and my beliefs have been fundamentally shaped by it (whether I was agreeing with it or positioning myself against something). This one's part of me for the rest of life, no matter where I end up.
  • The Hobbit (and LotR) -- My first real excursion into fantasy and imagining new worlds. The name sounded dumb on my 4th-grade reading list (so I ignored the title), but then I saw the cartoon and got the book out of the library, and that was the beginning...
  • People of the Lie (M. Scott Peck) -- Fundamentals of the interface between psychology and morality for me.
  • The Earthsea series (Ursula LeGuin) -- Another fantasy series that has driven me from a young age. The fact that LeGuin covers all ages (a boy coming of age, a girl being freed from darkness, a grown man losing his power and accepting his mortality, and her recent additions to the series show integration of people into community) only makes the work more important and applicable to all time periods of my life.
  • Narnia -- Offered me some general theological metaphors/images (including Aslan and his role in these stories) that still work for me, even if I find most of it too simplistic and/or too direct.
  • Almost anything by Dr. Seuss -- Interface between quirky/individualistic art, vocabulary gymnastics, "breaking the rules" in acceptable ways, silliness, and sharing important life experience in the process.
  • Bloom County -- Same qualities as Dr. Seuss, but also skeptical social commentary. Gave me the idea that sardonic commentary and lovability/warmth can still go hand in hand.
  • The Way Things Work (David MacCauley?) -- Not only communicates basic science and machines in very transparent ways, but showed me that it was possible to mix text and words together, along with a bit of quirk, in order to make a serious point.
  • Watchmen (Moore & Gibbons): Perfect integration of visual art and narrative, with mature topics and complex human beings. [Toss Gaiman's "Sandman" into this as well, as more books I regularly re-read.]

Oh yeah. I forgot "A Wrinkle in Time" -- although the one that impacts me most as an adult is "A Wind in the Door."
 

Shimpei

New member
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
339
MBTI Type
ISFJ
Enneagram
9
The very first most influential books I read were Lottie & Lisa; The Flying Classroom by Erich Kastner

Yes the No1 is the Bible

Then all the typology-psychology-sociology related books that helped me understand other people better.

The most cathartic fictions have been:
Death is My Profession (Robert Merle)
Madame Bovary (Gustave Flaubert)

I love to read biographies too:

Schindler's Ark (Thomas Keneally)
Selected Letters of Oscar Wilde (R. Hart-Davis)
Marie Antoinette (Antonia Fraser)
Women of the Third Reich (Anna-Maria Sigmund)
 

Langrenus

New member
Joined
Apr 23, 2007
Messages
358
Ahhh, books

All Quiet on the Western Front (Remarque). The only book I've read that made me feel genuinely emotional come the end. Beautifully written, tragically concluded.

Man's Search for Meaning (Victor Frankl) - anyone ever had a weird intellectual buzz after reading a book? I find it difficult to express (and nobody I've met gets it) - but it's like your brain is suddenly working 10x faster than it was when you started reading the book, making connections and generating new ideas. I genuinely sat in my chair for about 2 hours after finishing this book, just thinking. I also almost cried when I woke up the next morning and the buzz had gone...

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time (Mark Haddon) - something beautifully simple about this book. I believe it was originally a children's story, but there's an incredible level of depth to the story.
 

Maverick

New member
Joined
Apr 29, 2007
Messages
880
MBTI Type
ENTJ
The book that change my life was "Beyond Good and Evil" by Nietzsche. It made me realize how everything was relative and there was not one right/wrong...
 

Zergling

Permabanned
Joined
Apr 26, 2007
Messages
1,377
MBTI Type
ExTJ
Apollo 13/Lost moon (I rewad it around 3rd/4th grade the first time, than later grades)
Various other science books (I can't remember their names)

There aren't exactly 3 books, but these early ones got me interested in science/math/technology, and thanks to finding them really intertesting I got myself set on a science/technology oriented life path.
 

cafe

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 19, 2007
Messages
9,827
MBTI Type
INFJ
Enneagram
9w1
It's difficult to explain, and I'm sure it comes across as a little lot odd.

I don't remember a time when I couldn't read. Books were companions before I was old enough to make friends.

For me, a book is different from other media. It's being able to walk around in someone's mind, but put my own visual spin on it. If I want to escape, I can. If I want to be instructed, I can be. It's constant and comforting.
When you have a book, you never have to stay anyplace you don't want to be. You have a paper escape hatch.
 

MacGuffin

Permabanned
Joined
Apr 19, 2007
Messages
10,710
MBTI Type
xkcd
Enneagram
9w1
Instinctual Variant
sx/sp
Bunnicula!

Bunnicula.jpg


I read the series, or as much as had been written at the time I started reading them. Good fun. There was a TV show? Or special?
 

Littlelostnf

New member
Joined
Apr 23, 2007
Messages
645
MBTI Type
ENFJ
I can't actually remember not being able to read, while my mother taught my sister (she is 18 months older) how to read, I must have been listening and absorbing, because when she tried to introduce me to words at 3 I could already read.. apparently.

As for fairly scientific treatises...like Life on Earth, I can remember it freaking the teacher out that I was reading it at 7. She basically accused me of just looking at pictures (I'd brought it in from home) and recommending I stick to stuff like Peter Rabbit. After I'd explained to her in some detail about the chapter on Protozoa and its place in early life, she left me alone with my books ;)

By way of balance, I got my words late... I didnt speak until 3 or so, and even then i was composing and using my own nonsense language (did I ever stop :D ), apparently because of intellectual boredom, but it could just be I'm odd....

It's difficult to know what's normal, or not, when you have only yourself as an example.

-Geoff

Same here I really don't remember a time when I didn't read. My mom says that she and my dad and my aunts read to us all the time but I honestly can't remember. I DO remember teaching my little brother to read. We both read before kindergarten. I went into K and had reading with the 1st and then the 2nd graders. I always had my head in a book...still do. (I read while I drive and I drive a stick...sigh...(one day I won't be posting due to my excitment over chapter 2 while on the GSP) I'm trying to stop that extremely dangerous bad bad habit...:cry:
 

Littlelostnf

New member
Joined
Apr 23, 2007
Messages
645
MBTI Type
ENFJ
It's difficult to explain, and I'm sure it comes across as a little lot odd.

I don't remember a time when I couldn't read. Books were companions before I was old enough to make friends.

For me, a book is different from other media. It's being able to walk around in someone's mind, but put my own visual spin on it. If I want to escape, I can. If I want to be instructed, I can be. It's constant and comforting.

You just wrote my next post with those words.
Bloom County -- Same qualities as Dr. Seuss, but also skeptical social commentary. Gave me the idea that sardonic commentary and lovability/warmth can still go hand in hand.

Three cheers for Berkley Breathe...I LOVE BLOOM COUNTY...Steve Dallas forever!

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time (Mark Haddon) - something beautifully simple about this book. I believe it was originally a children's story, but there's an incredible level of depth to the story.


This story allowed me to be in the head of a child who was like the children I teach. Loved it!
 

SolitaryWalker

Tenured roisterer
Joined
Apr 23, 2007
Messages
3,504
MBTI Type
INTP
Enneagram
5w6
Instinctual Variant
so/sx
Please add any books that changed your outlook/philosophy on life.

1. The Tao Te Ching - Lao Tzu

2. Brave New World - Aldous Huxley

3. The Universe in a Nutshell - Steven Hawking

There shouldnt be any books that have changed your life. You by far should be mroe influenced by self than what is on the outside.
 

Totenkindly

@.~*virinaĉo*~.@
Joined
Apr 19, 2007
Messages
50,238
MBTI Type
BELF
Enneagram
594
Instinctual Variant
sx/sp
There shouldnt be any books that have changed your life. You by far should be mroe influenced by self than what is on the outside.

Yeah. After all, complex and glorious ideas just spontaneously generate within people's minds all on their lonesome.

(Heck, we can't even learn language and thus learn to think cohesively without the influence of other human beings....)

...Wait a second... :shock: you were... making a joke! :rofl1: yay! yay! SW made a joke!
 
Top