I'm having a hard time with this one. It seems like Sensors have very diverse literary tastes. I'll list the favorite books of some of my Sensor friends, based on type:
ESFP: Pride and Prejudice, Fight Club, The Catcher in the Rye, The Great Gatsby
ISFP: The Real Frank Zappa Book, Brave New World, The Philosophy of Andy Warhol, One Hundred Years of Solitude
ISFJ: Pride and Prejudice, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, the Harry Potter books, Persepolis
ESFJ: Alice in Wonderland, The Wizard of Oz
ISTJ: Sabriel, the Harry Potter books
ESTJ (cough ME cough): The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, the Harry Potter books, any/all Sherlock Holmes stories, Blankets (the graphic novel), Good Omens
I could also see STPs liking Fight Club... but not SJs.
I think if you had to generalize, and give one particular book that all Sensors had to read, it would probably be a nonfiction book - perhaps a biography? Maybe... "Fun Home", by Alison Bechdel. Perhaps "Long Walk to Freedom" by Nelson Mandela. Or maybe something funny, like "America: The Book". I dunno.
Also, I used to be in love with Neil Gaiman's work... like Coraline and Stardust. The books are so much better than the movies, in my opinion. Neverwhere is another good book of his.
Echo by Francesca Lia is another good book. Very dark and beautifully written. Poetic in a way.
Ionno, I like reading alot. I also had this habit of collecting encyclopedias and books on birds when I was younger because I was so fascinated by them. Haha. I'm a big fan of horror and fantasy. Esp. fiction.I grew up reading alot of fairytale books... heehee.
Hm. I'm a little rusty on my reading but I do still think I love books on the rare occasions I stick one out. I don't think they are must reads but I found them interestingly none the less. Note: Most of them are childrens books. ^^
Marianne Dreams - I haven't read this in a long time but I loved this as a child, it's one of the books that I still remember.
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time - Interesting story about some autistic child and how he views things, travelling around to solve this mystery.
The little prince - Sure most people have heard of this book.
I think that's why I'm not often drawn to nonfiction books, Halla74. I just often think there's a more efficient (aka FAST) way to get at the information than in thick volume form. Of course, that is, if you know exactly what you're looking for and where to find it.
Nonfiction books are great for general knowledge- being introduced to a new realm and getting a consistent framework/vision of this part of the world. Or hearing about an opinion/interpretation in greater detail.
Does everyone love Harry Potter except me?![]()
You're exactly right! Couldn't agree more. Hemingway and Fitzgerald have been mentioned so far, but I can't see STs liking them much. I don't, really. I read The Sun Also Rises and The Great Gatsby, and had serious problems with them. I like books where most of the action is ACTION, and not just emotional tumult in the heads of the characters. I still think that biographies work for Sensors - it just depends on whether or not you get something personal out of it. So, impersonal biographies don't work, but personal autobiographies, with a distinctive narrative style (e.g. "Fun Home", "Persepolis", "Born Standing Up", etc. etc), do work. For me, anyways.I don't mean to sound presumptious, but I think SPs generally might prefer different books than SJs. The idea that every S would like the same book amuses me. I'm thinking of a very special ISFP when I say this...
ISTJ: Sabriel, the Harry Potter books
You're exactly right! Couldn't agree more. Hemingway and Fitzgerald have been mentioned so far, but I can't see STs liking them much. I don't, really. I read The Sun Also Rises and The Great Gatsby, and had serious problems with them. I like books where most of the action is ACTION, and not just emotional tumult in the heads of the characters. I still think that biographies work for Sensors - it just depends on whether or not you get something personal out of it. So, impersonal biographies don't work, but personal autobiographies, with a distinctive narrative style (e.g. "Fun Home", "Persepolis", "Born Standing Up", etc. etc), do work. For me, anyways.
Also, one of my favorite books of all time (speaking of Douglas Adams-esque humor): "The Pirates! in an Adventure with Communists", by Gideon Defoe. SO funny!!! Laughed out loud through the whole thing.
Nope.
Post-modernist, anti-novels are definitely not recommended.
I don't mean to sound presumptious, but I think SPs generally might prefer different books than SJs. The idea that every S would like the same book amuses me. I'm thinking of a very special ISFP when I say this...
You're exactly right! Couldn't agree more.