Which books made you?

Soldato
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Which books made you who you are and helped form your ideas and ideals?

Not so much which books you enjoyed the most.

My reasoning behind the thread was a struggle to understand where some people were coming from and how they arrived at their way of thinking.

I know books aren't the be-all-and-end-all, but they represent an accessible slice of the influences on a person.

For me, especially in my formative years, I read mainly a lot of trash/reading for fun, and, in bulk, it will have definitely have made an impression - Enid Blyton, Terry Pratchett, Alan Garner, Rosemary Sutcliffe, Jack Higgins, Douglas Adams, John Grisham, Len Deighton, Robert Ludlum, Lee Child, Raymond Chandler, John Wyndham, Asimov, Banks, - all must have played a part.

In terms of the individual books that most made me think, and possibly most nudged my thinking, I'd say these might make the top list:-
  • To Kill a Mockingbird
  • Catcher in the Rye
  • Of Mice and Men
  • One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest
  • Zen & the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
Those all look a bit worthy on review. So I tried to think about books that may have influenced me negatively.

It feels like a difficult thought exercise. I guess 2 that spring to mind are I, Lucifer, and Good Omens. The Hitman Diaries is another one in a similar vein. Not really negative though, - more subversive, yet still highly moral.

It begs another question - Are there any truly poisonous books? Or books that you feel caused harm?
 
Soldato
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Brer rabbit, Danny Champion of the world, Georges marvelous medicine.

Oh and death of a salesman, did that in school.

Also Masters of doom and Accidental Empires: How the Boys of Silicon Valley Make Their Millions, Battle Foreign Competition, and Still Can't Get a Date.

Not very classy I know.
 
Soldato
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I remember Bridge to Terabithia having an impact on me as a kid. I mostly read Stephen King novels and disc world series back then though. Nothing particularly high brow.
 
Man of Honour
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There was 1-2 books along the lines of Tom's Midnight Garden (though I wasn't a big fan of that one) with time travel/parallel existence scenarios that had a big impact on and shaped my thinking/perspective of the world. Annoyingly I can't remember the title of the one that had the biggest impact on me.

Also I find the stuff by Carl Sagan well worth reading - not so much for its own value as such - I don't agree with everything he says although in some respects that isn't the purpose of a lot of his work - but the way that it can open your mind to being inquisitive about stuff like that.
 
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Soldato
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First book to really make me think was Lord of the Flies, which we were covering in English Lit.

My father was a bit of a UFO nut and so I ended up reading Erich von Däniken's Chariots of the Gods - I didn't really fall for his BS but it did make me think a great deal, specially about religion, which at that time we were taught was fact and as a result I ended up becoming an atheist, which I still am, some 50 years later.
 
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