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Obligatory:Atlas Shrugged (alternatively, you’re a masochist)
Obligatory:Atlas Shrugged (alternatively, you’re a masochist)
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It's the comic that turned an entire generation of ignored teenagers into angsty anarchy loving retards.
The narrator in Arthur Jermyn burns himself alive because he finds out he had an African great-grandmother.
I been meaning to get into Phillip k. Dick for a long time but I notice he seems to attract a peculiar kind of "what if lolweed420 and like reality is not reality maaan" kind of audience.
I can't comment on the content yet but the people shilling definitely fit the bill as tards who think they are too smart for this world.
I had to read that in high school and it made zero sense. Other than the name "Holden Caulfield", I don't remember anything of any significance about it. Most pointless book ever.The Catcher in the Rye
Holden Caufield is the personification of Gen X; whiny and self-absorbed. He likes to pretend he's counter-culture by calling out the phonies with his snark, but he's an impotent drifter. This cynicism has destroyed him of his natural desire to help children, which he alluded to with vague notions of wanting to be a Catcher rather than a concrete goal like a cop or a teacher.I had to read that in high school and it made zero sense. Other than the name "Holden Caulfield", I don't remember anything of any significance about it. Most pointless book ever.
Holden Caufield is the personification of Gen X; whiny and self-absorbed. He likes to pretend he's counter-culture by calling out the phonies with his snark, but he's an impotent drifter. This cynicism has destroyed him of his natural desire to help children, which he alluded to with vague notions of wanting to be a Catcher rather than a concrete goal like a cop or a teacher.
It's a good character study that got vastly overrated because he said "fuck" a few times.
TV is now the intellectual medium for snobs who are too good for Facebook and Twitch -- nobody reads lmao, except for YA fiction and "kill whitey" pop sociology that's dumber than television anyway. Oh the sad unwashed peasants, never to know the refined delights of following an epic 22-minute plot punctuated by a laugh track... Married With Children is an experience for the initiated, the elite...What's invented the whole "books are for intellectuals and other media is for plebs" stigma anyways? Is it something new? I don't recall examples of people jerking themselves over reading above watching TV back in the 90's.
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Might be helpful for some to know that in a lot of places, you can get that stuff free from your library, either through streaming or checking out physical copies. (I say this as someone who throws the Teaching Company a ton of money and never streams it for free, oh well. or oh yeah you can pirate them I guess.) I would recommend Robert Greenberg's courses on classical music to anybody slightly interested in the subject.I have that on my wish list. Lockdown has turned me into a Great Courses addict.
People keep saying Ayn Rand... maybe, in the sense that reading her books will make you feel like you're smarter than a famous philosopher. ONCE UPON A TIME THERE WAS AN AUTISTIC RAPIST WHO WAS BETTER THAN EVERYBODY ELSE, THE END. Whereas I'm pretty sure e.g. Thus Spake Zarathustra is actually beyond my capacity to decode and there's something to it, because Nietzsche can be lucid when he cares to be. But naw I didn't understand that shit.Also, anything written by Ayn Rand, Cotton Mather, John Calvin, Augustine, or Hunter S. Thompson
A lot of the more famous big Russian novels have suffered during to translation. Constance Garnett did a lot of the translations in the 20th century, despite having an extremely limited knowledge of the language. As a result, Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Gogol et al sound exactly the same in terms of tone, writing style, vocabulary, etc.The Brothers Karamzov
Mea Culpa: I did buy this book for pretentious reasons because I heard nothing but good things about Dostoyevsky, but I just can't bring myself to care about anyone in the book for any reason. I can't remember what happened in the first fifty pages at all.
Which freaked me out because I thought I had developed ADD from using the Internet so much. So I picked up The Quiet Time stories by Dimitri Keriotis to see if that's the case. Those short stories aren't in subjects I care about either, but since I found that I could finish one short story in one sitting, I probably don't have ADD. It's simply a case of not liking the novel.
The life and opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentelman.
It's basically 700+ Pages of references only applicaple to the time it was written in with a disjointed narrative by what seems to be a fictional syphilitic noble man.
A must read for any pseudo-philosopist/intellectual such as myself.
Or I'm just too stupid to understand it for the work of art it is.