HACKER Q&A
📣 tomrod

What book changed your life?


What book (or books) changed your life? I'm looking for inspiration and would love to hear what and how you were impacted.



👤 kaladin-jasnah
The Stormlight Archive (series) by Brandon Sanderson has probably changed my life the most. I don't think I've enjoyed a book as much or have had one mean as much to me as I've have with this series.

The series is incredibly inspirational since despite being a high fantasy novel. In fear of spoiling the plot, I'm being vague: it tracks the stories of (multiple) people who go through difficult life situations and learn to heal from depressive moments while having incredibly, intricate worldbuilding (which is excellent for taking your mind off of reality) and a twisty plot. If you go on the subreddit for this series, r/stormlight_archive, you'll see people talking about how this book (literally) saved their lives. I can tell you that in the most off-putting moments of life reading inspirational scenes from the Stormlight Archive has helped me stand up again. The messages and themes about life are simple, but also on-point. Overall, an excellent series. I recommend it.


👤 geocrasher
First and foremost: The Bible. Not the watered down "everybody goes to heaven" theology that most people subscribe to, but rather an evidence based approach that uses the Bible to interpret itself as it was designed to do.

Secondarily, this book saved my life in the sense that it helped me understand my depression, a clinical depression so deep that my psychologist had never seen such a thing previously:

Get Out of Your Mind and Into Your Life: The New Acceptance and Commitment Therapy - Stephen C. Hayes https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0054M063A/

Its scientific approach to understanding our own thought patterns gave me control- coping mechanisms- for dealing with my own feelings instead of ignoring ("Burying") them and letting them slowly destroy me from the inside out.


👤 thatjoeoverthr
Jacob’s Room, Virginia Woolf

Before this book I generally did not read, unless it was a Star Trek branded airport novel. I had just got an iPad and was rummaging around the Project Gutenberg texts they’d dumped into iBooks. I chose it impulsively.

This book set my brain and heart on fire and opened the world of literature for me. It’s very specific, though, and I can’t -recommend- it to anyone.

There is little spackle in this book, as if every sentence and scene is cropped a bit beyond the point of readability. But reading aloud it flows well. There is effectively no plot and a great deal of its merit is at the sentence level. Furthermore, this book in particular resonated with me emotionally.

I was thirsty for more and read other classics. My favorites; To the Lighthouse, Picture of Dorian Grey and Thus Spake Zarathustra (the translation they have on Gutenberg).

This hobby dominated my attention for years. What displaced it was I had to learn Polish. At first I tried to combine these; I read Charlotte’s Web, the Little Prince and Pulp (bukowski) in Polish. But it really wasn’t an effective way to continue and Polish was the priority. All other hobbies had to go.


👤 nanomonkey
The Listening Society by Hanzi Freinacht. It taught me that there is indeed a direction for society to go beyond PostModernism, that is constructive and nuanced. Also explained why it is so rare for people to move into such a stage of development.

The Dawn of Everything by David Graeber and David Wengrow. Showed all of the archaeological evidence for vast time periods where alternate governance models were put into practice, and how the history of progress that we are given is not the whole story. Useful for seeing that we are in a local minim, and can evolve into something better.

Dark Emu by Bruce Pascoe. Goes through the diaries and historical evidence of the early interactions with Australia's Aboriginals. Shows how over time their agricultural practices, towns and living environments were destroyed and replaced with a narrative that they were backwards and not using the land. Good example of how sustainable practices can look like unused natural spaces, and thus dismissed as poor uses of space.


👤 bloopernova
Dune. Specifically the parts about how a human can choose their reaction to an external event. And the ability to overcome fear.

Man's Search For Meaning. Again, overcoming the worst situations and finding joy anywhere.

How to Practice. Understanding what you are feeling and why you are feeling it.

Emotional Intelligence. How the amygdala sends signals to the brain, why it does that, and how to recognize your negative reactions.

And all the Discworld books, to find joy and humour in everything. GNU Terry Pratchett.


👤 throwawaybbq1
"Surely you're joking Mr. Feynman" - sort of like an autobiography of Richard Feynman but from recordings of some conversations. I'm a scientist and this resonated with me a lot.

"The Game" - very immature and sophomoric book. I was given this book by an acquaintance who was also geeky like me. I was painfully shy of girls until grad school, and this book gave me much needed confidence to talk to the opposite gender. A lot of the content is garbage but this book was definitely a life changer.

"Hobbit" - Great story that got me into the LOTR. Shorter than LOTR and hence why I put that on this list. Also about being brave I suppose. I'm seeing a pattern here.

"Good Omens" - Not sure why but when I read this book, I was convinced it was the best book ever written (and I used to read a lot of books in youth). Just witty writing and the occult I suppose.


👤 skilled
I think the only book I can recall having a direct impact on my conscious awareness was The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle[0].

The book is very easy to read and quite enjoyable with everything that it includes. I definitely recommend to check it out.

[0]: https://www.amazon.com/Power-Now-Guide-Spiritual-Enlightenme...


👤 labarilem
Gödel, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid

Introduced me to the beauty of logic and its limits. Also gave me solid mathematical thinking foundations.

Pro tip: Try listening to Bach while you read about Bach.


👤 TillE
As a young teenager, Carl Sagan's The Demon-Haunted World. A brilliant series of essays about critical thinking.

More recently - I hesitate to recommend it because the trilogy is unfinished, but still - Patrick Rothfuss' Kingkiller Chronicle books have redefined what is possible with fantasy fiction, with incredible depth and subtlety and literary flourishes. It has flaws for sure, but I can't think of anything that remotely compares to it, and I've read an enormous pile of genre fiction. A real eye opener if you're doing any kind of creative writing.


👤 yashg
Atomic habits. Last year I had just came back from 3 days in Hospital for extremely high blood pressure. I took up walking as a daily workout and listened to Atomic Habits audiobook. It provided me enough motivation to continue and build a new habit which has not become a part of my daily routine. I am healthier and in a much better space mentally as well.

👤 zorr
How to win friends and influence people - Carnegie

Think and grow rich - Napoleon Hill

That last one made something click in my head but I find it hard to describe what it is exactly. The key concepts that I learned from this book are in my thoughts and actions every single day.


👤 themadturk
A Wrinkle In Time, by Madeleine L'Engle

I probably read it in fourth or fifth grade, not too many years after it was published. It was definitely the first science fiction novel I ever read. It wasn't until many years later that I saw how foundational to my worldview it was that my first SF book had a female protagonist.

I was going to give a few other examples of truly life-changing works (LOTR, Dune, Neuromancer), but I'm not sure how I would have found them if A Wrinkle In Time hadn't opened by pre-adolescent eyes.


👤 hypertexthero
The First and Last Freedom by Jiddu Krishnamurti, with a forward by Aldous Huxley.

I read it while living in California, during a trying time after deciding to move far away from my parents, and it helped me see all of life in a calm new light.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_First_and_Last_Freedom


👤 NateEag
Non-violent Communication, by Marshall Rosenberg. It taught me so much about how to empathize with someone and genuinely listen to what they're saying.

It's a bunch of very straightforward advice that I would never have gotten to on my own and which is _really_ hard to put into practice, but so worth it when you do.


👤 rtourn
- The Unbearable Lightness of Being, fiction, how the “crazy” actions of people in relationships makes sense in the context of their individual history.

There’s one chapter about misunderstood words. The word “mother” was highly regarded by one character. They loved their mother, so to call someone a mother was a deep and powerful complement. The other character hated their mother, the word had a hypocritical meaning to her.

So when the first character complemented the second with the deepest most heart felt honor they could muster, the second character left them without a word.


👤 lbotos
It's trite but Crucial Conversations.

I think the key is that you have to read it when you are trying to collaborate with someone and you can't seem to communicate. In that moment, the guidance is a serious level up. If read outside of that context you'll say "well, yeah, sure, duh." In situ, it will help you better communicate (speaking and listening).


👤 rmnull
* Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi.

Among lot of books i've read this was the one that pushed me towards questioning my beliefs. Although i can't say this book made me irreligious it certainly was a gateway to a whole new world.

* Calvin and Hobbes.

this is one of those things that completely changed my perspective on creativity, oh and not to mention all the things about life and philosophy in there, its in good spirit.

* Animal Farm

This is arguably the best piece of satire I've read that is also fun and easy on the brain. It flows like water.

* The Little Schemer.

I hold this book dear. I've tried reading SICP twice and given up. And thought LISP was not for me. The environment was horrible, all those parens it was just confusing. This book changed that, what it encouraged me to do is grab a pen and paper and try to work everything out myself[1]. It was such a fun read and i owe most of my understanding of functional programming to this book. Few days after finishing this book, i introduced this book to my friend and we spent all our days discussing life listening to sufjan stevens and working through this book, it was a sweet time.

====

[1] I wrote my actual scheme programs on computer long after i had worked through the book(i don't recall exactly but it was after 5th or 6th chapter). An online friend of mine recommended that i try DrRacket as i could execute scheme there. It was a much friendlier environment.



👤 sillyinseattle
Zed Shaw's "Learn C the hard way". Had years of scientific programming before that (R, Matlab). But I used to be afraid of working with "real" code bases. This book (which still has an unfinished feel to it) helped me understand how computers work and how to write programs with that understanding - at a high level. Learning about "Object-oriented programming" with plain C was super fun. Not the most illuminating book I've read (e.g. The Gene by Siddhartha Mukherjee), but the others did not change my life.

👤 jkingsbery
Besides ones already mentioned, a suggestion I'd like to throw out is the writings of GK Chesterton. I've heard many engineers cite "Chesterton's fence," the idea that you shouldn't get rid of something until you understand why it's there in the first place (which, naturally comes up a lot in software engineering). I haven't come across many engineers though that have actually read one of his books.

His non-fiction books are easy to read and full of lots of wonderful turns-of-phrase. A lot of what he wrote back in the day sounds like it could be written today. There is a fair amount of his books that was very of-the-moment, making references to people from the time that I suppose were well known then that you need to read around.

I've only read two of his fiction books (Napoleon of Notting Hill and The Man who was Thursday), both of which are really funny.


👤 cutler
"Mastering Regular Expressions" by Jeffrey Friedl. While reading Dreamweaver 3 Bible I became intrigued by the Find And Replace options which included regular expressions. At the end of the chapter was a reference to Friel's classic and I found a copy in a local London library. That led me to "Programming Perl" by Larry Wall and the beginning of my career as a developer. The O'Reilly Perl collection is unsurpassed to this day.

👤 escapegoat
_The Mind Illuminated_ Hasn't changed my life yet but it might (found it three days ago out on hoopla.com). I say this as someone who has given meditation practice a good college try (more than a year at a time of daily practice) on a couple of occasions. Most books say just keep going and you will eventually fart pixie dust. This book says you can reach advanced practice in under a year BUT requires a consistent one hour a day which might be a deal breaker. This book gets very specific about technique, achievements and expectations which is unique in my experience. And the author is not saying you need to find a "mentor/guide". If you have seen a better book I would love to hear about it.

👤 s0teri0s
Steven Pinker's "Better Angels of Our Nature" and the sequel "Enlightenment Now" briefly helped to restore my faith that humanity is not entirely an evil virus best gone the way of the dinosaurs. Don't get me wrong though, these books are not easy reads. In the first one Pinker does spend an inordinate amount of time cataloging humanity's centuries of evils against itself before he can make the case that we're doing better now, so don't consider these to be light reads.

👤 Existenceblinks
None, seriously. Sorry for not giving any inspiration. I have only read technical books like Static/Dynamics mechanics, TCP/IP, Material Science, mostly engineering stuff etc. Because I wouldn't want much reading about someone else's opinion or view of truth. People may find they are useful for learning broad spectrum of perspective, but I find that they all fall into limited set of views that I never be surprised to know, actually almost anything is not new to me (i am yet too old though).

Update more info:

I'm a really fun at party guy and used to read adventurous fictions (text and audio), lots of entertaining, individual-help, business-help kind of books, they are all just opinions, not even statistical useful because you manually collect just one data point per book. Use science based knowledge and can get stuff done and be able to make money, that will make much more impact to life and family!


👤 johngo54
Not so much a life changer but certainly reshaping the way I look at things, the way I judge things, and the way I let things ruin my day:

'The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck' by Mark Manson

The book is full of examples and while reading, you go "hey, that's a bit like my friend X", or "hey, that sounds like my Uncle Y". And then, when Mark describes certain personality traits, you think, "hole smoke, that's ME!"


👤 garyrob
Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind by Shunru Suzuki. I first encountered it when I was around 19, and came back to it at various points. At around age 55 I finally started a serious Zen practice which involves an hour a day of meditation, working on koans with a Zen teacher, and more. I've been doing that for around 10 years. It has truly been life-altering in the deepest possible way. I've read other Zen books but that one by Suzuki is the one that started everything and it still holds a unique and very valuable place.

👤 asdfqwertzxcv
Awareness by Anthony De Mello

I've been a follower of Eastern Philosophy for 20+ years and have also read most major religious and philosophical works, but during my reading of this book I experienced Satori, Englightenment, Awakening, Nirvana, 'Receiving The Gospel', whatever you want to call it.

Oddly enough, it happened to a friend after their reading it, too.

I haven't been the same, in the best way possible, ever since.

Anthony was well-read and traveled and his background as an Indian, Jesuit Priest and practicing psychologist put him at the perfect intersection of experience to deliver such a life-changing work that encompasses religion, science, relationships, your psyche, career, money, philosophy, spirituality, etc.

It's telling and (to me) validating of his mastery of life that, after his death, he was excommunicated from the church due to his 'blasphemous' works.

The ebook and audiobook are available for free here: https://archive.org/details/Awareness-AnthonyDeMello


👤 kaycebasques
Gonna have to go with Dune. So much wisdom presented in such an engaging way.

Ecology? Check.

Emotional intelligence? Check.

Logical intelligence? Check.

Leadership? Check.

Power? Check.

Family? Check.

Love? Check.

Politics? Check.

Badass desert world and technology? Check.

> ... there will be nothing. Only I will remain.


👤 shantnutiwari
The Gita-- Eknath Easwaran's translation is the best

Gilgamesh--Stephen Mitchell's translation

Dear Author, you need to quit by Becca Syme-- a book for fiction writers, it opened my eyes to the fact that I dont need to follow the advice of "experts", thats its okay to write what I love and keep my writing a fun hobby. I only recently read this, and it allowed me to restart writing after a 2-3 year gap.


👤 AlecSchueler
Bessel Van Der Kolk's _The Body Keeps The Score_.

I had an extremely abusive childhood environment and mostly blocked it out through my adult years but had many obvious self-descructive, anti-social, self-sabotaging and socially untenable behaviour patterns that I couldn't understand or shake.

That book gave me the understanding of my own development and, furthermore, an idea of the tools that I could use to finally stand tall as a member of the human race.


👤 ChrisMarshallNY
The Design of Everyday Things[0], by Don Norman (I think that it's at its 3rd edition, but I preferred the second).

Once I read that book, I could never look at a door the same way. Just this morning, I encountered a "Norman Door."

[0] https://jnd.org/the-design-of-everyday-things-revised-and-ex...


👤 tootie
Kurt Vonnegut probably had the biggest impact on me. Mother Night and Timequake in particular. Two quotes I use all the time:

"I tell you, we are here on Earth to fart around, and don't let anybody tell you different."

And

"We are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful about what we pretend to be."


👤 Rylex
- Most books by Roger Zelazny. The guy code write with a few words, he could paint an amazing picture. Chronicles of Amber, Lord of Light, Isle of the Dead, etc... - And a trashy Candyman , https://sciencefictionruminations.com/2020/05/10/book-review..., not the one everyone is used to, this was so mind boggling to a 13 year old....

👤 lovingCranberry
A classic: How to Win Friends & Influence People - D Carnegie

👤 jdougan
I'd have to spend a lot more time for a comprehensive list, but I can easily throw out a couple:

"Computer Lib/Dream Machines" Theodor Nelson - a vision of a better computing future that sticks with me.

"Courtship Rite", "The Moon Goddess and the Son", "Psychohistorical Crisis" Donald Kingsbury - sociologicaly based SF that forced me to think way outside of my cultural assumptions. TMGATS is particularly relevant given the events in Ukraine.


👤 keane
A Treatise of Human Nature by David Hume (especially Book 3, Part 1)

https://www.earlymoderntexts.com/authors/hume


👤 ISL
The Tao Te Ching has given me more contemplative moments per page than anything else I've read.

👤 ArthurDevNL
Maybe a bit more niche, but these two have been real eye openers. The Book of Why - Judea Pearl. A very down to earth book about causality and related concepts. How Emotions are Made - Lisa Feldman Barrett. Emotions make a lot more sense after reading her book.

👤 jl6
I don’t think any book has caused the direction of my life to suddenly turn on a heel. I have found the influence of reading to be slow and incremental.

The most pivotal that springs to mind is The Hitch Hikers Guide to the Galaxy, read as an early teen. I think this is what fully opened my eyes to the world of nerdishness out of which I have built a career and which has shaped my interests.


👤 breckenedge
Barbara Tuchman’s The Guns of August about the first month of WWI. Got me interested in reading more history, and I think history has so much to teach us, but my quest really started with her and has branched out from there.

Tuchman often points out the critical mistake or mistakes that lead to the collapse of a crucial offensive that basically ends a country’s ability to succeed at war.


👤 tmin
'Patterns in Prehistory' class where we learned about pre-history civilizations. Saw that there is a book, 'Patterns in Prehistory: Humankind's First Three Million Years', which covers the topics were covered in that class. Initially, I was like 'why should I learn pre-history?' and I postponed it until the last semester of my undergrad. Learning different civilizations and their religious beliefs made me start questioning my religious belief.

And an NPR podcast, "Is Believing In God Evolutionarily Advantageous?", which explains why human are religious.

Those two changed my religious belief, so I can say that they changed my life.


👤 Gualdrapo
One of the recommended lectures on a logic class I had at my school, which was run by missionary nuns from Minnessota (and the teacher himself was catholic), was Carl Sagan's The demon-haunted world. It turned me into an atheist.

👤 vishnugupta
Debt: The First 5000 Years

It’s difficult for me to put in words the influence the book had and continues to have on me.

QED by Richard Feynman is a close second. It pulled a veil off from my eyes, made me really understand what science is all about.


👤 coverclock
"Measuring and Managing Performance in Organizations" by Robert Austin [Dorset House, 1996].

Austin, who at the time he wrote this was an executive with Ford Motors Europe, was working on his Ph.D. in Organizational Research at (I dimly recall) Carnegie Mellon. He writes about "measurement dysfunction", when human resources etc. policies drive organizations sideways, based on his application of Agency Theory (an offshoot of Game Theory) to incentive programs. This book is based on his dissertation. Very short. Extremely readable. Completely changed my worldview.


👤 fmitchell0
Crucial Conversations: Tools for Talking when Stakes are High by Kerry Patterson

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crucial_Conversations%3A_Tools...


👤 HeyLaughingBoy
Alistair McLean's HMS Ulysses was probably the main reason I ended up in nautical school and getting an engineering degree while being trained to be a merchant ship's navigation officer. Although it was a WWII story, his description of life on ships crossing the North Sea in winter for some insane reason made me want to do it. The people I met, the places I went and the things I did during that period set the stage for the rest of my life in ways I really can't explain.

👤 Eddy_Viscosity2
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.

I read this as part of course but it really stuck with me.


👤 shafoshaf
Getting Things Done By David Allen. I feel like everything I do is a decision and not a reaction now.

👤 FlyingSnake
I read the magnum opus of Marathi literature ’Mrityunjay’ as a teenager and it really helped me understand the world view.

Mrityunjay is a story of a great warrior who by sheer chance of luck ends up being a lower-caste charioteer.

The book showed me that life is not black and white, talent is not all that’s needed to succeed and how luck and pragmatism plays a huge part in your life. It also helped me understand what Krishna stands for and what Dharma is. Fascinating theme that is still relevant today.


👤 Maursault
The Hobbit, or There and Back Again. Changed my life by opening my imagination and getting me off of Judy Blume.

👤 ilovwindows
I wish I had read following books when I was a teenager or my parents had read them. Never too late though. These books changed my life.

1. The power of Now by Eckhart Tolle

Helped me stay present. Helped me overcome past regrets and future stresses

2. Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy by David D. Burns

Helped me understand how my thought process was impacting my mood and fueling anxiety

3. Crucial Conversations: Tools for Talking When Stakes are High

Saved my failing relationship

4. The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg

Helped me overcome some of my compulsive behaviors


👤 weldedtogether
Steppenwolf by Herman Hesse. Helped me out of my sort of self-inflicted isolation and to heal . I also love Siddhartha by the same author, they both helped me look at myself and life in a completely different and more positive way.

👤 williadc
The Jungle by Upton Sinclair was the first thing I read which challenged my teenaged conservative viewpoint.


👤 vecter
How to be a 3% Man by Corey Wayne [0]. Really helped me understand women, dating, and relationships in way that's so simple and clear. It has profoundly made my relationships with women better in every way.

[0] https://www.scribd.com/doc/33421576/How-To-Be-A-3-Man


👤 nsantos
- The Dune books. The depth of everything in it awes me. Every time I re-read them, I find some nuance I missed from the last reading. The way it portrays politics, religion, and basically the entangled web of life in general blew my mind when I first read it, and still does.

- Bio of a Space Tyrant series by Piers Anthony. I'm not sure I can put into words how it has impacted me, though, but it has. I guess it's more of a visceral reaction? I can't honestly say I can relate to the protagonist, since I've never been in his shoes (and I hope to never be; having every one in your family---save for one of your sisters---murdered, raped, or raped-then-murdered by pirates isn't exactly something to ascribe to). I love how Hope (the protagonist) can empathize with pretty much anyone, though---at least eventually; and I guess I relate to how deeply he feels things.

- Pretty much everything by Heinlein. It has once again become fashionable (I think it goes on in cycles) to shit on Heinlein's works, and I get where naysayers are coming from. Heinlein himself always maintained he wrote primarily to entertain, even though he can get kind of preachy at times.

The very first Heinlein I got my hands on was The Number of the Beast--, while I was a teenager. Flying cars, non-benevolent Other Beings, multiverses possibly made manifest through the sheer act of imagining it... For a kid who dreamt of one day becoming a nuclear physicist after having watched ST:TOS (Scotty is mah boy), that book was revelatory. Every Heinlein I've read after that has just gone on and contributed to who I am as person today: The Moon is a Harsh Mistress, Stranger in a Strange Land (both editions), To Sail Beyond the Sunset, et al.

It's almost literally impossible for me to overstate how much Heinlein's works has shaped who I am as a person, regardless of whatever flaws others might ascribe to his work.


👤 neilpanchal
Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins.

And not a book, but a documentary – The War by Ken Burns.


👤 m-alsuwaidi
Open society by Karl Popper. No doubt the number 1 book I recommend anybody to read. Completely changes your perspective on all your preconceived notions of politics, economics and sociology.

👤 ericfrazier
Isaac Asimov's Guide To The Bible. An agnostic atheist historian analyzes the history of every line of every book in the bible. Asimov is a good writer and he makes the bible a fun read.

👤 koboll
She Comes First.

Pretty much the sole reason I've been told over and over again for the past decade that ours was "the best sex [they've] ever had".

If you have sex with women, you need to read it.


👤 wj
I think it is a combination of the book and where you were in your life when you read it. For me:

Cosmos was such a departure from anything else I read for school or for pleasure. It transformed my love of reading into a love of learning.

On the Road gave me wanderlust and made me want to move beyond my bubble and see the world.


👤 beezle
The Compass of Zen by Seung Sahn. I was a much angrier and stressed person prior to reading it.

Not perfect today by any means but far, far better. And no, I'm not a "practicing" zen buddhist or anything close - the book just sort of reset my mind and outlook on life and dealings with others.


👤 kradeelav
"The Heart of the Buddha's Teaching" - Thich Nhat Hanh

It's not overly spiritual, but there's a relaxing, reassuring, thoughtful, and un-judging sense of peace that permeates this books. Brought me out of a really dark place when I was looking for reasons to keep existing.


👤 bjoli
Practical ethics by Peter Singer. It made me question a lot of my truths and habits and, in the end, made me more happy about how I live my life.

👤 throwaway743
Manufacturing Consent and Notes From The Underground

👤 shmde
Charlie and the great glass elevator. Changed my life in a way where I actually started reading not just for education but for fun. The book which kindled my love for reading. That books don't need to be academic or a hill to be climbed.

👤 kettunen
While being definitely more on the hippy-dippy side for some, for me the book that affected me the most was Ram Dass' Be Here Now.

👤 arisAlexis
The unbearable lightness of being - Milan Kundera.

Found it in an airbnb I rented during a lockdown and made me buy a kindle and restart reading books.


👤 mpkc
The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin

https://twitter.com/naval/status/1002103360646823936

The Economic History of the Jewish People


👤 readonthegoapp
Deterring Democracy by Noam Chomskyhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deterring_Democracy

more devastating than inspirational.

at least, at first.


👤 eyelidlessness
Widening Circles, memoir by Joanna Macy.

I picked it up as I was becoming interested in Buddhism and felt it would give me insight into from a “western convert” perspective (it did).

But it also opened my mind to environmentalism—not that I had been closed to it as such, just less interested.

More unexpectedly, it opened my mind to unconventional romantic relationships. I remain, in principle if not actively in practice, polyamorous to this day. Even since, I’ve realized that I’m demisexual (which is on the asexuality spectrum), and the same part of the book which helped me embrace poly also helped me embrace demi and reconcile the two.


👤 marius-nicoara
Galileo's Defence, by Octavian Paler

Imagines Galileo Galilei dealing with the fact that he recanted his theory that the Earth moved around the Sun.

A wonderful meditation on truth and love.

https://www.amazon.com/Galileos-Defence-Octavian-Paler/dp/97...


👤 kungito
The Hithchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy and Catch 22. They helped me work through my teenage existential crisis.

👤 thenerdhead
Cliché, but "Awaken the Giant Within" by Tony Robbins.

It wasn't the book itself that changed my life, it was the exposure to all of the underlying ideas & philosophies that then significantly changed my life. I know many people can't stand the guy, but his book was really powerful for me at one point in my life. I got my shit together and started to understand the origins of many of the messages he promotes.

I like to think that there's a paradox of book reading in general in that you never remember what you read, but you change because of it.


👤 issa
Difficult to pick just one, but I will go with The Stainless Steel Rat. It was a great introduction to the idea that society's rules don't always make sense. I haven't read it since I was in grade school, so I don't know if anyone older would enjoy it. But it definitely planted the seeds of anarchism, hacking, punk, and not taking rules too seriously.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Stainless_Steel_Rat


👤 Mildlypolite
Dostoevsky 's crime and punishment has taught me a lot about the human spirit.

I've nothing practical to say that the book taught me but the consequences in real life of what dostoevsky has taught me are innumerable and at the same time too subtle to talk about them. I learnt the meaning of love (a romantic and deep one) but also the meaning of hate, self destruction. What nihilism is and what are its consequences. Human spirit is complex and I feel that today's society tend to simplify it in a very rough way.


👤 theowenyoung
Stolen Focus: Why You Can't Pay Attention--and How to Think Deeply Again, by Johann Hari

Time and time again I made up my mind to focus, but it wasn't until I read this book that I actually did it.


👤 noema
In Search of Lost Time (Proust) -- the definitive portrait of life, memory and experience

Phenomenology of Perception (Merleau-Ponty) -- groundbreaking analysis of "the thickness of things" implicit within perception

Labyrinths (Borges) -- masterful explorations of time, thought, infinity... certain passages of this collection surface in my mind on a weekly basis

Civilization and Capitalism (Braudel) -- telescopes seamlessly from the microscale to the macroscale, granting a synoptic view of the modern world


👤 karmelapple
How to Talk to Anyone: 92 Little Tricks for Big Success in Relationships by Leil Lowndes

This book helped me handle introductions, small talk, and getting to know people better at a deeper level with so much less anxiety than I ever had before.

The biggest lesson I learned was to try and give the “spotlight” of who’s talking and what the subject is back to others frequently. It’s a simple concept, but the book is helpful in clarifying why it’s important and how to do it.


👤 LVB
“The Effective Executive” by Peter Drucker.

I’ve never even been an “executive” but have found that nuggets from this book have helped me navigate the working world for 25 years.


👤 funstuff007
I know it's trite to say it, but in my early 20s reading Atlas Shrugged helped me regain my bearings. And, no, it did not turn me into Peter Thiel.

👤 vincentmarle
Nassim Taleb’s books made me throw out everything I learned during my 4 college years in economics: in particular Fooled by Randomness and Antifragile.

👤 nicbou
How to win friends and influence people, at an early age. It’s a manual for being pleasant to work with and seeking mutual benefit. Despite the title, it describes a very genuine way to act.

Surely you’re joking Mr Feynman. It inspired me to be curious for the sake of curiosity, and not just in my field. It made me a little more adventurous. What gripped me wasn’t the science, it was the ants and the bongos.

Grapes of wrath. It’s poverty explained to those who never experienced it. This book just sticks with me. I can see why they make students read it. It’s also a damn good book.

No more Mr Nice Guy. Plot twist: you’re not nice, you’re insincere and manipulative. Don’t shame people into giving back. If you want your needs met, ask for things. Be nice when you mean it, not as a tool to earn approval.

Wages of Destruction. This book doesn’t explain what happened from 1933 to 1945, but why. It added contextual clarity to a topic I’ve been reading about for years. It changed how I perceive other historical events too. It’s not a casual read though.


👤 DoreenMichele
Diet for a small planet and the followup book by I believe her sister called Recipes for a small planet for which she wrote the intro.

The first half of the first book is about the political causes of hunger in the world and advocates for vegetarianism as an antidote to such. The intro to the followup book states that protein complementarity is easier than she made it out to be and she regretted making it sound harder than it is.

It's one of the reasons I eat a semi vegetarian diet. Changing my diet has had a big impact on my health and feeling like how I live makes a difference helps protect me from the sense of doom about climate change and what not that many people seem to have.

It also made me feel like there is no need for this to be such a polarizing us-vs-them topic. She talks about how "eating one less (grain fed) hamburger " makes a difference , so we can change the world with relatively small changes to our own behavior. It doesn't require extremist positions.


👤 shaggie76
The Tao of Pooh by Benjamin Hoff is a delightful introduction into Taoism that opened my mind to eastern philosophy as a young adult.

👤 jrib
A Guide to the Good Life: The Ancient Art of Stoic Joy by Irvine

Gave me a new perspective.


👤 da39a3ee
The Selfish Gene.

It made me want to become a biologist, and a computer programmer, and it confirmed childhood suspicions about religious belief.


👤 AngeloAnolin
The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.

While technically many people will consider this as a child's book, the lessons and teachings on this book will be timeless and be relevant in whatever stage you are in your life. This has profoundly impacted my life in more ways than I can imagine and I am going to pass this book to my kids as they up.


👤 codazoda
Handbook of BASIC, Third Edition by David I. Schneider published in 1988

This book probably launched my career in programming. When the book wore out, I carefully cut off the spine, hole punched it, and moved it into a 3-ring binder. I still have it.

It’s a complete reference to the language I cut my teeth on as a teenager. The appendix was particularly useful.


👤 tzs
Asimov’s collections of his science columns from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. I bought several of these collections starting maybe a couple years before high school through when I left for college, and I’m reasonably sure they were an important factor in my developing a serious STEM interest.

👤 franze
Thinking in Systems - Donella Meadows

👤 miguelrochefort
Getting Things Done - David Allen

👤 clivestaples
Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis. Specifically the chapter called Nice People or New Men.

👤 EdwardWarren
I'll Cry Tomorrow. By Lillian Roth. Lillian Roth was an American actress who was an alcoholic. Because of some tragic events in my childhood and because of my nature I believed that I would have become an alcoholic as well. The book, along with other influences, convinced me to never take a drink of alcohol. I never did. You can't become an alcoholic if you never take a drink. I have 5 or 6 friends/co-workers/relatives that I know are alcoholics whose lives are ruled by alcohol. They live absolutely miserable lives. My life was definitely changed by that book.

👤 yboris
Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss What Matters Most - by three researchers at Harvard that have spent over a decade helping resolve challenging interpersonal conflicts. I read in it in my early 20s and have been using the framework they recommend for numerous conversations (even the not difficult ones). It makes for better communication and understanding between parties. Can recommend!

https://www.amazon.com/Difficult-Conversations-Discuss-What-...


👤 leobg
How I love and hate these threats. I know I will read them. And I also know that afterwards, my Voice Dream Reader library is going to be filled with weeks worth of new books. Weeks worth in the sense that I would need weeks to read everything if I did nothing else and never slept and could digest 24/7. Oh that dread!

Anyway, my top candidate. Surely has been mentioned already:

- Peter Thiel, Zero to One. Has been worth literally millions to me. I wish I had read it sooner. Then again, “The student is ready, the teacher appears”. When you read something might be just as important as what you read.

Thanks for the thread.


👤 meristohm
The Parable of the Sower, by Octavia E. Butler [0], because it helped change and focus my values around extending the story of life on earth in an unbroken way thousands of years into the future, so that people can look back on history with greater understanding. I grew to accept my own death more fully, and to live it like a book rather than an endless MMORPG.

[0] https://www.worldcat.org/title/parable-of-the-sower/oclc/125...


👤 mylonov
"Easy way to stop smoking" by far.

👤 shisisms
The Psychology of Money by Morgan Housel is a truly exceptional and balanced view on life/money and the emotional challenge of making and keeping money.

It’s surprisingly insightful/original/authentic.


👤 sixstringtheory
So many great books I’ve enjoyed are mentioned here. And it’s hard to pick just one that’s changed my life, many have.

But in the interest of variety in this thread, I’ll throw out Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver. It inspired me to go deeper in my beloved cooking practice towards growing food and hunting, and through all that I’ve found much gratitude for and understanding of life and what humanity has gone through to get us to this point.

Over a decade later and I’m still working towards a simpler and more fulfilling lifestyle.


👤 Amy_W
Maria or the Wrongs of Woman by Mary Wollstonecraft. It`s a story of a woman incarcerated in a madhouse by her abusive husband. Dramatizes the effect of the English marriage laws, which made women virtually the property of their husbands (short review without spoilers - https://ivypanda.com/essays/book-reviews-northanger-abbey-ma...).


👤 ya1sec
Three Novels - Samuel Beckett

The Upanishads - Eknath Easwaran translation

Season in Hell - Arthur Rimbaud

Modern Man in Search of a Soul - Carl Jung

Abandoned Fragments - Franz Kafka

Philosophical Grammar - Ludwig Wittgenstein

The Gay Science - Friedrich Nietzsche

Hapworth 16, 1924 - JD Salinger

The Dream Machine - M. Mitchell Waldrop


👤 cookiengineer
I'm was a network engineer and I have to admit I wouldn't be on the peer-to-peer path I took if I wouldn't have read the book "Honeybee Democracy".

It's an amazing non programming related book that teaches a working concept of swarm intelligence and their communication algorithms and behaviours. In the networked computers world this has so many potential applications, especially when you have to think outside the box to be able to scale and analyze network traffic patterns.


👤 marginalia_nu
Early works by Plato pretty much reframed my relationship with knowledge. I went from thinking I knew most things, to questioning whether what I even mean when I say I know something.

👤 dxbydt
Martin Gardner’s “The Whys of a philosophical scrivener” influenced my 20s & 30s. Looking back, should have been exposed to it much earlier, perhaps in my early teens.

👤 CraftingLinks
Darwin's Dangerous Idea by Daniel Dennett, when I was 15, 25 years ago. I was already less than sympathetic to the whole God idea, but that book was the revelation that made it all click. I still remember the moment, p.53 or so, when he explained how a simple algo and a few billion years could explain all biology we see around us. As a kid, i was simply stunned,i immediately embraced the idea and it's consequences and never looked back.

👤 lurker137
The War of Art, Steven Pressfield

It's written in the same concise format as The Art of War by Sun Tzu, and it's just as dense with insights. I would encourage anyone to spend just 5 min reading the first few pages of Book Two here: https://aimeeknight.files.wordpress.com/2016/01/the-war-of-a...


👤 jwood27
The following have all had a significant effect on my worldview. You can find more information at [1].

- The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany

- Thinking, Fast and Slow

- Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind

- Crime and Punishment

- The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York

- Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies

- The Precipice: Existential Risk and the Future of Humanity

- Daring Greatly: How the Courage to Be Vulnerable Transforms the Way We Live, Love, Parent, and Lead

- Franny and Zooey

- Master of the Senate

- Atlas Shrugged

- Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed

- Destined for War: Can America and China Escape Thucydides’s Trap?

- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

- The Dictator's Handbook: Why Bad Behavior is Almost Always Good Politics

- The Scout Mindset: Why Some People See Things Clearly and Others Don't

- Artificial Intelligence: A Guide for Thinking Humans

- Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage

- Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World

- Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones

- Homo Deus: A History of Tomorrow

- Ethics in the Real World: 86 Brief Essays on Things that Matter

- A Swim in a Pond in the Rain: In Which Four Russians Give a Master Class on Writing, Reading, and Life

- Humankind: A Hopeful History

- The Bird Way: A New Look at How Birds Talk, Work, Play, Parent, and Think

[1] https://jacobw.xyz/books/


👤 lubien
I read the whole bible as a kid then realized I wasn't a Christian.

If you're gonna ask what's my current religion well I've been asking myself that ever since.


👤 maxharris

👤 bbrbb11
Toxic parents, Susan Forward. Opened my eyes on issues with my parents and highlighted that it's not me being broken. First step to overcome my issues.

👤 haakonhr
A good chance reflect. There are several:

- A Conferedancy of Dunces, Peter O'Toole: tragic, hilarious and absurd

- Fooled by Randomness, Nassim Taleb: this was my first exposure to a lot of biases and other interesting phenomena

- The Design of Everything Things: eye-opener!

Harry Potter, Tolkien, Dune and a lot of other sci-fi has also affected me, although I find it hard to point out one in particular. The Moon is a Harsh Mistress by Robert Heinlein stands out a bit.


👤 itsmejeff
W1nning - Tim Grover

Never Split the Difference - Chriss Voss

Three Laws of Performance - Steve Zaffron

Peak - Anders Ericsson

All of these books fall into the category of rounding out my world view. I’m an engineer, and spent nearly 100% of 10-12 years of my life (school plus early career) focused solely on engineering topics. These books have made me drastically more effective at achieving personal and professional goals, especially ones that require cooperation of other people.


👤 sebmellen
Marcus Aurelius's Meditations, undoubtedly.

👤 icc97
I read the following 3 in this order and it definitely co-incided with a change in my life for the better:

* A confession and other religious stories by Leo Tolstoy * Happiness by Matthieu Ricard (a counter argument against French philosophers who believe happiness doesn't exist) * The Diary of Anne Frank * A Life Interrupted by Etty Hillesum (the most beautiful book I will ever read)


👤 aradox66
Stepping out of self deception by Rodney Smith. A Buddhist book by someone who has really internalized the dharma and uses his own words rather than reiterating the same jargon as everyone else.

As someone who got caught up in a lot of "spiritual materialism" in dharma practice, over-fixation on techniques and theory, this book reached me in a way that nothing else did.


👤 karkehan
"The World Jones Made" by Philip K. Dick. Like much of his work it feels depressing and melancholy, however there is one paragraph, just one, that turns the story on its head. It is so thoroughly provocative and mind-bending that it made me re-evaluate my perspective on reality. A very Philip K. Dick thing to do.

👤 rendx
Louise Hay: You Can Heal Your Life

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_Can_Heal_Your_Life

"by 2008, over 35 million copies worldwide had been sold in over 30 languages, becoming the best-selling non-fiction book of all time"


👤 elevaet
Lord of the Rings captured my imagination so profoundly as a kid there's no way it didn't change my life.

👤 CobaltFire
As someone who struggles with Anxiety, Depression, and PTSD “Meditations” by Julius Caesar has been a life changer.

👤 kkoncevicius
"I am that"

You can listen to some quotes from the book here: https://web.archive.org/web/2oe_/http://wayback-fakeurl.arch...


👤 drakonka
Maybe not a very useful answer, but for me it was the Narnia books when I was around 6. I already liked reading before then, but that was mostly simpler booms. Narnia really opened my eyes to a whole new level of wonder with reading and solidified my love of fantasy and science fiction forever.

👤 wildrhythms
The Color Purple - Even on re-reading I get emotional because the story is so powerful and impactful to me.

👤 coding-saints
My book is in context of changing career over to software engineer... "SOFT SKILLS" by John Somnez. Not sure if there's any alternative today for self taught people, but this book released right when I had started obtaining real work. Obviously just my personal experience.

👤 tyroh
The Speed of Trust by Stephen Covey: Made me realize that trust is essential in human interactions. Helped me through my businesses, career, and community building.

Atomic Habits by James Clear: Read a lot about habits before but this really kickstarted my focus on living healthy and staying consistent.


👤 przeor
How Life Imitates Chess Book by Garry Kasparov

This book explained me concepts of - material - time - and quality

in chess and business life.


👤 philliphaydon
I wouldn’t say life changing but the book. The Inmates Are Running The Asylum. It really made me think differently about software design and how users interact with it. I think a lot of “ux” people would benefit from reading it because many “ux” experts seem to get so much wrong.

👤 simonw
"Finding Flow" convinced me to quit job once, because I was frustrated that I wasn't achieving "flow state" often enough. I was young and foolish then so looking back that probably wasn't the right reason, even though the decision was a good one!

👤 ftrobro
This book gave me a lot to think about 25 years ago. Made me aware of limitations of my own consciosness. Has perhaps been superseded by some other book since then, I'd love to hear recommendations.

"The User Illusion: Cutting Consciousness Down to Size" by Tor Norretranders


👤 sys_64738
K&R

👤 rebhan
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/4069.Man_s_Search_for_Me...

from Victor Frankl, Auschwitz survivor and founder of Logotherapy.


👤 achenet
The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron.

Helped me reduce bad habits, get useful things done, and have more fun.


👤 nazgulnarsil
Cutting through spiritual materialism

Opening the Heart of Compassion

Both very high in the calling me out on my bullshit metric


👤 hulitu
1984 and Animal farm - George Orwell. Dune - Frank Herbert. Antimemoire - André Malraux

👤 athinkingmeat
The book on the taboo against knowing who you are by Alan Watts. It has changed my life for sure, I am actually still tripping for the last of ten years or so after reading it. Is it for the better? I don't know it yet.

👤 foogazi
Peak by Erickson and Pool

There is no innate talent - it takes practice and repetition to build those capabilities

Scary


👤 theodric
Thoreau, Walden - simplicity, rejection of societal expectations. The chapter on economy is delightfully technical.

Toffler, Future Shock - the danger to societal cohesion and human wellness caused by constant, rapid, paradigm-breaking change.

Kaczynski, Industrial Society and its Future - like the two above, but more modern, frighteningly prescient, and with some unfortunate baggage attached. Still, it's short, and worth a read.

While not originally books, solar.lowtechmagazine.com now offers POD versions of their essays. They routinely introduce dead-end technologies to the reader that are often simpler and easier for a person to create and maintain at home, and which often confer a greater degree of independence than their mass-market analogues.

I don't necessarily recommend wading through countless pages of psuedomythical waffling, but Crowley's Thelemic concept of True Will - that is, the real goal you want to achieve, rather than whatever pure hedonism happens to have caught your brain-corvid's attention at the moment - is a useful framework for prioritizing. Does it further the goal directly, or indirectly, or does it hinder the goal? In this way, you can avoid wasting time and effort.

I found good stuff in Heidegger, but I don't think it's worth your time to grind through it. Just look up the Cliff's Notes for 'Sein und Zeit.'

So what did I get out of all that?

-I started to question what it was I really wanted to get out of life.

-I decided I wanted more independence and liberty.

-I decided I didn't like the direction tech was going, and wanted out.

-I stopped being quite as materialistic. I'm still extremely materialistic, but I'm working on it.

-I refocused my effort on amassing something like "F-U money" (for about ten years).

-I spent a lot of time flailing for what to do next, but eventually became obsessed with small-scale, high-intensity regenerative agriculture, and decided that was it.

-I spent a bunch of the saved money to buy myself a farm in Ireland, and will eventually pivot to full-time farming and part-time anti-materialism-- and away from tech. (At the moment, I'm still milking my Swiss job to fund startup costs and avoid the need to bootstrap or raid my nest egg, but the pivot day is in sight.)

-I have something to look forward to that isn't just constant obsolecence of skills and an ever-accelerating race to the bottom.


👤 nurettin
I really liked the sword of truth series from terry goodkind more than any other novel series I've read.

It isn't just medieval fantasy, there is a lot to take from his views on politics, human interaction and freedom.


👤 kseistrup

👤 User23
The Illuminatus! Trilogy. Going into detail would get too personal, but reading that book as a young man changed my understanding of our experience of being and my life took paths it otherwise never would have.

👤 pkdpic
Remembrance of Earths Past Trilogy, Ministry for the Future, Wild Sheep Chase

👤 joddystreet

👤 mmazurki
Heal your wounds & find your true self by Lise Bourbeau Being Geek by Michael Loop

Very good at putting into words my introspection efforts and try to devise action plans for both personal and professional growth.


👤 jonah
Finite and Infinite Games Paperback – by James Carse

"Play" with the purpose of continuing play rather than ending by winning.

The Design of Everyday Things – by Don Norman

See the details of the ways we interact with the world around.


👤 udia
Nonviolent Communication: A Language of Life - Marshall B. Rosenberg

👤 kentf
Age of Spiritual Machines. Made me want to be a software engineer.

👤 nthobe
The Cuckoo's Egg by Clifford Stoll. It really crystallized how to approach problems by continually drilling down through the layers to find what's really going on.

👤 tjansen
Robert X Cringely - Accidental Empires. After reading this I knew what I want, and actually joined a startup a few years later (only to see it fail in the 2000 dotcom crash).

👤 kcartlidge
- Total Freedom by Jiddu Krishnamurti.

Initially this came across as shallow truths masquerading as profundity, especially with his unwillingness/inability to explain himself during discussions. Finally I read enough that some things just 'clicked' into place and my perspectives shifted along with my outlook on life.

- Letters from the Desert by Carlo Carretto (first half).

I was brought up a protestant so was never really exposed to catholic thought in my formative years. When I finally started exploring the classics for myself I found them often overly wordy and mystical, so I moved on to more modern (relatively speaking) works like this and the Way of the Pilgrim too. The simplicity of the writing and the clarity of the thoughts in the first few chapters of Letters from the Desert hit me hard.

- The Quran

A wonderfully phrased book that captures its times very well. Ideally to be read alongside something like Islam: A Short History or Muhammad: A Biography of the Prophet, both by Karen Armstrong, to provide the context.

As an aside the Qu'ran is available for free online in audio format both as interlinear English/Arabic but also as Arabic only, and as a non-speaker of Arabic I often find listening to it being chanted a very calming and uplifting experience despite having no clue what is being said.

- Getting Real by 37 Signals.

As a programmer/developer/engineer since the late 1980s this was a revelation, bringing a clarity to my own thoughts and feelings about much of the world of enterprise software development. Very obvious points in retrospect that nobody ever (including me) seemed to have realised during my entire career before then.

- Web Copy that Sells by Maria Veloso.

A strange choice, given that there is nothing 'profound' in here. What it is, though, is a very well written book on persuasion which finally got me to see that I'd spent years avoiding 'sales' as something that wasn't for me whereas in reality it's for everyone and we do it all the time.

- The Body by Charles Colson.

Colson was jailed for his part in the Nixon stuff, then became a Christian. It's an incredibly moving book which is not his autobiography but an analysis of what is going wrong with the church. The impact comes from the stories he relates at the start of the chapters (especially the opening ones about 9/11). Those tales gave me an understanding of the potential 'greatness' in people.


👤 woodruffw

👤 every
Dandelion Wine - Ray Bradbury

Murder in the Cathedral - T. S. Eliot

Our Town - Thornton Wilder


👤 BeFlatXIII
House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski. It re-inspired my desire to read fiction. It's an internet rabbit hole crystallized into paper.

👤 VohuMana
For me The Nordic Theory of Everything by Anu Partanen really upended my thoughts and opinions on systems in the United States.

👤 MaceOutWindu
Was forced to read All Quiet on the Western Front a while back in my high school english class.

All Quiet really shows the suffering of war.


👤 nnx
The Fabric of The Cosmos by Brian Greene

Mind-bending explanations of modern physics and how our Newtonian intuition is far from reality.


👤 alcal74
I read Fooled By Randomness while in business school and it completely changed the way I think about economic systems.

👤 dhosek
The dictionary. Specifically, a large one on a pedestal stand in the children's section of my local library.

I looked up my name, as one is wont to do as a child, and saw next to “Don,” an entry which read “Don Quixote, see Quixote, Don.” Wow! There was something with my name in it and it had a Q and an X! I, of course, turned to the Qs, read the entry, not only for “Quixote, Don” but also for “quixotic” and “quixotism” and thought, “I like the idea of being quixotic.”

I then, read the bowdlerized children's version of Don Quixote that they had in the children's section and returned to the book many times over the years that followed.

One day in high school, a friend who had graduated came by to visit the band teacher and had a book in his hand that he was reading, Monsignor Quixote by Graham Greene. He described it as “Don Quixote is a Catholic priest and Sancho Panza is the communist ex-mayor of El Toboso.” I went to the library the next day and checked out their copy of the book and loved it. I proceeded to read every book that the library had by Graham Greene and became imbued with his world view (it probably helped that I was inclined in that direction already) and it gradually led to my becoming Catholic 7 years later. My love of Greene also influenced me in becoming a writer (something to which I was already inclined) and he and J. D. Salinger are the two most obvious influences in my writing to this day.


👤 exdsq
Terry Pratchetts Disc World novels. Endless quotes and jokes that I think about on a weekly basis if not more.

👤 2OEH8eoCRo0
Walden - Thoreau

Meditations - Aurelius

Simply existing can be exhilarating.


👤 profunctor
Exterminate all the brutes by Sven Lindquist

It got me into reading about history and taught me to be more critical of media.


👤 openfuture
Impro by Keith Johnstone, Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams, Momo by Michael Ende...

👤 kull
Alan Watts, but rather than his books I recommend to start with audiobook with his lectures.

👤 fhkatari
Factfulness by Hans Rosling

👤 myegorov
Painting and Experience in 15th Century Italy by Michael Baxandall

👤 charlieyu1
Book on Pook on dating. Rich Dad Poor Dad on finance in general

👤 PopAlongKid
Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth - R. Buckminster Fuller

👤 rubyfan
Bhagavad Gita

I read it in my mid 20s and it helped me stop worrying.


👤 iancmceachern
The book of joy by the Dhali Llama and Desmond Tutu

👤 throwaway20011
Pretty much anything I could find by Isaac Asimov.

👤 nprateem
The Red Queen - cleared up dating once and for all

👤 ralmidani
1. The Quran. I’ve struggled with depression and anxiety - reading The Quran is always soothing and sometimes cathartic. One of the common themes is how insignificant this life is compared to eternity; e.g. Putin and Assad destroyed my country, Syria (and they’re now doing the same in Ukraine). I hope I see them brought to justice in this world, but if they’re not, I can live with that.

2. The Fabric of the Cosmos by Brian Greene. Written by someone who might an atheist, but it also demonstrates both theoretically and empirically how humble we and our planet are. He uses genius analogies to simplify complex concepts. Reading the book is very mind-expanding.


👤 AhmedMHassan
The Quran, have you wondered what is inside it?

👤 peterfield
Life 3.0 Max Tegmark Elevation series David Brin

👤 injb
Them: Adventures With Extremists by Jon Ronson.

👤 jowday
Gravity’s Rainbow

👤 robg
Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankyl

👤 tagawa
How to win friends and influence people.

👤 mike128
No more mr nice guy.

The power of your subconscious mind.


👤 cnorthwood
Utopia for Realists, by Rutger Bregman

👤 earthboundkid
The Essential Haiku by Robert Hass.

👤 azhenley
The Design of Everyday Things.

👤 johnobrien1010
Moral Mazes by Robert Jackall

👤 irchans
Personal Power - Robbins, How to win friends and influence people - Carnegie, Feeling Good - Burns, Godel Esher Bach - Hofstadter, Fundamentals of Physics - Halliday and Resnick, Jonathan Livingston Seagull - Bach, The Commodore 64 User Manual, "Stocks for the Long Run", The Player's Handbook and Dungeon Master's Guide - Gygax, Dune - Herbert

👤 raymond_goo
The Trial by Franz Kafka!!!

👤 rg111
There has only been three books so far that have changed my life-

1. "Sei Somoy" (Those Times) by Sunil Ganguly. It is a novel about the past of Bengalis. The Bengali Reneissance, its central characters, progress, the conflict- all are beautifully depicted. I had no collective identity as a person before. And disliked whatever I had. This book made me feel really good about my identity. Suddenly, I was more confident in a conscious way, and did things better.

2. "Maitreya Jatak" by Bani Basu. Buddha is a human character in this novel. And so is the time and place of India. The pre-big-Empire India is beautifully depicted. I got deeply interested in Buddha and that opened a new path of life for me, which transformed my life.

3. "Godel, Escher, Bach"- learned deeply about logic and its limitations. How human constructs such as mathematical symbols and human languages- all are so limited. Completely changed me as a person and gave me a new outlook.

There are other books that did not change my life completely, but added layers to my perception and thinking.

1. "The Black Swan" by N. Nicholas Taleb. It has added a filter to my entire thought process. I call it the Nicholas filter.

2. "Innovators" by Walter Isaacson. Learned about computer history, collaboration. The idea of " collaboration through time" got really etched into me.

3. "The Little Schemer", 4e and Graham Hutton's Haskell book made me a better programmer in ways I did not expect.

4. Strangly, Neal Stephenson's " Cryptonomicon" has taught me to never waste my time on entertainment or learning that is not fully ideal. The idea that something so profoundly good can exist for people like us, convinced me to read only very high quality literature of all kinds and sci-fi of only the highest kind. Also made me give up watching TV/web series to a large degree. I don’t compromise with the quality of entertainment that I consume anymore. I consume only the best and most desired things.

5. "Mastery" by Leonard Gordon has, above all, taught me that a boring life should be desired where the brain's desire for novelty is not awarded, and instead, time is spent on honing much fewer number of skills.

6. "Deep Work" by Cal Newport has really helped me with my productivity and happiness, and made me give up social media. Same goes for "Pragmatic Thinking and Learning" by Andy Hunt.

7. "Atomic Habits" by James Clear has been effective in many ways of my life.

8. "Mindfulness in Plain English", "The Mind Illuminated", and " What the Buddha Taught" have made me a better human- in all aspects. As if my character's level has been upped in the video game of the world.

9. "Fundamentals of Physics" by Halliday, Resnick, and Walker and my whole familiarity with Feynman through Feynman Lactures and recorded lectures made me intolerant towards dry learning materials. Now, I use learning material that are not marely useful, but also overly entertaining.


👤 DougN7
The Book of Mormon. It gives me hope despite some things looking increasingly dark in the world.

👤 Witosso
“Orthodoxy” G.K Chesterton

👤 zhenyakovalyov
history of western philosophy by bertrand russell

👤 atlgator
Rich Dad Poor Dad

👤 shaunxcode
The dispossessed

👤 thebillywayne
Aion - Carl Jung

👤 rotanibmocy2
Brave new world

👤 oxff
Blood Meridian.

👤 throwawaygo
Coders at Work

👤 azth
The Quran

👤 RubyRidgeRandy
Surprised not to see Man's search for meaning on here. It's a great book about life from a holocaust survivor. It's one of those books that definitely stays with you for a while. I like to reread it every few years.

👤 ebb_earl_co
Sam Harris' Waking Up. My time on Earth is best partitioned into before and after I started the project of spirituality without religion (the book's subtitle).

👤 BoumTAC
Basic Economics from Thomas Sowell.

It show me there is another world if you go outside socialism and that socialism has a lot of bad consequence that are never talked about


👤 ZeroClickOk
Holy Bible