Is there a book that changed your life? Or your life view?

Anonymous
Caste by Isabel Wilkerson. I can't unsee caste in American now. Great book, engaging to read, perspective-changing for sure.

I also loved Being Mortal. I haven't yet made my Advanced Directive but when I do it will incorporate valuing life and freedom over safety when I am elderly.

I need to get back to Man's Search for Meaning. Started it some time back and didn't finish it. Thanks for the nudge.
Anonymous
As a younger person, "Alex the life of a child" by Frank Deford.

As a woman in my 20s, "The road to Coorain" and "Guns Germs and Steel."

As a now middle-aged person, "Caste."
Anonymous
Anonymous[b wrote:]Caste by Isabel Wilkerson. I can't unsee caste in American now. Great book, engaging to read, perspective-changing for sure.[/b]

I also loved Being Mortal. I haven't yet made my Advanced Directive but when I do it will incorporate valuing life and freedom over safety when I am elderly.

I need to get back to Man's Search for Meaning. Started it some time back and didn't finish it. Thanks for the nudge.


PP here. Ditto.
Anonymous
The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying by Sogyal Rinpoche. Still not finished it, just do 20 pages or so at once, but it's a really amazing book.

Anonymous
Guns, Germs and Steel - why the West’s economic fortunes are down to lucky draws in geography, pack animals (have you ever tried to get a llama to carry anything), and other factors

The Beak of the Finch - evolution in the Galapagos
The gospels
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:As a younger person, "Alex the life of a child" by Frank Deford.

As a woman in my 20s, "The road to Coorain" and "Guns Germs and Steel."

As a now middle-aged person, "Caste."


I also loved "The road to Coorain."

For me personally, "Jane Eyre." I first read it in Chinese translation in 7th grade and Jane's my first feminist.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:As a younger person, "Alex the life of a child" by Frank Deford.

As a woman in my 20s, "The road to Coorain" and "Guns Germs and Steel."

As a now middle-aged person, "Caste."


I also loved "The road to Coorain."

For me personally, "Jane Eyre." I first read it in Chinese translation in 7th grade and Jane's my first feminist.



Fellow Smithie? The Road to Coorain was good but it didn’t change my life.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl


+1
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:As a younger person, "Alex the life of a child" by Frank Deford.

As a woman in my 20s, "The road to Coorain" and "Guns Germs and Steel."

As a now middle-aged person, "Caste."


I also loved "The road to Coorain."

For me personally, "Jane Eyre." I first read it in Chinese translation in 7th grade and Jane's my first feminist.


I read Jane Eyre in middle school and she remains one of the most adored heroines of my literary journeying. She is also the reason I set my expectations for marriage very high and chose to be a free human being with an independent will. As Jane said, “I care for myself. The more solitary, the more friendless, the more unsustained I am, the more I will respect myself.”

Jane Eyre is one of the greatest feminists and most admirable characters in all literature, I believe.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl


+1


+2

More prosaic than some of the other suggestions here, but I'll add Your Money or Your Life by Vicki Robin.
Anonymous
A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara
Anonymous
So many books have changed my life -- one of the reasons I love to read so much.

But one in particular was Angle of Repose by Wallace Stegner.

I was engaged to marry someone and it wasn't a good fit, and a friend gave that book to me to read.

I eventually broke off the engagement and looking back 20 years later it was undoubtedly the right decision.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara


How?
Anonymous
Cry the Beloved Country by Alan Paton about apartheid in South Africa.
Anonymous
Crossing to Safety by Wallace Stegner.
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