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The novel that's had the biggest impact on you
Which novel has had the biggest impact on you?
I read a similar thread on another board and it seems like Camus' The Outsider figures high for quite a few people. There must be a lot more Cure fans out there than I realised! |
George Orwell - "1984". I was recovering a few days after I'd read that.
Another ones are: Aldous Huxley - "Brave New World" William S. Burroughs - "Junky" Ian Mc Ewan - "The Cement Garden" Charles Bukowski - "Post Office" and "Ham on Rye" Albert Camus - "Stranger" Herrmann Hesse - "Siddharta" Douglas Adams - "Hitchhiker's Guide to Galaxy" |
Probably Charles Dickens' "Bleak House", but for a totally wrong reason: After reading that book as part of my A-level syllabus at school, I was put off "classic" fiction for life.
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William Peter Blatty -The Exorcist
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Difficult to say. These are a few for different reasons.
The Unbearable Lightness of Being - Milan Kundera Demian - Hermann Hesse Of Mice and Men - John Ernst Steinbeck To Kill a Mockingbird - Harper Lee I read the last two in 6th grade, which made quite an impact. |
Stephen King - The Stand
god, I've read that damn book at least 10 times now. pork: Legion is good too! |
Boring but true answer: Wm Burroughs "The Naked Lunch".
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im trying to think...
"tom sawyer" because it was the first novel i read as a little kid and it fueled my imagination at an early age the first book that truly blew my mind wasn't a novel but a book of short stories-- "ficciones" by borges. he never wrote a novel. hesse's "demian" and "steppenwolf" were huge for me when i was 18. "the unbearabe lightness of being" and "love in the times of cholera" changed the way i think about sex and relationships. "neuromancer" in terms of understanding the value of science fiction and how to deal with the future.. it changed my imagination about the future. there are others but this i recall right now. --- ps- ha ha toko, we have a couple of those in common! |
Zazie in the Metro - Raymond Queneau
Master and Margarita - Mikhail Afanasievich Bulgakov These do not qualify as novels, but still... Le Petit Prince - Antoine de Saint-Exupéry The Pidgeon - Patrick Suskind Carmilla - Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu dear God, I forgot this: Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (+ Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There) - Charles Lutwidge Dodgson I might add that those books did not "change my life".... I find it hard to explain it, but those are the ones whose lines are sorta "recurring" in my thinking patterns and I find them related to "real life" on so many levels.... |
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Indeed. For some reason, most of the books I read when I was at school, stuck to this day. Another good example was The Wave by Todd Strasser (Morton Rhue). ![]() Edit: nicfit, Le Petit Prince made my imagination run wild as a kid. Another book of great importance to me was Jonathan Livingstone Seagull - Richard Bach |
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It think it might have been Colin Wilson's The Outsider we were going on about in the other thread, not Camus' The Stranger (aka The Outsider). The Myth of Sisyphus, of course, is the essay by Camus that explores his absurdist view...interesting book to read...but, of course, as actual philosophy, it's basically junk. formative books (only one is a novel) Colin Wilson, The Outsider Ernest Becker, The Denial of Death Frijitof Capra, The Tao of Physics Fyodor Dostoevsky, Crime and Punishment (NOVEL) C.G. Jung, Psyche and Symbol Plato, Dialogues of Plato Various (compilation), The Beat Generation & the Angry Young Men photos by and compiled by David Douglas Duncan, Picasso's Picassos & not to copy, but I read just about all of Hesse early before graduating high school...I'll list Narcissus & Goldmund and Demian. I suppose the Casteneda muck and Clarke/Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey screenplay should be in there too as early books that had impact. |
not a novel but a play
Chekov - Three sisters. Made me see how classical literature could be as affective as modern. |
Chekhov is great.
So is Ibsen. The 19th century produced some incredibly insightful works of literature. "Just as Effective?" 19c lit is more "effective" then "Modern" literature. Stuff nowadays is fairly universally superficial and too cluttered with detritus. It's as if authors these days have several layers of gunk clouding their mind's eye. |
Tolstoy's Anna Karenin. The last chapter had a really profound impact on me.
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Yeah, that book is great.
Anna Karenina was the first I read because I had a high school girlfriend that recommended it. But, after that, I read the short stories to test the waters before going on to other Tolstoy. Every once in a blue moon, I'll read one again. |
Michael Bond's A Bear Called Paddington (1958), the first in Mr Bond's remarkable series. Everyone should read this book or have it read to them, as early on in their lives as possible. The charm, inquisitiveness and morals of the eponymous hero are already established at this eary stage.
![]() A true classic. |
The first poet I read a lot of books by was e.e. cummings. Blake was after that.
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I cannot remember any specific children's books besides the "Peanuts" books by Schultz.
I loved pop-up books, especially ones about dinosaurs or space exploration. I had one of those large storybooks about St. George and the Dragon or something. I remember an Aesop fairy tales book being on the family bookshelf and a set of "children's classics" The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain Last of the Mohicans, Daniel Fenmore Cooper Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, Kate Douglas Wiggin The Old Man & the Sea, Ernest Hemingway Treasure Island, Robert Louis Stevenson Never got into the Dr. Suess really or a lot of the other more traditional children's books. |
James Herbert - The Rats (the first "grown up" book I read)
George Orwell - all of his books starting with Animal Farm, because I realised for the first time the power and beauty of words (sounds corny, but true) |
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