I noted that you’re up for some light reading with ‘The Second Sex’ by Beauvoir; I’d suggest you make a day of it and add ’Phenomenology of Spirit’ by G. W. F. Hegel and ‘Process and Reality’ by A. N. Whitehead - you know - to keep yourself occupied.
Made me think of some other classics that just never seem to end.
berlpett t1_j9t01c2 wrote
Reply to Update: so, I'm going to read 100 "classic" books, and To Kill a Mockingbird was the first on the list by [deleted]
‘The Stranger’ by Albert Camus
‘Heart of Darkness’ by Joseph Conrad
’Three Men in a Boat’ by Jerome K. Jerome
’The Löwensköld Ring’ by Selma Lagerlöf
’Candide’ by François Voltaire
‘The Crying of lot 49’ by Thomas Pynchon
‘Silas Marner’ by George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans)
‘The Pearl’ by John Steinbeck
‘The Grass is Singing’ by Doris Lessing
‘Stoner’ by John Williams
‘The Bell Jar’ by Sylvia Plath
’The Process’ by Franz Kafka
‘The Devil and the Good Lord’ by Jean-Paul Sartre
’A Burnt Child’ by Stig Dagerman
I noted that you’re up for some light reading with ‘The Second Sex’ by Beauvoir; I’d suggest you make a day of it and add ’Phenomenology of Spirit’ by G. W. F. Hegel and ‘Process and Reality’ by A. N. Whitehead - you know - to keep yourself occupied.
Made me think of some other classics that just never seem to end.
‘Gravity’s Rainbow’ by Thomas Pynchon
‘A Critique of Pure Reason’ by Immanuel Kant