State some excellent books you've read in the past year or so, and try and include at least a sentence or so on what it is about, and/or why you recommend it.
As for me:
1) War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy -- because it is a tribute to existence, and contains basically every imaginable impulse and action of man, written in prose that simply is incomparable. People have often called it a philosophical study, and that it is, especially with reference to Tolstoy's views on causality and predestination and it affected the Napoleonic opposition to Russia, which is the center of the book. But it would better be called a psychological study, especially with reference to eros and marriage, for this is what the book is given significant focus, much to the dismay of most. Highly recommended; one of the greatest books I've ever read.
2) The Heart of Christianity by Marcus Borg -- a moderate's exposition on the subject of Christianity, with slight emphasis on mysticism. This is a book that makes clear such ignored and befuddled concepts throughout Christian history as salvation (which Borg defines as something Jesus spoke of as having primary focus on this life), faith, and consciousness and interaction with God. Short and precise.
3,4) Awareness and The Way to Love by Anthony de Mello -- here is mysticism at its absolute best. According to de Mello, the angst of this world is cured by a fundamental practice, which he calls awareness: the realization of existence involved in every facet of our experience, and it is here that eternal life is found. Both books deal with the necessity of being conscious of existence and the negation of desires, for it is in desires that blur our perception of reality, and ultimate keep us from loving -- which is emphasized in repetitive detail in The Way to Love. These books will change your life, I absolutely promise you.
5) The poems of Alexander Pushkin (published by Everyman's Library) -- by far the greatest and deepest poems I have ever read, even after a translation from Russian.
6) Memoirs from the House of the Dead by Fyodor Dostoevsky -- this deals with Dostoevsky's real-life experience with prison and exile in Siberia after he was charged with conspiracy during his younger days prior to the publication of his major novels. Anything by Dostoyevksy is beyond fantastic, but here we have the nasty details of the distorted human psyche expressed from the pen of genius. I always advise the Brothers Karamazov (which I regard as likely my favorite book of all time), and Crime and Punishment; but here is a different angle little known by contemporary readers. Tolstoy actually stated that he knew of no other book in modern literature that compares with it.
There are many others, but here are the notables that immediately come to mind.
Please share.
As for me:
1) War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy -- because it is a tribute to existence, and contains basically every imaginable impulse and action of man, written in prose that simply is incomparable. People have often called it a philosophical study, and that it is, especially with reference to Tolstoy's views on causality and predestination and it affected the Napoleonic opposition to Russia, which is the center of the book. But it would better be called a psychological study, especially with reference to eros and marriage, for this is what the book is given significant focus, much to the dismay of most. Highly recommended; one of the greatest books I've ever read.
2) The Heart of Christianity by Marcus Borg -- a moderate's exposition on the subject of Christianity, with slight emphasis on mysticism. This is a book that makes clear such ignored and befuddled concepts throughout Christian history as salvation (which Borg defines as something Jesus spoke of as having primary focus on this life), faith, and consciousness and interaction with God. Short and precise.
3,4) Awareness and The Way to Love by Anthony de Mello -- here is mysticism at its absolute best. According to de Mello, the angst of this world is cured by a fundamental practice, which he calls awareness: the realization of existence involved in every facet of our experience, and it is here that eternal life is found. Both books deal with the necessity of being conscious of existence and the negation of desires, for it is in desires that blur our perception of reality, and ultimate keep us from loving -- which is emphasized in repetitive detail in The Way to Love. These books will change your life, I absolutely promise you.
5) The poems of Alexander Pushkin (published by Everyman's Library) -- by far the greatest and deepest poems I have ever read, even after a translation from Russian.
6) Memoirs from the House of the Dead by Fyodor Dostoevsky -- this deals with Dostoevsky's real-life experience with prison and exile in Siberia after he was charged with conspiracy during his younger days prior to the publication of his major novels. Anything by Dostoyevksy is beyond fantastic, but here we have the nasty details of the distorted human psyche expressed from the pen of genius. I always advise the Brothers Karamazov (which I regard as likely my favorite book of all time), and Crime and Punishment; but here is a different angle little known by contemporary readers. Tolstoy actually stated that he knew of no other book in modern literature that compares with it.
There are many others, but here are the notables that immediately come to mind.
Please share.