What's in your bookshelf?

kenny olavkenny olav Posts: 3,319
edited October 2006 in A Moving Train
From left to right, mine has:

The Best Democracy Money Can Buy - Greg Palast
Napalm and Silly Putty - George Carlin
The I Hate Republicans Reader
A Choice Not an Echo - Phyllis Schafly
Tao Te Ching
The Holy Bible
The Beat Book: Writings from the Beat Generation
Mexico City Blues - Jack Kerouac
When Will Jesus Bring the Pork Chops? - George Carlin
Nickel and Dimed - Barbara Ehrenreich
America and the Crisis of World Capitalism
The Mystical Life of Jesus
The Elements of Counseling
On Death and Dying - Elisabeth Kiibler-Ross, MD
Ecotopia - Ernest Callenbach
The Handmaid's Tale - Margaret Atwood
The Secret Life of Bees - Sue Monk Kidd
The Communist Manifesto - Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels
The Book of Mormon
Two Treatises on Government - John Locke
The Rationalists - writings of Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz
The Presidential Papers - Norman Mailer
The Hundredth Monkey - Ken Keyes Jr.
Looking Backward - Edward Bellamy
Peasant Fires - Richard Wunderli
The Ralph Nader Reader
In Pursuit of Justice - Ralph Nader
Ralph Nader: Crusader, Spoiler, Icon - Justin Martin
Rules for Radicals - Saul Alinsky
World on Fire - Amy Chua
Fast Food Nation - Eric Schlosser
The Republic - Plato
Post edited by Unknown User on
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Comments

  • catefrancescatefrances Posts: 29,003
    false flag - zeev avni
    every contact leaves a trace - dr. zakarias erzinclioglu
    african exodus - christopher stranger & robin mckie
    axis of deceit - andrew wilkie
    dude, where's my country? - michael moore
    finding freedom:writings from death row - jarvis jay walker
    demon lover:the roots of terrorism - robin morgan
    bush in babylon - tariq ali
    a problem from hell: america and the age of genocide - samantha power
    the clash of fundamentalisms - tariq ali
    allies - william shawcross
    big boys rules - mark urban
    made in america - bill bryson
    stupid white men - michael moore
    no logo - naomi klein
    branded - alissa quart
    the new rulers of the world - john pilger
    power and terror - noam chomsky
    terrorism and war - howard zinn
    frontier justice - scott ritter
    oxford history of australia 1860-1900 - beverley kingston
    still life with woodpecker - tom robbins
    a guide to recognising your saints - dito montiel
    hear my name
    take a good look
    this could be the day
    hold my hand
    lie beside me
    i just need to say
  • hippiemomhippiemom Posts: 3,326
    Most of my books are downstairs, but I do have a small book shelf up here ...

    War Talk - Arundahti Roy
    The Trial of Henry Kissinger - Christopher Hitchens
    The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald
    Unequal Protection - Thom Hartmann
    Love in the Time of Cholera - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down - Anne Fadiman
    Manufacturing Consent - Noam Chomsky
    Work, Consumerism and the New Poor - Zygmunt Bauman
    The Year of Magical Thinking - Joan Didion
    Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim - David Sedaris
    Working Men - Michael Dorris
    The Human Stain - Philip Roth
    The Places In Between - Rory Stewart
    Farenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury
    How To Be Good - Nick Hornby
    Gilead - Marilynne Robinson
    One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    We - Yevgeny Zamyatin
    The Tender Bar - J.R. Moehringer
    American Theocracy - Kevin Phillips
    Bob Dylan: The Essential Interviews - Jonathan Cott
    The God Delusion - Richard Dawkins
    Barrel Fever - David Sedaris
    Light in August - William Faulkner
    The Sound and the Fury - William Faulkner
    Sick Puppy - Carl Hiassen
    My Traitor's Heart - Rian Malan
    A Walk Across America - Peter Jenkins
    Hitler's Willing Executioners - Daniel Jonah Goldhagen
    Alias Grace - Margaret Atwood
    Song of Solomon - Toni Morrison
    Brave New World - Aldous Huxley
    America (The Book) - Jon Stewart
    The I Hate Republicans Reader - Clint Willis
    Animal Farm - George Orwell
    Life of Pi - Yann Martel
    The Bookseller of Kabul - Asne Seierstad
    People's History of the United States - Howard Zinn
    The Bible - New King James Version
    The Survivor - John F. Harris
    'Tis - Frank McCourt
    It's Not About The Bike - Lance Armstrong
    Arc of Justice - Kevin Boyle
    The Great Big Book of Tomorrow - Tom Tomorrow
    The Fool's Progress - Edward Abbey
    Anna Karenina - Leo Tolstoy
    Running With Scissors - Augusten Burroughs
    Bait and Switch - Barbara Ehrenreich
    "Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." ~ MLK, 1963
  • catefrancescatefrances Posts: 29,003
    hippiemom wrote:
    The Bookseller of Kabul - Asne Seierstad

    have you read 'reading lolita in tehren' by azar nafisi.
    i think you may enjoy it. :)
    hear my name
    take a good look
    this could be the day
    hold my hand
    lie beside me
    i just need to say
  • hippiemomhippiemom Posts: 3,326
    have you read 'reading lolita in tehren' by azar nafisi.
    i think you may enjoy it. :)
    I bought it, but my daughter swiped it before I could get to it. I'm sure I'll read it eventually :)
    "Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." ~ MLK, 1963
  • celtic book of living and dying-Juliette Wood
    and some other celtic history books.(too many to name them all
    L'isola del giorno prima-Umberto Eco(don't know the title in english)
    The Eleventh Plague-John Baldwin Marr
    Band of Brothers-Stephen E Ambrose
    almost everything from Marion Zimmer Bradly
    The Outlander series (7 books)-Diana Gabaldon
    Labyrinth-Kate Mosse
    prehistoric series from Jean M Auel
    Doomsday book-Connie Willis(book about the middle ages and the plague)
    And many more books about dutch and french history.
    Some books about witchcraft
    Some Raymond e Feist
    Lots more but most is about woII and some more history(prehistoric,middle ages and celtic culture)
  • redrockredrock Posts: 18,341
    Hippiemom.. noticed you mention Marquez a couple of times. He's my all time favourite author. I read all of his books (some in english, some in french). He is soooo interesting.

    Have you read anything by Jorge Luis Borges? If not, you might enjoy his stuff. Also, 'Ana Non' by Agustin Gomez Arcos. A most beautiful story.
  • AhnimusAhnimus Posts: 10,560
    Seriously, I read ebooks and articles online.

    I do have a few books, but none of them are philosophical. I'm not really a big fan of reading a lot of philosophy.

    The books I have are:
    • A+ Complete Study Guide
    • Best Karate Comprehensive
    • CCNA Study Guide
    • Exam Cram's Core Four Windows 2000
    • Getting Along in German
    • Illustrated History of the Third Reich, The
    • Physics: For Scientists and Engineers
    • Microsoft's MCSE Windows 2000 Study Kit
    • Top 100 Best Selling Albums, The
    • Russ Whitney's Property Tax Valuation
    I necessarily have the passion for writing this, and you have the passion for condemning me; both of us are equally fools, equally the toys of destiny. Your nature is to do harm, mine is to love truth, and to make it public in spite of you. - Voltaire
  • OutOfBreathOutOfBreath Posts: 1,804
    As I'm sitting at school right now, my shelf by my designated computer looks like this, left to right:

    Grusky (red): Social stratification
    Ritzer (red): Sociological theory 5th edition
    Granovetter: Getting a job
    Lash & Urry: The end of organized capitalism
    Johannessen: Introduction to SPSS
    Beck: Globalization and individualization
    Esping-Andersen: Social Foundations of post-industrial economies
    Bauman: The individualized society
    Halvorsen: When there's no use for you - unemployment and living conditions (norwegian)
    Hellevik: Research method in sociology and political science (norwegian)
    Landman: Issues and methods in comparative politics
    Beck: Risk society
    Bauman: Work, consumerism and the new poor
    Weber: The protestant ethic and the spirit of capitalism

    and various outprints and stuff in regards to my (now completed) master's thesis.

    As for home at my bedroom table, I am currently re-reading a compilation of Lovecraft's horror stories. :)

    Peace
    Dan
    "YOU [humans] NEED TO BELIEVE IN THINGS THAT AREN'T TRUE. HOW ELSE CAN THEY BECOME?" - Death

    "Every judgment teeters on the brink of error. To claim absolute knowledge is to become monstrous. Knowledge is an unending adventure at the edge of uncertainty." - Frank Herbert, Dune, 1965
  • One day, I'll sit down and catalogue my library. Then I'll tell you what I've got, here.
  • Ms. HaikuMs. Haiku Posts: 7,265
    One day, I'll sit down and catalogue my library. Then I'll tell you what I've got, here.
    I'm looking forward to going home today, and just write down one of the layers of my book shelves. You'll see it's pretty consistent with how I present on here, you know.
    There is no such thing as leftover pizza. There is now pizza and later pizza. - anonymous
    The risk I took was calculated, but man, am I bad at math - The Mincing Mockingbird
  • catefrancescatefrances Posts: 29,003
    Ms. Haiku wrote:
    I'm looking forward to going home today, and just write down one of the layers of my book shelves. You'll see it's pretty consistent with how I present on here, you know.

    i like that. 'one of the layers of your bookshelves' cause when i saw this thread i laughed and thought just ONE shelf? how the bloody hell am i gonna do just A shelf. cause you know i've got quite a few.


    and hey fins. can't you just pick one random shelf. i for one am fascinated by what would be on your shelves. :)
    hear my name
    take a good look
    this could be the day
    hold my hand
    lie beside me
    i just need to say
  • qtegirlqtegirl Posts: 321
    redrock wrote:
    Hippiemom.. noticed you mention Marquez a couple of times. He's my all time favourite author. I read all of his books (some in english, some in french). He is soooo interesting.

    Have you read anything by Jorge Luis Borges? If not, you might enjoy his stuff. Also, 'Ana Non' by Agustin Gomez Arcos. A most beautiful story.

    If you like Gabriel Garcia Marquez, you should also check out Isabel Allende. Especially, The House of Spirits. Great book.
  • qtegirlqtegirl Posts: 321
    I'm not at home, so I'll try to remember what's there

    A People's History of the United States - Howard Zinn
    Manufacturing Consent - Noam Chomsky
    The Chomsky Reader
    The Holy Bible
    The Great War for Civilisation, the Conquest of the Middle East - Robert Fisk
    Failed States - The abuse of Power and Assault on Democracy - Chomsky
    Passionate Declarations - Essays on War and Justice - Howard Zinn
    The Lord of the Rings - JRR Tolkien
    Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
    Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
    Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
    Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
    Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
    Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
    One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    Love in the Time of Cholera - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    The House of Spirits - Isabel Allende
    Daughter of Fortune - Isabel Allende
    Moby Dick - Herman Melville
    The Once and Future King - T.H. White
    Maria - Jorge Isaacs
    Azul - Ruben Dario

    And then... A WHOLE BUNCH of Chemistry, Biology and Chemical Engineering books, a few dictionaries, and a few how-to books.
  • _Crazy_Mary__Crazy_Mary_ Posts: 1,299
    The Savage Nation- Michael Savage
    The Enemy Within - Michael Savage
    Liberalism is a Mental Disorder - Michael Savage
    The Political Zoo - Michael Savage
    Godless: The Church of Liberalism - Ann H. Coulter
    How to Talk to a Liberal (if You Must): The World according to Ann Coulter
    Treason: Liberal Treachery From the Cold War to the War on Terrorism-Ann Coulter
    Slander: Liberal Lies about the American Right-Ann Coulter
    Way Things Ought to Be-Rush H. Limbaugh
    See, I Told You So-Rush Limbaugh
    Men in Black: How the Supreme Court is Destroying America-Mark R. Levin
    Proper Care and Feeding of Husbands-Laura C. Schlessinger
    Ten Stupid Things Couples do to Mess up Their Relationships-Laura Schlessinger
    Ten Stupid Things Women Do to Mess up Their Lives-Laura C. Schlessinger
    Stupid Things Parents Do to Mess Up Their Kids-Laura C. Schlessinger
    I really screwed that up. I really Schruted it.
  • On my nightstand:

    Imperial Hubris by Michael Scheuer
    Politics: Observations and Arguments 1966-2004 by Hedrick Hertzberg
    State of Denial by Bob Woodward
    American Theocracy by Kevin Phillips
    The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde
    Marley and Me by John Grogan
    Tristram Shandy by Laurence Sterne
    Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen (always there)
    The Bible (always there)
    The Republican War on Science by Christopher Mooney
    Don't Try This at Home by Kimberly Witherspoon and Andrew Friedman (about professional chefs' biggest disasters)
    Kitchen Confidential by Anthony Bourdain
    Alexander Hamilton by Ron Chernow (This is the best book ever about my favorite -- and most misunderstood -- Founding Father. Contrary to popular belief, he would *never* have signed off on this administration's expansion of power.)
    "Things will just get better and better even though it
    doesn't feel that way right now. That's the hopeful
    idea . . . Hope didn't get much applause . . .
    Hope! Hope is the underdog!"

    -- EV, Live at the Showbox
  • i like that. 'one of the layers of your bookshelves' cause when i saw this thread i laughed and thought just ONE shelf? how the bloody hell am i gonna do just A shelf. cause you know i've got quite a few.


    and hey fins. can't you just pick one random shelf. i for one am fascinated by what would be on your shelves. :)

    One random shelf? I have thirteen big ole bookcases in this room. I'll do one shelf, because even if I do one case, I'll be here all night. Er... hang on....

    The Complete Pelican Shakespeare - Comedy and Romances (Pelican)
    The Complete Pelican Shakespeare - Histories and Tragedies (Pelican)
    The Complete Works of Shakespeare (Midpoint Press)
    Shakspeare (sic) - another complete works (Kegan Paul Ltd 1909)
    Shakespeare in Production: A Midsummer Night's Dream (Cambridge)
    Twelfth Night (Oxford)
    Othello (Cambridge Schools)
    Shakespeare in Production: Antony and Cleopatra (Cambridge)
    Shakespeare's Sonnets (eds. Ingram and Redpath)
    Antony and Cleopatra (Oxford)
    Shakespeare in Production: The Tempest (Cambridge)
    The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare on Film (Cambridge)
    The Merchant of Venice (Cambridge Schools)
    Duncan Salkeld - Madness and Drama in the Age of Shakespeare (Manchester)
    Keir Elam - Shakespeare's Universe of Discourses (Cambridge)
    The Norton Shakespeare
    Mr William Shakespeares: A Facsimile of the First Folio, 1623 (Routledge)
    Helen Vendler - The Art of Shakespeare's Sonnets (Harvard)
    The TLS on Shakespeare (TLS)
    Anne Righter - Shakespeare and the Idea of the Play (Penguin)
    The Longman Guide to Shakespeare Quotations (Longman)

    There ya go. Yes, every edition is different.
  • LizardLizard Posts: 12,091
    I have a good old fashioned set of Encyclopedias I bought when my 18 year old was a baby!!! among other books. All the Harry Potters! The Jungle, The Pelican Brief.
    You Too can be Pretentious

    How not to Strain Your Arm While Patting Your Own Back

    Date/Place Book

    Dictionary
    So I'll just lie down and wait for the dream
    Where I'm not ugly and you're lookin' at me
  • Just for the sake of variety, I'll do another, completely random bookshelf:

    Keywords - Raymond Williams
    The Dematerialisation of Karl Marx - Leonard Jackson
    Marxism and Literary Criticism - Terry Eagleton
    Marxism and Literature - Raymond Williams
    Post-Structuralism and the Question of History - ed. by Attridge, Bennington, Young
    Narrative and Ideology - Jeremy Tambling
    A Dictionary of Modern Critical Terms - ed. by Roger Fowler
    Ideology - ed. by Terry Eagleton
    The Long Revolution - Raymond Williams
    Literary Theory at Work: Three Texts - ed. by Douglas Tallack
    Sructuralism and Semiotics - Terence Hawkes
    Structuralist Poetics - Jonathan Culler
    Narrative: A Critical Linguistic Introduction - Michael J. Toolan
    Indian Literature in English - William Walsh
    Psychoanalytic Literary Criticism - ed. by Maud Ellmann
    New Historicism and Cultural Materialism - John Brannigan
    Medieval English Poetry - ed. by Stephanie Trigg
    The Pelican History of England 2: The Beginnings of English Society - Dorothy Whitelock
    The Pelican History of England 4: England in the Late Middle Ages - A.R. Myers
    Modernism: A Guide to European Literature 1890-1930 - ed by. Bradbury & McFarlane
    The Interpretation of Dreams - Sigmund Freud
    Art and Literature - Sigmund Freud
    Readers and Reading - ed. by Andrew Bennett
    Feminist Literary Criticism - ed. by Mary Eagleton
    Literary Theory: An Introduction - Terry Eagleton
    Critical Approaches to Literature - David Daiches
    Culture and Society 1780-1950 - Raymond Williams
    Aspects of the Novel - E.M. Forster
    Seven Types of Ambiguity - William Empson
    Narratology - ed. by Onega & Garcia Landa
    The Country and the City - Raymond Williams
    Narrative Fiction: Contemporary Poetics - Shlomith Rimmon-Kenan
    Literature and Criticism - H. Coombes
    Drama From Ibsen to Brecht - Raymond Williams
    Narrative Discourse - Gerard Genette
    The Anatomy of Poetry - Marjorie Boulton
  • Nice list Hippiemom, my senior year spanish literature class was all about One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. amazing book. it is about as universal a book can get. And as another poster suggested Isabel Allende is also very good.
  • Just for the sake of variety, I'll go another, completely random bookshelf:

    Keywords - Raymond Williams
    The Dematerialisation of Karl Marx - Leonard Jackson
    Marxism and Literary Criticism - Terry Eagleton
    Marxism and Literature - Raymond Williams
    Post-Structuralism and the Question of History - ed. by Attridge, Bennington, Young
    Narrative and Ideology - Jeremy Tambling
    A Dictionary of Modern Critical Terms - ed. by Roger Fowler
    Ideology - ed. by Terry Eagleton
    The Long Revolution - Raymond Williams
    Literary Theory at Work: Three Texts - ed. by Douglas Tallack
    Sructuralism and Semiotics - Terence Hawkes
    Structuralist Poetics - Jonathan Culler
    Narrative: A Critical Linguistic Introduction - Michael J. Toolan
    Indian Literature in English - William Walsh
    Psychoanalytic Literary Criticism - ed. by Maud Ellmann
    New Historicism and Cultural Materialism - John Brannigan
    Medieval English Poetry - ed. by Stephanie Trigg
    The Pelican History of England 2: The Beginnings of English Society - Dorothy Whitelock
    The Pelican History of England 4: England in the Late Middle Ages - A.R. Myers
    Modernism: A Guide to European Literature 1890-1930 - ed by. Bradbury & McFarlane
    The Interpretation of Dreams - Sigmund Freud
    Art and Literature - Sigmund Freud
    Readers and Reading - ed. by Andrew Bennett
    Feminist Literary Criticism - ed. by Mary Eagleton
    Literary Theory: An Introduction - Terry Eagleton
    Critical Approaches to Literature - David Daiches
    Culture and Society 1780-1950 - Raymond Williams
    Aspects of the Novel - E.M. Forster
    Seven Types of Ambiguity - William Empson
    Narratology - ed. by Onega & Garcia Landa
    The Country and the City - Raymond Williams
    Narrative Fiction: Contemporary Poetics - Shlomith Rimmon-Kenan
    Literature and Criticism - H. Coombes
    Drama From Ibsen to Brecht - Raymond Williams
    Narrative Discourse - Gerard Genette
    The Anatomy of Poetry - Marjorie Boulton

    Okay, now you're just showing off! :D
    "Things will just get better and better even though it
    doesn't feel that way right now. That's the hopeful
    idea . . . Hope didn't get much applause . . .
    Hope! Hope is the underdog!"

    -- EV, Live at the Showbox
  • Hope&Anger wrote:
    Okay, now you're just showing off! :D

    Well, if there's one thing I take pride in, it's my books, and having read all of them. ;)
  • hippiemomhippiemom Posts: 3,326
    I'm totally intimidated by Finsbury's list. Not only the content, but look how organized it is! A whole shelf with nothing but Shakespeare! I've got plenty of Shakespeare, but it's mixed in with Al Franken and Fyodor Dostoyevsky and Alice Walker and Harry Potter books and god knows what else :o

    *slinks off in shame*
    "Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." ~ MLK, 1963
  • the only books on my shelves are coloring books,...
    you're a real hooker. im gonna slap you in public.
    ~Ron Burgundy
  • hippiemom wrote:
    I'm totally intimidated by Finsbury's list. Not only the content, but look how organized it is! A whole shelf with nothing but Shakespeare!

    There's actually a whole case of Shakespeare, but I stopped at one shelf. The shelves are two rows deep, too, to save space ... so I didn't mention what was behind them. :D
  • hippiemomhippiemom Posts: 3,326
    There's actually a whole case of Shakespeare, but I stopped at one shelf. The shelves are two rows deep, too, to save space ... so I didn't mention what was behind them. :D
    She's right, you're just showing off :D
    "Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." ~ MLK, 1963
  • hippiemomhippiemom Posts: 3,326
    Nice list Hippiemom, my senior year spanish literature class was all about One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. amazing book. it is about as universal a book can get. And as another poster suggested Isabel Allende is also very good.
    You know, I've read the first half of that book three times. Loved it all three times too! But every time I start reading it, some catastrophe happens and I have to set it aside for a while, and then so much time goes by that I feel like I have to start at the beginning again. So now I'm sort of afraid to start reading it again for fear of bringing on another catastrophe :o

    Ridiculous, I know. I'm not even superstitious. When I'm done with The Tender Bar (great fun to read, by the way, highly recommended!) I think I'll give it another shot.
    "Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." ~ MLK, 1963
  • parel jamparel jam Posts: 7,223
    Kenny Olav wrote:
    What's in your bookshelf

    Books, vinyl, whiskey, cigar box, mp3 player.
    ♪♫♪♫♫

    http://youtube.com/watch?v=U_-WGNRyRzU

    ♪♫♪♫♫
  • About 70 Garfield Books, and a few autobiographies
    no matter where you go,
    there you are.

    - brain of c
  • seagoat2seagoat2 Posts: 241
    One day, I'll sit down and catalogue my library. Then I'll tell you what I've got, here.

    Yeah, I hear that, Fins - I have so many books it'd be impossible to tell you - but to give you an idea - I have lots of books about art/artists, nature writings, children's book illustrators (like Arthur Rackham, 1 of my fave artists), Buddhism/philosophy, poetry, some great fiction (LOTR, The Hobbit), Native American history, craft books.

    Some fave authors:
    Jack Kerouac
    Bernd Heinrich, Barry Lopez, Gretel Ehrlich (nature writers)
    William Blake
    can't list 'em all.......

    Nice to see that we have some "readers" on the board.....;-)
  • ByrnzieByrnzie Posts: 21,037
    Henry Miller - Tropic of Cancer
    Henry Miller - Tropic of Capricorn
    Henry Miller - Black Spring
    Henry Miller - Sunday After The War
    Henry Miller - The Smile at the foot of the Ladder (signed by the author)
    Charles Bukowski - Post Office
    Charles Bukowski - Factotum
    Charles Bukowski - Erections, Ejaculations, Exhibitions and General Tales of Ordinary Madness
    Charles Bukowski - Ham on Rye
    Charles Bukowski - Betting on the muse
    Charles Bukowski - Last night of the Earth Poems
    Charles Bukowski - Shakespeare never did this
    Charles Bukowski - You Get So Alone at Times It Just Makes Sense
    Charles Bukowski - Poems written before jumping out of an 8 story window
    Charles Bukowski - The Days run away like horses over the Hills
    Charles Bukowski - Notes of a dirty old man
    Charles Bukowski - The Captain Is Out to Lunch and the Sailors Have Taken Over the Ship
    Charles Bukowski - Selected Letters Volumes 1, 2, & 3
    Charles Bukowski - Love is a dog from Hell
    Charles Bukowski - Septuagenarian Stew (Signed by the author)
    Louis Ferdinand Celine - Journey to the end of the night
    Louis Ferdinand Celine -North
    Knut Hamsun - Mysteries
    Knut Hamsun - Hunger
    William Burroughs - Naked Lunch
    William Burroughs - The Place of dead roads
    William Burroughs - The Western Lands
    William Burroughs - Nova Express
    Tom Wolfe - The Electric Kool Aid Acid Test
    Vasily Grossman - Life and Fate
    Gunter Grass - The Tin Drum
    Jean Genet - Prisoner Of Love
    Jean Genet - The Thiefs Journal
    Blaise Cendrars - Moravagine
    Blaise Cendrars - Sky
    Gerard De Nerval - Selected Writings
    Antonin Artaud - Collected works
    Arthur Rimbaud - Collected Poems
    Joseph Campbell - The Hero with a thousand faces
    Julian Jaynes - The Origin of conciousness in the breakdown of the bicameral mind
    Primo Levi - If this is a man
    Primo levi - The Drowned and the saved
    Primo Levi - The Search for Roots
    Elie Weisel - Night
    Arthur Schopenhaur - The World as will and representation parts 1 & 2
    Nietzsche - Untimely Meditations
    Nietzsche - The Birth Of Tragedy
    Nietzsche - Thus spoke Zarathustra
    Nietzsche - Beyond Good and Evil
    Nietzsche - The Anti-Christ & Ecce Homo
    The Letters Of Vincent Van Gogh
    The Bhagavad Gita
    Lao Tzu - Tao Te Ching
    Sun Tzu - The Art Of War
    Daniel Pinchbeck - Breaking Open The Head
    The Secret Gospels Of jesus
    Elaine Pagels - The Gnostic Gospels
    Lewis Hyde - Trickster makes this world
    Martin Esslin - The Theatre of the Absurd
    Cormac McCarthy - The Orchard Keeper
    Cormac McCarthy - Outer Dark
    Cormac McCarthy - Sutree
    Cormac McCarthy - Blood Meridian
    Cormac McCarthy - All the pretty horses
    Cormac McCarthy - The crossing
    Cormac McCarthy - No country for old men
    The collected tales of Nikolai Gogol
    Gogol - Dead Souls
    Dostoyevsky - The Brothers Karamazov
    Dostoyevsky - The Devils
    Dostoyevsky - The Idiot
    Dostoyevsky - Crime and Punishment
    Anthony Loyd - My War Gone By, I Miss It So
    Peter Matthiessen - In The Spirit of Crazy Horse
    Bill Hicks - Agent Of Evolution
    Rob Jovanovic - Big Star: The Story of Rock's Forgotten Band
    Johnny Rotten - No Irish, No Blacks, No Dogs
    Andrew Meir - Black Earth - Russia after the fall
    Anthony Beevor - Berlin
    Roderic Braithwaite - Moscow 1941 - A city and it's people at war
    Richard Overy - Russia's war
    Michel Houllebecq - Atomised
    Michel Houllebecq - Platform
    Michel Houllebecq - H.P Lovecraft - Against The World, Against Life
    Michel Houllebecq - The Possibility Of an Island
    Luke Rhinehart - The Dice Man
    Nick Cave - And the ass saw the angel
    Albert Camus - The Myth Of Sisyphus
    Albert Camus - The Rebel
    Albert Camus - The Stranger
    Alexander Trocchi - Cains Book
    Richard Farina - Been down so long it looks like up to me
    Ken Kesey - One flew over the cuckoos nest
    Jim Dodge - Stone Junction
    Jim Dodge - Not Fade away
    Emmet Grogan - Ringolevio
    Hunter Thompson - Hells Angels
    Hunter Thompson - The Rum Diary
    Saul Bellow - Herzog
    Saul Bellow - The Deans December
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