Ask HN: What are your greatest books?

33 points by whyandhow ↗ HN
any book that changed your lifestyle, career, or financial status quo...

27 comments

[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 58.0 ms ] thread
"Things hidden since the foundation of the world" by Rene Girard. Changed literally everything.
"7 habits" by Steven Covey. Read it 20 years back. Amazed how it is still useful.
+1. Still the most 'foundational' book I have ever read.
"Meditations", Marcus Aurelius - chill, the answer is there
"The Prince" -- Niccolò Machiavelli

"The little Prince" -- Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

The Art of Living by William Hart
"Nairn Bus to Baghdad" - J.S. Tullett
"Essentialism", by Greg McKeown. Reading it right now, have already learned a lot from it.
Looks interesting - does it cover minimalistic ideas for living or is it more on the lines of information consumption ?
The Four Steps To The Epiphany - Steve Blank

The Fountainhead - Ayn Rand

The Art Of The Start - Guy Kawasaki

The World Is Flat - Thomas Friedman

"The World Is Flat - Thomas Friedman"

A terrible book. Looks like he made a talk he gave or a paper into a book. Says nothing in several hundred pages that he could not say in a few. Many things are actually wrong. If the world would be flat, geopolitics would be meaningless.

If the world would be flat, geopolitics would be meaningless.

I think it's pretty clear that it's a metaphor and that qualifiers apply. Nonetheless, the book inspired me and I gained a new appreciation for a lot of things from reading it. For all its flaws, I would advocate reading it to everyone. shrug

(comment deleted)
The Innovator's Dilemma.
The Conquest of Happiness by Bertrand Russell. What an enlightenment!
Lots of gold in this book. Even though it was published in 1930, just like with The Prince mentioned elsewhere in this thread, human nature changes so very slowly - if at all - that these works are only substantiated by the test of time. Definitely a must read.
Fiction :

* Lolita by Vladmir Nabakov ; an absolute master class.

* The Harry Potter series by JK Rowling ; one for the memories!

Non Fiction :

* Letters of Note by Shawn Usher; a compendium of wonderful letters from the past. Highly recommended. https://www.amazon.com/Letters-Note-Collection-Correspondenc...

* Deep work by Cal Newport ; very applicable to the modern day distracted soul.

There's a set of books I picked right in freshman year that marked me:

"Pensées" - Blaise Pascal: It showed me the clarity of thought a human being could have with a brain that functions correctly. Reading this is humbling. It is often reduced to a "theological" book and this is what you often see it described as.

"The Prince" - Niccolo Machiavelli: Shrewd but so much more nuanced than what 99% of the people who quote him would let believe. Practically every famous quote was taken out of context in a pathetic way.

"The Wealth of Nation": I skimmed over a few chapters on a few volumes, haven't read it cover to cover, but the parts I've read were eye opening.

"Meditations", Marcus Aurelius: This was surprising. The writing style was so... fresh, for lack of a better word.

A few books from "La Comédie Humaine" collection: Honoré de Balzac. I haven't read the whole collection, but it's "Le Père Goriot" that got me into reading a few ones. The great thing about these is the fact they're intertwined (which I didn't know until I saw a character from one novel appear in the other. This was an amazing feeling..). Balzac also knows his humans and describes the human traits and the things you don't expect characters to do or say. All the little unflattering internal thoughts.. When a character gives you goose bumps, the author is doing something right.

"How the Steel Was Tempered", by Nikolaï Ostrovski: relates the adventures of Pavka Korchagin, a kid warrior during the Russian Revolution.

"On the Genealogy of Morality", Friedrich Nietzsche. I found it in a library and I had just enough money to buy it, so I did and walked 5 miles home. I was asked by a beggar for the equivalent of a dollar, and it made me laugh.

Except for Ostrovski, Balzac, and Pascal which we had at home, the others were from a Canadian university's website. You can't order just any book you want here, so finding this was like finding the door to a new galaxy.

[0]: http://classiques.uqac.ca/classiques/

Read the Book of Mormon. It's the closest thing to having a personal one to one conversation with God the Son.
In the interests of balance you should read up on the life of Joseph Smith, the founder of the Mormons, and his history of fraud.

You could follow up with Why I Am Not a Christian by Bertrand Russell: https://users.drew.edu/~jlenz/whynot.html It's pretty short.

I know all about Joseph Smith. I'll leave it at that.

However, my initial comment still stands.

Was more offering a counterpoint for the OP than trying to get argumentative. :) I found his life fascinating, not least as it's very much one that would be too remarkable for the biopic!
(comment deleted)
Glad you brought it up. The Joseph Smith controversy is the most interesting and perplexing story never told.

Despite the sensation and spectacle, the Book of Mormon continues to blow my mind. Nothing compares.

Deep Work Rework Zero to One E-myth