What book(s) changed your life or the way you think the most significantly?

mohandasgandhi:

Let’s take holy books as read.

Any thoughts?

(this post was reblogged from mohandasgandhi)

Notes

  1. joelpriestley answered: A People’s History of the American Empire
  2. 909empire answered: one flew over the cuckoo’s nest
  3. thegiraffediaries answered: By the River Piedra I sat and Wept.. Paulo Coelho. Something about it changed the way in which I felt about the world and myself.
  4. gatewaysparadise answered: I read Dante’s Inferno when I was 12. I was teetering with the idea of morality and religion. It cemented my atheism.
  5. sagansapien answered: Billions and Billions by Carl Sagan
  6. dontbotherbreakingthedoordown reblogged this from crookedindifference and added:
     Give Peace A Chance 
  7. myroadsandmemories answered: Book of Wicca
  8. kathrynodessa answered: Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult (if I didn’t butcher her name) and Cesar Milan’s books but I’m a dog person so … ya. Predictable :P
  9. the-box-of-erotic answered: Louis Ferdinand Celiné “Journey To The End Of The Night” - Thanks For The Blog!
  10. catwatchesoutside answered: House of Leaves
  11. gallen answered: Holy books never did it for me. Books like Dune, or Game of Thrones. Those do it for me.
  12. thesunlightpaintsusgold reblogged this from mohandasgandhi
  13. reasonssssssssss answered: querido jonh *-*
  14. tahx3 answered: no
  15. dcfcutiechk reblogged this from mohandasgandhi
  16. escute answered: Narnia, Harry Potter, and maybe The Girl With Glass Feet.
  17. 242243tumblrcom answered:
  18. astallascliffs answered: Death Be Not Proud.
  19. phoco answered: Think on These Things + You Are the World; The Cosmic Serpent; Parable of the Sower; Tales of Power; Ways of Seeing; Understanding Media
  20. hannabis answered: the china study
  21. nubivagant-e reblogged this from crookedindifference
  22. superbstunning answered: Friendship Factor.
  23. bumerangue answered: Jean-Paul Sartre, Nausea; Albert Camus, The Stranger; Michel Houellebecq, Whatever and The Elementary Particles and all of Millôr´s works.
  24. -tea answered: The Little Prince and The Secret Garden.
  25. chromatichouse reblogged this from jamessteiner and added:
    The Aleph and Other Stories - Jorge Luis Borges
  26. falling-stone answered: Johnny Got his Gun
  27. erminisat answered: Being and nothingness by Sartre
  28. nojokesfact answered: East of Eden by John Steinbeck.
  29. wellville answered: Diversity of Life, Edward O. Wilson
  30. curiousnowhere answered: 1984, brave new world, jonathan livingston seagull, of mice and men, the sun also rises, a wrinkle in time, griffin & sabine. so many.
  31. ommegang answered: The Stranger - Camus
  32. jacqueattaque answered: No answer for the question but I tried reading I, Lucifer once and just could not but all your posts make me want to try again.
  33. ahman answered: Alan Fletcher - The art of looking sideways
  34. basquavita answered: a golden age. it was about bangladesh’s liberation war. taught me what i come from.
  35. sariemcstrickland answered: Bill Bryson A Short History of Nearly Everything
  36. sariemcstrickland reblogged this from crookedindifference
  37. chromatichouse answered: The Aleph and Other Stories by Jorge Luis Borges
  38. enayalate-h8-with-me answered: I think my books would be The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstien and A Midsummer Night’s Dream by Shakespeare :)
  39. threesleeplessnights answered: The
  40. jamessteiner reblogged this from mohandasgandhi and added:
    Guns, Germs, and Steel - Jared Diamond. NonZero - Robert Wright The Worthing Chronicle - Orson Scott Card The...