@MK2boogaloo @fluffy @tarperfume Here's some suggestions to get started:
>1. The Psychology of Revolution - Gustave Le Bon
From skimming through it I found it better than "The Crowd". Have read neither btw.
>Half-brothers Michel and Bruno have a mother in common but little else. Michel is a molecular biologist, a thinker and idealist, a man with no erotic life to speak of and little in the way of human society. Bruno, by contrast, is a libertine, though more in theory than in practice, his endless lust is all too rarely reciprocated. Both are symptomatic members of our atomised society, where religion has given way to shallow 'new age' philosophies and love to meaningless sexual connections. Atomised (Les Particules elementaires) tells the stories of the two brothers, but the real subject of the novel is in its dismantling of contemporary society and its assumptions, in its political incorrectness, and its caustic and penetrating asides on everything from anthropology to the problem pages of girls' magazines. A dissection of modern lives and loves. By turns funny, acid, infuriating, didactic, touching and visceral.
>2. Book 1 of Thucydides History of the Peloponnesian war
I've 10-20 pages and it's a really great geopolitics books. No former knowledge needed, the text is self-explanatory. Very related to current events since it describes a naval power (Athens) and a land power (Sparta) slowly being dragged into a war to engulf every city state. Very similar to the current GAE-Russia situation even if it was written 2500 years ago.
>3. Atomised - Houellebecq
I've read 2 other books written by him. One was "The Platform" which I liked very much and the other "Serotonin" which I found to be okay (mediocre to good).
>Half-brothers Michel and Bruno have a mother in common but little else. Michel is a molecular biologist, a thinker and idealist, a man with no erotic life to speak of and little in the way of human society. Bruno, by contrast, is a libertine, though more in theory than in practice, his endless lust is all too rarely reciprocated. Both are symptomatic members of our atomised society, where religion has given way to shallow 'new age' philosophies and love to meaningless sexual connections. Atomised (Les Particules elementaires) tells the stories of the two brothers, but the real subject of the novel is in its dismantling of contemporary society and its assumptions, in its political incorrectness, and its caustic and penetrating asides on everything from anthropology to the problem pages of girls' magazines. A dissection of modern lives and loves. By turns funny, acid, infuriating, didactic, touching and visceral.
Atomised - Houellebecq, Michel, 1958-.pdfThe Psychology of Revolution - Gustave Le Bon.epubThucydides_ The War of the Peloponnesians and the Athenians-Cambridge.pdf
Nice
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