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princexhhn

princexhhn

ich will alles, was mir nicht hilft
Sep 26, 2023
343
What's your favourite and explain why! :D or just talk about classic literature any way you want, I don't give a shit!!

I don't wanna say mine yet I don't… wanna be called pretentious. I don't really know why I like this book so much specifically but I do.

But I'll tell you my second favourite, Wuthering Heights!! Gothic romance all the way!!
 
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getoutgirl

getoutgirl

<3
Mar 17, 2025
462
I like The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (or Baron Munchausen's Narrative of His Marvellous Travels and Campaigns in Russia, in its og name). Basically a very short book narrated by your crazy uncle telling tall tales while tripping. Full of lies and absurd surreal humor like how he rode a cannonball against the turks, climbed to the moon and hunted like a million things. It's such a fun read, specially how insane it gets at times for the 18th century.

Another "sadder" one I like is Anatomy of Melancholy (or in its og name, and forgive me but I love how silly these oldie titles are, The Anatomy of Melancholy, What it is: With all the Kinds, Causes, Symptomes, Prognostickes, and Several Cures of it. In Three Maine Partitions with their several Sections, Members, and Subsections. Philosophically, Medicinally, Historically, Opened and Cut Up)
I never waste a chance to rant about this book.
I've never finished it. Because it's introduction is 200 pages alone, and it's itself a parody of introductions. It's final edition is almost 2.000 pages. It was written and rewritten by one guy, Robert Burton, in the course of 17 years as a way to treat his own depression.
It's far from a medical text, it's the closest thing to a blog but from the 17th century, If it was written by an oxford scholar that never left his library and so turned to philosophy, astrology, geography and basically every subject and book on earth to try to find meaning in it for his depression. The book goes everywhere, its a constant ramble but so eloquent and filled with humor, it is very funny. Like he just tells you an anecdote about how sad he was one time and then goes "anyways... so on demons"... and you can expect he will go on about demons for the next 50 pages.
It's not an easy read, it's a self admitted confused mess, but he just said "fuck it" and made it progressively more confusing with each edition. Sometimes it reads nihilistic others hopeful, depending on how he was feeling that day.
But it's one of the few books from that era that transcend all the arcaic language and lets you see "oh, this was just a guy, an actual shut in messy person trying their best to write himself out of his depression" and he tried hard. He gives hundreds of remedies for it but also concludes that probably none work. Which is sad but... yeah I feel u buddy :(
so yeah, I like how real this book feels. He said he only wrote about melancholy to distract his own melancholy, and maybe bring such comfort to others, and I think he did good on that front.

Rant over.
 
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princexhhn

princexhhn

ich will alles, was mir nicht hilft
Sep 26, 2023
343
I like The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (or Baron Munchausen's Narrative of His Marvellous Travels and Campaigns in Russia, in its og name). Basically a very short book narrated by your crazy uncle telling high tales while tripping. Full of lies and absurd surreal humor like how he rode a cannonball against the turks, climbed to the moon and hunted like a million things. It's such a fun read, specially how insane it gets at times for the 18th century.

Another "sadder" one I like is Anatomy of Melancholy (or in its og name, and forgive me but I love how silly these oldie titles are, The Anatomy of Melancholy, What it is: With all the Kinds, Causes, Symptomes, Prognostickes, and Several Cures of it. In Three Maine Partitions with their several Sections, Members, and Subsections. Philosophically, Medicinally, Historically, Opened and Cut Up)
I never waste a chance to rant about this book.
I've never finished it. Because it's introduction is 200 pages alone, and it's itself a parody of introductions. It's final edition is almost 2.000 pages. It was written and rewritten by one guy, Robert Burton, in the course of 17 years as a way to treat his own depression.
It's far from a medical text, it's the closest thing to a blog but from the 17th century, If it was written by an oxford scholar that never left his library and so turned to philosophy, astrology, geography and basically every subject and book on earth to try to find meaning in it for his depression. The book goes everywhere, its a constant ramble but so eloquent and filled with humor, it is very funny. Like he just tells you an anecdote about how sad he was one time and then goes "anyways... so on demons"... and you can expect he will go on about demons for the next 50 pages.
It's not an easy read, it's a self admitted confused mess, but he just said "fuck it" and made it progressively more confusing with each edition. Sometimes it reads nihilistic others hopeful, depending on how he was feeling that day.
But it's one of the few books from that era that trascend all the arcaic language and lets you see "oh, this was just a guy, an actual shut in messy person trying their best to write himself out of his depression" and he tried hard. He gives hundreds of remedies for it but also concludes that probably none work. Which is sad but... yeah I feel u buddy :(
so yeah, I like how real this book feels. He said he only wrote about melancholy to distract his own melancholy, and maybe bring such comfort to others, and I think he did good on that front.

Rant over.
Wow, both books sound interesting for different reasons:D will definitely look more into them!!
 
Pluto

Pluto

Cat Extremist
Dec 27, 2020
5,622
b38f572b4247cd83736d84c80a6a792e.jpg
 
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NaturalBornNEET

NaturalBornNEET

俺は絶対にセックスになるんだ
Feb 22, 2022
129
I like the few Dostoevsky books I've read (specifically Notes From Underground and Crime & Punishment). I just like the focus on the protagonist's internal mental and emotional states and how luridly it's described. And seeing how that in turn colours the rest of the world the story takes place in.


I don't wanna say mine yet I don't… wanna be called pretentious.
Do tell, I like pretentious books the best
 
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_Gollum_

_Gollum_

Formerly Alexei_Kirillov
Mar 9, 2024
1,495
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte! I just adore Jane and relate to her in many ways. She's very different from Elizabeth from Pride and Prejudice and other books in that genre, in that she's sincere, sensitive, and forgiving. My memory is really bad so I can't really give your more than that hahaha, I just remember that I loved it and tore through it very quickly.
 
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B

bleeding_heart_show

Student
Dec 23, 2023
195
Anything by Osamu Dazai or Yukio Mishima (I recommend reading no longer human (Dazai) and confessions of a mask (Mishima) alongside one another, the books compliment one another despite the authors' disdain for one another).

I have been trying to get my hands on a copy of l'etranger by Albert Camus, but have not had any luck looking at the online inventory of nearby bookstores.

I should include some american authors for good measure; any of Earnest Hemmingway's short stories, moby dick by Herman Melville, and the catcher in the rye/the ocean full of bowling balls by J.D. Salinger.
 
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johnnytsunami667

johnnytsunami667

Member
Sep 8, 2025
12
Bel ami by Maupassant, outstanding story about a wise scammer
 
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