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70 Books Everyone Should Read At Least Once, As Shared By People In This Online Thread

With thousands of great books out there, choosing your next read can feel overwhelming—especially when your reading time is limited. Whether you’re into mystery, romance, self-help, or classic literature, the struggle is real: so many best books to read, yet so little time.

If you’re an avid reader or even just starting your literary journey, creating a books to read before you die list is essential. And trust us—if you haven’t read some of these life-changing books yet, you’re missing out on stories that could shift your entire perspective.

Recently, a thought-provoking question popped up in the AskReddit community: “What’s a book everyone should read at least once in their lives?” The responses were flooded with powerful titles that have left lasting impressions on readers worldwide.

From modern masterpieces to timeless classics, we’ve curated the most upvoted suggestions and turned them into the ultimate recommended reading list—filled with influential, thought-provoking, and emotionally unforgettable stories. These aren’t just books—they’re experiences.

Whether you’re looking for motivational reads, educational books, or just a good novel to get lost in, this list has something for everyone.

📚 Explore the best books of all time.
📚 Add these timeless reads to your personal library.
📚 Discover must-read books that people can’t stop talking about.

Scroll through the list, upvote your favorites, and let us know which books everyone should read at least once in the comments. Got a favorite that’s not here? Share it—we’re always looking to grow the ultimate bookshelf.

#1 The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy By Douglas Adams

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“Hitchhiker’s guide is a book I read at least once a year, more if I’m having a particularly rough patch in life. Arthur Dents biscuit story gets me every time and hearing the late, great Douglas Adams tell it, as it apparently happened to him, is ice cream for the soul.”

#2 To Kill A Mockingbird By Harper Lee

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unchartedfour said:
“To Kill a Mockingbird.”

Mission_Eagle_7611 replied:
“I put off reading Go Set A Watchman because I couldn’t bear the thought of my favourite character being pushed off his pedestal. Finished the book with on a flight absolutely sobbing because of exactly that.”

Awkward_Dog replied:
“I re-read this once a year. I swear I see new details every time. I suspect Atticus played a substantial role in my becoming a legal academic researching on human rights.”

#3 Animal Farm By George Orwell

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epikninja123 said:
“Animal Farm by George Orwell.”

xfjqvyks replied:
“If it wasn’t for the comical levels of irony, I’d be really pissed that so many Americans think 1984 alludes to what’s going on today more than Animal Farm. It’s crazy.”

Shadowguynick replied:
“Animal Farm is more of a retelling of the story of the foundation of the Soviet Union. 1984 serves better as a general government control story.”

Commenter replied:
“I disagree. 1984 alludes to the human condition (and language use) on so many levels. Animal farm is just a more specific metaphor about a certain type of socialism.”

#4 Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury

plato_thyself said:
“Fahrenheit 451 should be on this list.”

FlyingChange replied:
“I agree 100%. What’s really eerie about Bradbury are the details that he throws at you and then just lets float on by. Like, bits about how advertising boards are stretched out so that you have to look at them or the parts about how the children are more interested in electronic baubles than books and human interaction.”

#5 The Hobbit By J. R. R. Tolkien

Nowhereman50 said:
“The Hobbit. It’s just such a nice book.”

BiceRankyman replied:
“If you haven’t read this yet and start, a word of advice… if it starts to drag, hold out for Gandalf to come back. Everything always picks up when Gandalf comes back.”

#6 All Quiet On The Western Front By Erich Maria Remarque

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“It’s All Quiet on The Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque is an important book I feel. Truly showed the first World War as it was from the perspective of a German soldier.”

#7 And Then There Were None By Agatha Christie

thunder_by_blunder said:
“And then there were none by Agatha Christie.

A quick and mind stimulating read that will keep you engaged throughout.”

Th4tGamerChick replied:
“Agatha Christie has written some incredible novels. She’s overall a fantastic writer.”

#8 The Metamorphosis By Franz Kafka

Plastic_Pinocchio said:
“The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka is a story I’ll never forget. You can read it in a couple of hours.”

ceryssienna replied:
“I read this about 2 months ago and it is an unforgettable story! It’s something I never would’ve read myself but ended up doing so as I had nothing to read but I’m glad that that’s what I chose!”

#9 The Very Hungry Caterpillar By Eric Carle

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MEUP14 said:
“The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle. I know this book isn’t like the other great novels listed, but it definitely brings me back to when I was a kid and my parents read it to me.”

MDTashley replied:
“This book tells the story of every attempt I have at dieting. By Saturday, I eat like absolute sh*t, then have 1 green leaf on Sunday to make it right again.”

#10 Night By Elie Wiesel

“I highly recommend ‘Night’ by Eli Wiesel. I read it in high school and it got me into reading. The ways that Wiesel describes the horrific scenes are so powerful.”

#11 A Short History Of Nearly Everything By Bill Bryson

sewmuchmarish said:
“A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson.”

thebohomama replied:
“Bill Bryson is such an engaging writer. I can’t get enough of his travel books.”

#12 Flowers For Algernon By Daniel Keyes

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1ShadowStar1 said:
“Flowers for Algernon is truly a great book. I borrowed it from the library and enjoyed it so much I bought it and I’m not one to reread books. So many great life lessons in it.”

heresybob replied:
“Ugh, makes me cry horribly.”

#13 The Picture Of Dorian Gray By Oscar Wilde

raptor_mkii said:
“The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde! His plays are great too if you’re looking for less serious and lighter reads.”

Foreigner4ever replied:
“I had to read this in high school and had the same experience with it as with pretty much every other ‘classic’ they made us read. Hated it when reading it, but after it’s over I appreciated it and still think of it years later.”

#14 Lord Of The Flies By William Golding

tropiqz said:
“Lord of the Flies – William Golding.”

entroyfan2 replied:
“When I came to the USA I started 9th grade. My English was not good, had a thick accent, and culture shock. My peers used to make fun of me a lot so I threw my self into books. My first English through read was the Lord of the flies. It was a mind f*ck.”

Tim_Buk2 replied:
“I hated this book – it was part of the school study list when I was 13 and still part of the school study list in the UK 30 years later when my kids did it.

It probably kick-started my misanthropy.”

#15 American Gods By Neil Gaiman

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Grogslog said:
“American Gods by Neil Gaiman.”

knighttim replied:
“Not bad, but personally I enjoyed Neverwhere more.”

#16 Man’s Search For Meaning By Viktor E. Frankl

ionhazmat said:
“Man’s search for meaning – Viktor Frankl.”

Commenter replied:
“When I was 17, I was hospitalized in a psychiatric ward for the first time. My boss, from a fast food joint called Harvey’s (it’s Canadian, great food, 20 years later I still run into her outside of the restaurant!) got my call saying I’d need a couple weeks off, and I trusted her enough to tell her where I was.

Half hour later she shows up with 2 books, that being 1 of them. I read it that night. I still have it. It is a great book, it really helped. I read it a few times over my 3 week stay, and I had brought a lot of books and we had a library. It was just good, and inspiring.

She also gave everyone gift cards to the restaurant. She was great. She visited a few times. Thank you, Anne.”

#17 The Giver By Lois Lowry

hisamsmith said:
“The Giver- that book made my 9-10 year old mind really think about what was important in society. It was the first time the idea of ‘good’ things having a negative consequence was presented to me. I think what makes it work is that we are learning how this whole society really works along side a character who has lived in it his whole life. As the facade of the utopian society begins to fall away to show devastating consequences of the ‘perfect life and society’ the reader not only feels their shock but the main character’s shock. This was a book I read in school 4 times- once in 5th grade and once in 10th for English and then in both high school and college sociology classes. This book written for 9-13 year olds made for great discussions.”

tommyleepasta replied:
“Fun fact, The Giver was written by a woman who was from a military family going to department of defense schools, but she was on these bases during the Cold War. The theme of the book itself is very anti-communist because of her early life environment.”

#18 Of Mice And Men By John Steinbeck

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TheBrassDancer said:
“Going to suggest Of Mice And Men by John Steinbeck. A real eye-opener about how grim the Great Depression was.”

Mackteague replied:
“I would have loved this book if I didn’t have to analyse it to hell in school.”

#19 Catch-22 By Joseph Heller

NostalgiaRocks said:
“Catch 22 is one of those books that’s been recommended to me for easily 7+ years and that I have been meaning to read, but the idea of not actively reading it with somebody so we can discuss it as we experience it together frustrates me. I should find a little book club or something to read that with, because I want it to be fresh in people’s minds when we talk about it.”

RutCry replied:
“Do it. Read this book. Drop what you are doing and go get it now. The fact that you are reading this list at all is enough evidence that you will be hooked within the first few paragraphs. You will regret turning the last page because the journey through it will have come to an end. Read. This. Book!”

#20 Cosmos By Carl Sagan

MasterbeaterPi said:
“Cosmos by Carl Sagan. I know it’s an adaption of a television show but it is the history of science.”

kadyrovs_cat replied:
“Read this about two years ago and still remember the lessons it taught me to this day. Absolutely fantastic read and incredibly educational. Highly recommend to everyone.”

#21 The Canterbury Tales By Geoffrey Chaucer

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newleafkratom said:
“The Canterbury Tales – Geoffrey Chaucer.”

crunrun replied:
“I read this for a Medieval Literature class in college and it really changed some of my assumptions about older literature. I was not expecting s*x and fart jokes of the same caliber as George Carlin. The Middle English takes some getting used to, but once you grasp it you can find some of the best tongue-in-cheek humor out there. Some of this sh*t had me in stitches which really surprised me.”

#22 East Of Eden By John Steinbeck

“I just read it a few weeks ago and it blew me away. He’s such a masterful writer. It was an amazing read and I’ll probably do it again in a decade.”

#23 The Little Prince By Antoine De Saint-Exupéry

PrimateOnAPlanet said: “Not exactly a long novel, but I feel like everyone should read ‘The Little Prince.'” pulsetract replied: “We had to read this in French class in elementary school (French immersion). I never realized it’s depth until I was much older.” hungryczito replied: “In Poland we have to read it twice during our education – once in primary school, when we are around 8 y old, and in secondary school (early high school), around 15 y old. It really is a different book both times.”

#24 The Jungle By Upton Sinclair

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washheightsboy3 said:
“I’d recommend The Jungle by Upton Sinclair.”

zdh989 replied:
“I remember trying to read this when I was like 12 because I thought it was about…you know…a jungle. Couldn’t make it through 5 pages. Then I picked it up again before me and my wife went on a cruise to read at leisure on the decks because I am a huge meat eater and was a chef at the time. Halfway through the book, I couldn’t put it down. I became so invested in Jurgis. The book is about so much more than the meat packing industry in Chicago at that time, which is really what I thought it was all about. Anyway, I say all that to say, I agree.”

#25 The Count Of Monte Cristo By Alexandre Dumas

I_paintball said:
“The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas.

Such a great book.”

skundrik replied:
“Oh my god yes. I love this book for being the s*x, drugs and rock and roll of the classics world. It is lengthy but has revenge, treasure, plots and schemes and drugs. There is nothing stuffy about this classic.”

#26 Frankenstein By Mary Shelley

boop-oop-a-doop said:
“Frankenstein. It’s a classic for a reason & no movie adaptation has ever really done it justice.”

buddaaaa replied:
“I read it my sophomore year of high school along with another set of books in small groups where we each had to read one of the three books given and lead discussions for our teammates and do other stuff I don’t remember. Anyway, I got ‘stuck’ with Frankenstein (I believe I was absent the day we chose). Completely lucked out, that book kicks a**.”

Conair24601 replied:
“I read Frankenstein last year and was absolutely stunned by it. As you say, no movie comes even close to the book. It’s gothic and cozy to read but just so impactful and ahead of It’s time. How Shelley wrote it at 17 is beyond me.”

#27 The Kite Runner By Khaled Hosseini

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boogieafterhours said:
“The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini.”

melike_moonchild replied:
“This is the book I was thinking about too, A thousand splendid suns is imo even better than The Kite Runner.”

Ace_of_the_skies replied:
“LOVE Khaled Hosseini. Read a few of his other books as well, so good.”

#28 One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest By Ken Kesey

“Absolutely. This is probably my favourite book of all time, both from a story and writing standpoint. A very close second is All Quiet on the Western Front though.”

#29 The Grapes Of Wrath By John Steinbeck

newleafkratom said:
“The Grapes of Wrath – John Steinbeck.”

Commenter replied:
“I read this book in middle school. I remembered I barely understand English back then but it made me cry.”

#30 The Catcher In The Rye By J.D. Salinger

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BRONXSBURNING said:
“The Catcher in the Rye is such a powerful and great book, I’d recommend it 100%!”

jaleel131 replied:
“Honestly, I’ve never been so impacted by a book before. I read it when I was 17 and severely depressed and it found me at the right time. ‘I don’t know exactly what I mean by that, but I mean it.'”

#31 The Phantom Tollbooth By Norton Juster

chadtewks said:
“The Phantom Tollbooth.”

kiltedturtle replied:
“I love ‘Point of View’ where they are in mid-air and as they grow older their feet touch the ground. That means their point of view never changed as they get older. Unlike silly Milo who as he grows ‘up’ his point of view is constantly changing.

In the last few years I’ve used that snippet with people that seem to grow down, instead of growing up as they get older. I’ve had a few that actually get the point.”

wort_hog replied:
“Maybe one of my favorite literary moments…

Milo: ‘Many of the things I’m supposed to know seem so useless that I can’t see the purpose of learning them at all.’

Princess of Sweet Rhyme: ‘…what you learn today, for no reason at all, will help you discover the wonderful secrets of tomorrow.'”

#32 The Stranger By Albert Camus

Elctro-Blak said:
“The Stranger by Albert Camus.”

thirdaccountmaybe replied:
“I was gonna say the myth of Sisyphus.”

tirkman replied:
“I remember absolutely hating the stranger and existentialism in general in high school. Maybe now that I’m older I’ll view the book differently.”

#33 Holes By Louis Sachar

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nefarioustortellini said:
“Holes.”

swallowtails replied:
“Great book. I feel like Louis Sachar (sp?) is an underrated author. I remember reading his book ‘There’s a Boy in the Girl’s Bathroom’ and just loving that. It’s a look into a boy’s life… One who is a failing student with no friends, is sort of a bully. It’s so good! I definitely recommend picking it up.”

#34 Slaughterhouse-Five By Kurt Vonnegut

JananayBanana said:
“Slaughterhouse five.”

zodwa_wa_bantu replied:
“Couldn’t finish it. Sent through an Existentialist crisis, doubting my reality and myself and whatnot. Great book though.”

BiceRankyman replied:
“Read it three times. Still in the existential life crisis. So it goes.”

#35 Watership Down By Richard Adams

“I love Watership Down. It’s so moving and exciting at the same time. I especially like the fact that the author was never set out to be an author. He simply began making up stories about rabbits and telling them to his daughters who then convinced him to write it all down.”

#36 Where The Red Fern Grows By Wilson Rawls

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moxin84 said:
“‘Where The Red Fern Grows’ – Wilson Rawls.”

PervisMCR replied:
“Read that in 4th grade. The poor hounds.”

#37 A Tree Grows In Brooklyn By Betty Smith

“A Tree Grows in Brooklyn changed my life.”

#38 Shogun By James Clavell

“When I was going through basic training as a US Marine officer at Quantico an instructor in tactics strongly recommended Shogun, so I picked it up, but didn’t have time to start it during training. My newly wed wife saw it and started reading it. She became so engrossed that she would ask if I minded her bringing it into restaurants to read during our dinner. Tired of eating and watching her read, I bought a second copy and totally understood where she was coming from. It has the wonderful quality of being nearly 1200 pages that I didn’t want to end.”

#39 The Power Of Myth By Joseph Campbell

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KnowsGooderThanYou said:
“The Power of Myth by Joseph Campbell.”

m1nt_ replied:
“I’m reading this now, and despite only being about halfway through it, I’ve already reconsidered my approach to stories and their value. It’s fantastic, and I would definitely recommend either The Power of Myth or his other book The Hero with a Thousand Faces.”

#40 The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle By Haruki Murakami

Neuroxian said:
“The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle – Haruki Murakami.”

MotherBeef replied:
“Personally I would suggest Colourless or Norwegian wood. But really, any Murakami.

What I love about his books is I feel everyone has a different favourite and I believe that’s due to how much each book is able to capture a different theme and therefore relates to different people. The existential crisis and understanding of love/belonging that so many of his characters seem to go through is something that resonated so intensely with me during my 20s. It’s what keeps Murakami at the top of my list, nothing else has ever made me question more, want to change and yet feel so content with the basics.”

#41 The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald

SasquatchButterpants said:
“I’d add The Great Gatsby. F. Scott Fitzgerald is a literary genius.”

Commenter replied:
“I read that in high school, kind of enjoyed it. Now I’m blown away by the genius of the writing.”

#42 The Demon-Haunted World: Science As A Candle In The Dark By Carl Sagan And Ann Druyan

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gambit_- said:
“The Demon Haunted World by Carl Sagan.”

laflavor replied:
“This is criminally underrated in this thread. A book about evidence and how to think and why science works is essential.”

#43 Dracula By Bram Stoker

“Dracula. One of the first horror novels to successfully use the readers own imagination and to really build suspense. Told through diaries and accounts from characters within the story rather than an omniscient narrator. I read it in one night.”

#44 Cat’s Cradle By Kurt Vonnegut

blbrd30 said:
“I’m putting a vote in for Cat’s Cradle. It’s my fav.”

screeching_janitor replied:
“This book make me hate Vonnegut. I try really hard to like him, but I can’t.”

zcen replied:
“I read and wrote a report on Cat’s Cradle at the end of high school. I don’t know if it would have pleased Vonnegut but my teacher handed the report back to me and the only thing she wrote on it was ‘Did you even read this book?'”

#45 The Name Of The Wind By Patrick Rothfuss

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Colorado-Pineapples said:
“Name of the Wind – Patrick Rothfuss.”

EclecticDreck replied:
“It was the book that somehow planted a seed in my head that suggested I could write stuff. It wasn’t that it made me think I could do better – far from it – just that maybe I could.

Then, I did write a book and am on a second.

I love the book and the man inspired me to write. That’s enough to buy him another year for the third book, I think.”

The_Guber replied:
“This book got me back into reading so +1 on this.”

#46 Johnny Got His Gun By Dalton Trumbo

_AskMyMom_ said:
“Johnny’s Got His Gun. It’s so intense, but it’s so good.

Metallica’s song One is based off this book. Guy has his arms and legs blown off, goes blind and deaf, and is left to live like that. I only read it once, but it’s forever engrained into my memory. It hits you like a freight train.”

WeightyToastmaster replied:
“Yes! I was gonna comment with this book but wanted to see if anyone had already put it. It’s a great read and I have had to stop myself reading it several times because of how intense it gets. It really makes you think about life, war, and so many other things. It really messes with your mind. I believe all public officials should read the book as well.”

#47 The Westing Game By Ellen Raskin

schroedingersnewcat said:
“The Westing Game.”

Commenter replied:
“Love love love this book! No one has ever heard of it when I mention it!”

DFRacing98 replied:
“Read this book in 5th grade, loved it. Constantly kept guessing.”

#48 House Of Leaves By Mark Z. Danielewski

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roflspammer said:
“House of Leaves by Danielewski. Amazing, intricate, arousing at times and generally deep.”

timeiscoming replied:
“This is a great answer, unfortunately, I’d imagine its greatest strengths (complexity and allegorical merits) are also the reasons why it’s super inaccessible to casual fiction readers.”

#49 The Things They Carried By Tim O’Brien

“The Things They Carried… The first time I ever cried while reading a book. What an emotional experience that book was.”

#50 The Last Unicorn By Peter S. Beagle

SeaLemons2300 said:
“May sound weird but I really enjoyed ‘The Last Unicorn’ by Peter S Beagle.”

Eternaltuesday replied:
“I just commented this book as well. It is absolutely magical, and really stands apart from other fantasy literature.”

#51 How To Tell If Your Cat Is Plotting To Kill You Bymatthew Inman

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Ray_Catty said:
“‘How to Tell If Your Cat Is Plotting to Kill You.’

Yes it’s a real book.”

dr4gonr1der replied:
“That reminds me of another book: how to live with the neurotic cat.

Again, that’s it’s real name, and if you like how to tell if your cart is plotting to kill you, you’ll probably like that one also.”

#52 Siddhartha By Hermann Hesse

Ok-Bullfrog-3010 said:
“Siddhartha, Hermann Hesse.”

Paddle14 replied:
“I feel it takes you on a very relatable journey from young to old. We are all the heroes of our own stories but really just in the search of what is the point of all this.”

#53 The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress By Robert A. Heinlein

“I learned English at the age of 22. I love reading books that most English speaking people have read during their school days. It helps me understand the western culture, people’s thinking and most importantly all the references in art. The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress would be my suggestion.”

#54 Faust By Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

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BBPP20 said:
“Faust by Goethe.”

morosophi replied:
“Goethe’s Faust is ok, but it’s too positive for my taste. For a more classic dark tale, I recommended Thomas Mann’s Doctor Faustus.”

docvs replied:
“Yes, this is an absolute MUST for everyone at some point in their lives!”

#55 Germinal By Émile Zola

charmingtaintman51 said:
“Germinal by Emile Zola.”

TofuBurgerGoodFood replied:
“Absolutely beautiful book, really changed my mind on the power of literature to tell a powerful, human message.”

#56 A Clockwork Orange By Anthony Burgess

Lurtle7 said:
“A Clockwork Orange.”

Commenter replied:
“I am reading A Clockwork Orange right now for a book report. Literally need urban dictionary open all the time to decipher all the British slang.

But don’t get me wrong its a f*cken great book so far.”

#57 We Need To Talk About Kevin By Lionel Shriver

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Waffle2121 said:
“We Need To Talk About Kevin. An amazing (and disturbing) look at one mother’s relationship (negative and positive) with her son.”

cats4lyfbanana replied:
“I got like 4 chapters in and then felt so sad and useless about life I gave up.. I did watch the film a while later, but I’m very impressed with anyone who makes it through the whole book! Did you feel okay about life afterwards? If anything it really made me worry about having children in the future!”

#58 Tropic Of Cancer By Henry Miller

bunchedupwalrus said:
“Tropic of Cancer by Henry Miller.

Has to be on that list, there’s nothing else like it.”

mumfywest replied:
“I can remember so much about my life at the point that I read Cancer. Like the book cemented every insanity happening irl in the same way the book slaps it all out there, open. I’d love to have that sort of convergence with a book and a point in my life again.”

#59 Infinite Jest By David Foster Wallace

Tehgnarr said: “Missing “Infinite Jest”. I was born in Russia, I read Tolstoi, Dostojewski and such in school, I love literature… and I am pretty sure that “Infinite Jest” is the modern masterpiece.” Commenter replied: “I think Infinite Jest suffers from having a sort of literary hipster culture surrounding it. It may be a wonderful book, but sometimes the ways in which people go on about it make them seem like the worst kind of book snobs, and it can turn people of reading it before they’ve even given it a chance. People I talk to about it seem split 50/50. They either herald it as a monument of 20th century literature and stress how you have to read it omg, or they go the complete opposite direction and say it’s a piece of long-winded trash that isn’t worth the effort.”

#60 The Brothers Karamazov By Fyodor Dostoevsky

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ghostofcrilly said:
“The Brothers Karamazov by Dostoyevsky. In Slaughterhouse 5 Vonnegut said it could teach everything that we needed to know about life, except that wasn’t enough anymore…”

Reneeisme replied:
“If the only thing that book did was make you marvel at how people centuries and oceans removed from you in time and place, could experience the exact same emotions about life as you did, it would be worth the read. There’s so much more to it, but Dostoyevsky had such a knack for digging deep into universal human experience. And it’s just a hell of a good story too.”

#61 War And Peace By Leo Tolstoy

“War and Peace.

I love that book. There are no villains. Just people with good and bad in them – like all of us.

I think sometimes that almost everyone I have ever met has been like one of the characters in War and Peace.”

#62 Crime And Punishment By Fyodor Dostoyevsky

brosencephalon07 said:
“Crime and Punishment. Dostoyevsky.”

the_tico_life replied:
“Agreed. Dostoyevsky had an incredible insight into the human soul, and C&P in particular will stick with you for a long time.”

#63 Midnight’s Children By Salman Rushdie

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NovaDreamSequence said:
“Midnight’s Children – Salman Rushdie.”

arppacket replied:
“Definitely belongs on a must-read list. I still fondly remember reading through it on a long train journey back when I was in high school.”

#64 Skinny Legs And All By Tom Robbins

newleafkratom said:
“Skinny Legs and All – Tom Robbins.”

Commenter replied:
“I prefer Jitterbug Perfume. But love Tom Robbins.”

newleafkratom replied:
“I used to. But then I re read both and prefer the politics and absurdity of Skinny Legs. Though Jitterbug is still better than most literature on the planet!”

#65 A Fable By William Faulkner

“Faulkner – The Fable. It was a difficult read for me, because Faulkner, but I still think about the book and the language usage.”

#66 Lolita By Vladimir Nabokov

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ctrip19 said:
“Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov.”

GirlNumber20 replied:
“This should be on the list. I read it years ago and am still in awe of how equally beautiful and horrific it is.”

unkwntech replied:
“For as much as most of us are repulsed by the subject matter, Nabokov’s writing style and the style of this book really merit it being on a list as bold as ‘Books you should read at least once in your life.'”

#67 Blood Meridian: Or The Evening Redness In The West Bycormac Mccarthy

“I’m going to say that Blood Meridian should be on here, one of the most graphic and gripping tales of the depths of human savagery I’ve ever read, def Cormac McCarthy’s best work IMO.

Some of the things they do in that book… The judge in particular, one of the most enigmatic yet monstrous characters ever created.

McCarthy’s style of writing also is so perfect for it, the lack of true dialogue helps to create this chaotic world where the characters can lose themselves.”

#68 Anna Karenina By Leo Tolstoy

Arroganteggplant said:
“Anna Karenina or War and Peace by Tolstoy.”

The_Guber replied:
“I think few books portray human interaction as accurately and broadly as Anna Karenina. Especially in regards to the way lover relationships are viewed by society and how that affects the relationships.

On top of that this book gives a lot of spiritual insight from several different points of view.”

#69 Invisible Man By Ralph Ellison

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JaisBit said:
“Invisible Man – Ralph Ellison.”

Sietemadrid replied:
“Great book. You never know what’s going to happen next.”

#70 How To Win Friends & Influence People By Dale Carnegie

zackcough said:
“‘How to Win Friends and Influence People.’ Non-fiction, but a phenomenal read that literally everyone could benefit from reading.”

RegionalChaos replied:
“This and Steven Covey’s 7 Habits ought to be required reading for freshmen in high school.”

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