Is there anything else I should add to my reading list?
The Iliad The Oddyssey The Aeniad Beowulf Prose Edda Poetic Edda Heimskringla Nibelungenlied The Bible Brother’s Grimm Adventures of Huckleberry Finn War and Peace Crime and Punishment The Idiot The Art of the Deal Commentarii de Bello Gallico The Republic Meditations Art of War The Prince Leviathan Two Treatises of Government Phenomenology of Spirit Wealth of Nations Das Kapital The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money Man, Economy, and the State Beyond Good and Evil Thus Spoke Zarathustra Memories, Dreams and Reflection Modern Man in Search of a Soul The Decline of the West Mein Kampf Introduction to the Study of the Hindu Doctrines The Doctrine of Awakening Revolt Against the Modern World Ride the Tiger The Gulag Archipelago
Discourse on Voluntary Servitude, or the Against-One from Étienne de La Boétie.
Good one, try to find it if you can
William Watson
Lord of the world.
I swear is better that 1984 and huxley
Jackson Bennett
Man and his Symbols Ovid's Metamorphosis Seneca's letters
Evan Howard
chanson de roland
Ryder Ross
Of Human Bondage
Jackson Fisher
Good list. I would add:
"The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire" by Gibbon
"The Enchiridion" by Epictetus
"The Civil War" by Caesar
"The Federalist Papers" by Hamilton, Jay and Madison
And while there are many books on this subject, I highly recommend "The Greek Myths" by Robert Graves. Also by Graves, if you like fiction, you might try "I, Claudius", "Claudius the God" and "Count Belisarius".
Oliver Twist. Dickens is pretty woke about das judens
Benjamin King
Diarrhea of Anne Frank
Connor Russell
The way of man
Alexander Lopez
You mean my diari desu
Elijah Wood
Harry Potter series to understand the modern leftist point of view
Matthew Adams
Dump the war and piece and get Oblomov and The Dog's Heart instead.
W&P is an enormous boringfest nostly famous for its size and scale, when youre done reading it you wont remember the beginning.
Brody Flores
>Beowulf If you are going to read Literary Classics of Western Civilization, I would unironically wholeheartedly suggest the King James Bible. I do not believe in God, but I can appreciate the prose and sheer poetic beauty that has come of this book and the historical value of it as well.
It's clear that literary quality went downhill whenever other translations of the Bible started to be used circa late 1800s. Famous phrases like "God forbid!" and most frequently used idioms originate from the King James Bible.
If you get it, try to get one without The problem with it is how modern printings butcher the damn book into little verses.