September 2025
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    Hii, everyone! So I wanted some suggestions books that are dense not in terms of their plot or anything but with their words, complexity. Books from which I can draw inferences and would literally have to read lines again, but the i want them to be fiction such that there’s an ongoing interest so even if it’s heavy I would still wanna know how it ends

    Please drop your suggestions 🙂‍↕️🙂‍↕️🙂‍↕️🙂‍↕️

    by Own-Cake2277

    18 Comments

    1. Current-Ad-3233 on

      not sure if this is what you’re looking for but virginia woolf’s prose can be dense and hard to understand

    2. I found The Vorrh by Brian Catling to be quite opaque. Beautifully written, don’t get me wrong. But I had to go back and read pages a few times to make sure I was following what was being said.

      My brain’s also been melted by years of internet scrolling, so I’ve been trying to get back into reading and this may not have been the best choice. It requires your full attention.

    3. The German philosophers, Nietzsche and Hegel are very difficult to read. You have to read everything three times before you can even begin to understand them.

    4. OpportunityIcy254 on

      salman rushdie and david foster wallace come to mind. house of leaves if you’re up for some postmodern stuff.

    5. Automatic-Increase74 on

      A Clockwork Orange. Loved that book. He made up an entire lexicon for the book and the more you read, the more context helps you understand a lot of the words.

      I also think for me this served as a brain block from my mind fully imagining the violence I was reading haha. While I loved the book, I don’t think I could watch the movie

    6. Starlight-Edith on

      The Dark Frigate

      They made me read it in school at 12 years old because I was reading at a college lexile level. Being twelve, my group and I found it INCREDIBLY boring and referred to the main character as Marshmallow (his name is Marsham) to keep ourselves sane.

      However, if I were to read it again now, I do believe I’d like it. Who doesn’t love a pirate story.

      It was just really, really dense

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