These books are all fiction books that have philosophical aspects. I’ll try and list them from easiest to hardest to read although all of them won’t be too difficult.
The Phantom TollBooth by Norton Juster
The Cat Who Saved Books by Sosuke Natsukawa
The Midnight Library By Matt Haig
Slaughter House 5 by Kurt Vonnegut (literally any of Vonnegut’s books)
Cloud Atlas by David Mitchel. This one has a lot of deep meanings and is great if you want to dive into a complex book. It’s about 5 people from 5 different eras in time and how each of their actions indirectly effected the others’ lives throughout time. This one would probably be the only harder read due to the amount of meaning it has.
I’ve heard T.J. Klune is good. I have one of his books but haven’t read it yet.
simian-system on
Sci-fi is a great entryway for beginners in my opinion. Try Flowers for Algernon, Slaughterhouse Five, Frankenstein, etc..
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These books are all fiction books that have philosophical aspects. I’ll try and list them from easiest to hardest to read although all of them won’t be too difficult.
The Phantom TollBooth by Norton Juster
The Cat Who Saved Books by Sosuke Natsukawa
The Midnight Library By Matt Haig
Slaughter House 5 by Kurt Vonnegut (literally any of Vonnegut’s books)
Cloud Atlas by David Mitchel. This one has a lot of deep meanings and is great if you want to dive into a complex book. It’s about 5 people from 5 different eras in time and how each of their actions indirectly effected the others’ lives throughout time. This one would probably be the only harder read due to the amount of meaning it has.
I’ve heard T.J. Klune is good. I have one of his books but haven’t read it yet.
Sci-fi is a great entryway for beginners in my opinion. Try Flowers for Algernon, Slaughterhouse Five, Frankenstein, etc..