May 2026
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    Hello everyone!

    I’m putting together a long-term reading list.

    I'd love if you could suggest me the books that made you bleed words. The ones that changed how you think, feel and see the world.

    Here are the main categories I want to cover (open to adding more) :

    \ Philosophy*

    \ Psychology*

    \ History*

    \ Politics & Power*

    \ Literature*

    \ Economics*

    \ Feminism*

    \ Science*

    \ Self-knowledge*

    \ More*

    P.S. I’m open to recommendations in Arabic and French as well.

    Looking forward for your suggestions! THANK YOU IN ADVANCE!

    by Fragrant_Judgment326

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    17 Comments

    1. Most influential books for me have been

      All I really need to know I learned in kindergarten by Robert Fulghum

      Times Square Red Times Square Blue by Samuel R. Delany

      Ejaculate Responsibly by Gabrielle Blair

      Girly Drinks:A World History of Women and Alcohol by Mallory O’Meara

      Tacky: a love letter to the worst culture we have to offer by Rax King (this one’s a bit of a stench genre-wise but I adore it and will forever recommend it)

      Best of luck! 🤞🏼

    2. Vivid_Magazine6151 on

      I recently read
      East of Eden – John Steinbeck

      I thought it was incredibly written and really made me reflect a lot on what it means to be good or evil.

    3. Flat-Rutabaga-723 on

      The Sublime Object of Ideology by Zizek. Really fucked my head up when I was in college.

    4. Specialist-Web7854 on

      Philosophy: Sophie’s World – it’s a good simple introduction to philosophy, but in novel form.

      Economics: The Undercover Economist, and How To Make The World Add Up, by Tim Harford (the second one has a different US title).

      Feminism: Invisible Women by Caroline Criado Perez. Women and Power by Mary Beard, We Should all be Feminists by Chimamanda Ngozi Adiche. The first is about how women are missing from the statistics that are used to shape the world and politics around us. The other two are excellent slim volumes, giving clear insight into why we need feminism.

      Science: Bad Science by Ben Goldacre talks about what makes bad science in medicine using examples such as the MMR vaccine misinformation scandal.

    5. Everything is Tuberculosis by John Green

      The Immortal Life of Henrietta Flacks by Rebecca Sploot

      The Emperor of Maladies by Siddharta Mukharjee

      NeuroTribes by Steve Silberman

    6. The Demon-Haunted World by Carl Sagan was THE book that changed my whole life. It explains the basis of critical thought and scientific method that you will use for every other aspect of your life.

      Now, some others for after Carl Sagan:

      The Denial of Death (Ernest Becker)

      The Dawn of Everything (David Graeber and David Wengrow)

      A History of God (Karen Armstrong)

      Origins of Totalitarianism (Hannah Arendt)

      The History of White People (Nell Irvin Painter)

      I’ll force myself to stop here, but I have way more recs if you are interested on a specific subject. I’m a huge History lover.

      Also, you can trust Oxford’s “Very Short Introduction” series of books for any subject, they are very well researched and written by scholars.

    7. WonderingWhy767 on

      Feminism:

      Whipping Girl 2nd ed by Julia Serano

      Thick and Other Essays by Tressie McMillan Cottom

      Ain’t I A Woman? by bell hooks

      Care Work by Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha

      Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde

      Skin by Dorothy Allison

    8. RealMusicLover33 on

      Really enjoying Huxley’s writing. After Brave new world I moved onto Island and Doors of Perception (like to have multiple books going at once), and I feel like these books have a great mix of psychology, philosophy, and general world knowledge. Everything Huxley wrote in the mid century is relevant today.

      I’m also gonna add Paglia’s writing to my list for feminist reading.

    9. Howard Zinn’s **A People’s History Of The United States**

      and

      **Malcolm X** by Alex Haley

    10. For history, the Autobiography of Malcolm X, The Stationery Shop, The Kite Runner, Daughter’s of Shandong

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