Started by leigh
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updated 7 days ago
From mainstream to fringe, these books have definitely had an effect on how I see things, for better or worse. Of course I was an English major, by default we're a bit odd anyways.
The Consumer - Michael Gira
Winner, Most Disturbing Book
Written by the singer/songwriter of American rock and post-industrial group Swans , Michael Gira, The Consumer is a truly disturbing read. The short stories were created in two waves, the mid-1980s and the early 1990s, and offer an appalling yet entrancing look into half-real half-imagined tales of human suffering and misery. Seriously, this book is a disturbing read.
If this sounds intriguing, good luck finding a copy; it’s no longer in print and even used copies fetch a pretty high price.
Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith - Jon Krakauer
Written by the same man who wrote Into the Wild (also a movie) and Into Thin Air (also a TV movie), Under the Banner of Heaven takes a stunning look into the past and present of the Fundamentalist Mormon movement. This is particularly relevant, and terrifying, in light of the 2008 raids on the Texas polygamist ranch.
Indeed!
The Theory of Almost Everything - Robert Oerter
I was okay just leaving quantum mechanics, string theory and other such bizarre ideas be, but this book got loaned to me and started convincing me that scientists really have no clue what they’re talking about either. One nice thing about this book, it’s really intended for the layperson, you don’t need a degree in the sciences or mathematics to follow the general idea of what’s going on, though it probably helps.
Particle physics never made more, or less, sense.
I don’t know what half those symbols mean.
Gravity's Rainbow - Thomas Pynchon
A novel told through many narratives and hallucinogenic imagery about V2 missiles in WW2. Definitely a head trip!
Try a protective cloth book cover. Now you just look like a weird obsessive bookworm.
Floral patterns help make it look innocent.
American Psycho - Bret Easton Ellis
You’ve probably heard of the story, or the movie American Psycho starring Christian Bale. Still, the sheer dissassociative psychosis of the novel’s main character can’t be fully realized in film.
Reading about the wealthy, unfeeling sociopath, I wonder about the culture that shaped this character and this story. Set in the late 1980s, Manhattan, it’s possible to imagine Patrick Bateman as a real person, alternating between fashion and pop culture commentary, dating socialites and chopping up strangers.
Even playing a psychopath, I have a bit of a crush on Christian Bale…
Haunted - Chuck Palahniuk
Despite its many disturbing images and stories, Haunted has an almost lighthearted tone. Alternating tales with poetry, the book is a collection of linked short stories presenting imagined horrors of the tellers’ past actions.
Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of the book is the willingness of the characters to suffer for imagined medial glory.
Religious Texts
Disclaimer: I’m not trying to start a criticism of religion. Believe whatever you want.
That being said, religious texts are filled with all kinds of anomalies that are often conveniently glossed over by modern-day adherents. Those who follow literal interpretations of said texts are generally cast to the fringes of society. They make for unique reading material, though.
I too was an English major and had to read this for a class. I really didn’t care of the book, but it totally got into my head. It made me start to think that I was going crazy (or rather suffering from “ennui”) as well. I, however, was able to resist the temptations of arsenic.