19 Comments

What a great request! Great novelists: Anne Tyler, Ann Patchett, Annie Proulx, John Grisham. Classic works: The Confessions of Augustine, Christianity and Culture by Grisham Machen, The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand, the Aeneid. Current nonfiction: Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self by Carl Trueman and Extreme Ownership by Jocko Willink, anything by Jordan B. Peterson.

Expand full comment

I’ll suggest two short ones, though I could suggest dozens of things. Try the novella by Joseph Conrad “The End of the Tether” and the novella by Leo Tolstoy “Hadji Murad” — both are masterpieces.

Expand full comment

Neal Stephenson. Anything by him, really, but my strongest recommendations would be Cryptonomicon and Snow Crash.

Expand full comment

I share some of my favorites from our library in this post:

https://gavinmounsey.substack.com/p/regenerative-resources-a-recommended

Expand full comment

Tragedy and Hope 101 by Joseph Plummer or Tragedy and Hope by Carrol Quigley if so inclined; Anglo American Establishment by Quigley as well however 101 by Plummer is a summarization of Quigley’s works.

Creature from Jekyl Island by G Edward Griffin

The Law by Fredric Bastiat

Foundations: Their Power and Influence by Carrol Reece

Panopticon by Jeremy Bentham

Technocracy Rising by Patrick Wood

America’s Secret Establishment: An Introduction to the Order of Skull and Bones by Antony Sutton

Propaganda by Edward Bernays

War is a Racket by General Smedley Butler

Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution, Wall Street and FDR, and Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler all by Antony Sutton

The Republic by Plato

Rhetoric by Aristotle

The Search for the Manchurian Candidate by John Marks

Operation Mind Control by Walter Bowart

Brave New World Revisited by Aldous Huxley (people forget about that one)

Operation Paperclip by Annie Jacobsen

Weird Scenes inside the Canyon by David McGowan

The Most Dangerous Superstition by Larken Rose

Novels

The Wanting Seed by Antony Burgess

Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky

Anything by Philip K Dick

I could drop more novels but you seem pretty well read.

Expand full comment

Bill Brysons A Short History On Nearly Everything.

Tough Crowd by Graham Linehan.

The Horus Heresy Series by multiple authors.

Expand full comment

I have the Bryson book if you are interested, MM.

Expand full comment

Machen wrote Christianity and Liberalism (religious not political). Christianity and Culture was written by TS Eliot.

Expand full comment

Stranger In A Strange Land by Robert A Heinlein.

Meditations

by Marcus Aurelius.

The Book Of Five Rings

by Miyamoto Musashi

The Note Books of Lazarus Long,

By Robert Heinlein

The Instructions of The King,

By King Cormac MacArt

The Camulod Chronicles

By Jack Whyte

The Probability Broach

By L Neil Smith

The works of Carl Jung

Dylan Thomas

WB Yeats

Edgar Allan Poe

Expand full comment

A lot of these I already wanted to read, but thanks for some things I haven't even heard of!

Expand full comment

“Oh the places you’ll go” - Dr. Seuss

Expand full comment

"Oh the places Substack will go" — Dr. Nazi Porn Seuss

Expand full comment

Your reference to the humanities makes me think you’re not looking for pulp fiction but for real literature. This is good. Life is too short and your mind is meant for more than Stephen King and James Patterson. (Not that there’s anything wrong with reading just for entertainment now and then.) Most -- not all -- contemporary fiction you will see at Barnes & Noble is a waste of paper. You’re on more solid ground with the classics, which were recognized as worthwhile back when there were still artistic standards. If you haven’t read these, I recommend them at random:

St. Augustine’s Confessions (a must);

Frankenstein by Mary Shelley;

C&P or The Bros. K. by Dostoyevsky;

Dante’s Divine Comedy

The Wind in the Willows.

A few more recent works to consider:

Wind, Sand, and Stars by Antoine de St Exupery

Catch-22 by Joseph Heller

The Sword of Honour trilogy by Evelyn Waugh

The Hobbit & The LOTR trilogy by Tolkien.

The Horseman on the Roof by Jean Giono.

Dive in and enjoy!

Expand full comment

Oh, pulp is fine because I specified novels, it’s just the people posting nonfiction books that aren’t particularly helpful because I didn’t stop reading those.

Speaking of Stephen King, why would I be better off reading something called The Sword of Honour than It, Pet Semetary, and Carrie? Not that that’s mutually exclusive, but for all Stephen King’s faults he’s at least culturally relevant and has some interesting ideas. The Sword of Honour sounds like the name of a pulp book, it just sounds like the name of a boring pulp book about how great it supposedly is to live in ye olde dark ages instead of a cool pulp book about fighting the Devil or having telekinesis or time traveling like Stephen King’s pulp books.

Expand full comment

Sword of Honor is a contender for my favorite book of all time. It is a novel about one man’s experience in the second world war, and it is a grand and sweeping work, that is about many things, including the collapse of the Christian culture of the west, particularly in Britain. Also, because it is Waugh, there are absurdist and comical bits mixed in with the more profound elements. It is a large book, and it is in a sensei a summing up all of his earlier work, it is his masterpiece, though like all large, sprawling, and ambitious books, it has its imperfections.

Expand full comment

Stephen King at his best is very good. At his worst, e.g. Christine, he is still engaging, and he holds the reader’s attention all the way to the end. He is an entertainer, and he is one of the best at what he does. There’s nothing wrong with it, but it does not aspire to being profound, and novels are capable of being profound. With king you get what you pay for, which is better than you can say about most writers.

Expand full comment

Read Sword of Honor and Stephen King, these aren’t opposed is probably the answer then.

Expand full comment

Try a short story by Donald Barthelme. I have so many favorites of his, but this one is among my top ten (and luckily available online):

https://cdn.theatlantic.com/media/archives/1972/09/230-3/132565741.pdf

Expand full comment