15 Books That Shaped Me
Putting it simply, my childhood was pretty crazy, so I spend much of it reading books. Until I was 18 I read only fiction, losing myself in the stories in the books to forget about the ridiculous shit often going on in my own life.
My earliest memories of my Mom are of her with her face in a book with a lit cigarette and open beer. When I lived with her, I remember every room of the house being filled with massive overstuffed bookshelves full of mostly fiction so I think that’s where my love for reading started. The kind of bookshelves where the tension of the books is kind of what’s holding the thing together, the wood was there for show.
I started reading early, having been taught Dr. Suess by my Aunt. You think with how much my mom read, she would have been the one to teach me but she also liked to party a lot as well as sell drugs, which generally cuts into the mother daughter time. By the time we lived in that house I described that was filled with books, I was reading pretty much anything I wanted.
It wasn’t long before I was reading a chapter book a day and that just increased as I went through school. I was known for finishing books in English early, only to move on to my own books I had ready to read. My tastes were pretty mature from a young age, I remember I started regularly reading books by the likes of Stephen King by the time I was 11.
In high school, I spent all of my spare time in the library and that included at the end of classes, when the lecture would be done and we could start homework. Almost always every free chance I got I made my way to the library, both for the books and the librarian who was ordering and cataloging them. The nice thing about being close to the librarian? You could make requests and get first dibs on new novels as soon as they arrived.
This love affair continued into college where I immediately sought a library job at my campus. I got it and that’s roughly when I made the shift from fiction to non-fiction, or to reality anyway. At this point I have to really identify with a piece of fiction to bother, I now find the tales of history much more entertaining. This point is also oddly enough when I made the shift to agorist as I was reading everything from Karl Marx to Hayek.
At the end of the day, I would literally not be the same person were it not for the books I read in my youth. At the suggestion of Thaddeus Russell (Thanks for the idea!), I’ve compiled a list of 15 Books that Shaped Me.
1) Dark Tower Series by Stephen King:
Technically 7 books telling one massive epic tale that is literally like nothing else King has ever written. It’s got everything from romance to scifi to western themes in it and it’s all about saving a world falling apart. Highly metaphorical for me, especially the end of the series.
(Stephen King's Dark Tower Series)[https://www.amazon.com/Dark-Tower-8-Book-Boxed-Set/dp/1501163566]
2) Woman of the Frontier by Zane Grey:
I avoided westerns until I met John’s grandpa (on his father’s side) who had hundreds of them in his house. I noticed this book and his grandpa gave it to me and it turned out to be one of the best fiction novels I’ve ever read. Its controversial, tragic and just a great story.
(Woman of the Frontier)[https://www.amazon.com/Woman-Frontier-Zane-Grey/dp/0843947187]
3) Huxley by Sybille Bedford:
This is a biography written about Aldous Huxley by what I think might have been one of his mistresses. It goes into great detail about his entire life and honestly is so well written it reads like a fiction novel despite being non-fiction. Huxley was an incredibly fascinating man and that all becomes obvious when you read this book. Also explains a lot of his views on society and the world which were extremely fascinating to me.
(Huxley)[https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/30559.Aldous_Huxley]
4) Walden- Henry David Thoreau
I listened to this book on audio with John many times while living off the grid for the first time in Cleveland Ohio. It made us proud of what we were doing even though we had the modern day comforts of the city, we were still concerned with things like cooking bread on a potbelly wood stove.
(Walden)[https://www.amazon.com/Walden-Henry-David-Thoreau/dp/1494812509]
5) The Commonwealth of Thieves: The Improbable Birth of Australia by Thomas Keneally
This was one of the first what I call “entertaining history books” I came across. It was a dollar buy from Goodwill and was honestly a page turner. I had no idea that Australia was founded technically by prisoners before this and it definitely made me wonder what other history was out there I wasn’t aware of.
(The Commonwealth of Thieves: The Improbable Birth of Australia )[https://www.amazon.com/Commonwealth-Thieves-Improbable-Birth-Australia/dp/140007956X]
6) Mr. Bloomfields Orchard: The Mysterious World of Mushrooms, Molds and Mycologists
Another find at Goodwill that proved to be a fascinating general source of knowledge that left me with nothing more than a badass respect for the hyper versatile lifeform that is fungi in general. This kicked off a marathon of reading books like this on everything from root biology to soil science.
(Mr. Bloomfields Orchard Mysterious Mycologists)[https://www.amazon.com/Mr-Bloomfields-Orchard-Mysterious-Mycologists/dp/0195171586]
7) The Rebel Farmer by Sepp Holzer
Sepp Holzer is a permaculture expert in Europe who has spent much of his career finding loopholes so he can continue to farm his land the way he wants in spite of the government. The Rebel Farmer is all about his struggles and triumphs with dealing with the local authorities and his right to do what he wants on his own property. Sepp is a hero of mine and was a hero of John’s.
(The Rebel Farmer)[https://www.amazon.com/Rebel-Farmer-Holzer-Sepp/dp/3702010548]
8) The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls
A book I bought from Goodwill the day I got out of jail was a personal memior on this woman’s insane childhood. I remember while reading it that I loved how brutally honest she was about everything. I plan to use this novel for inspiration for compiling and finishing to write my own memoir.
(The Glass Castle)[https://www.amazon.com/Glass-Castle-Memoir-Jeannette-Walls/dp/074324754X]
9) Getting Things Done by David Allen
I have read and listened to this one on audio many times. As soon as I accepted the fact that my interests were diverse my focus turned to trying to learn proper time management and productivity skills. I don’t apply everything as well as I would like to but this has provided as a basis for me. If you’ve ever wondered how I’m so productive, this is a big part of it. Otherwise I’m just a big unorganized mess of too much responsibility.
(Getting Things Done)[https://gettingthingsdone.com/]
10) Secrets of a Buccaneer Scholar by James Marcus Bach
We heard of this in a podcast back in the days when we binged on School Sucks podcast. This book inspired me to take my education into my own hands.
(Secrets of a Buccaneer Scholar)[https://www.amazon.com/Secrets-Buccaneer-Scholar-Self-Education-Pursuit-Passion/dp/1439109095]
11) A Basque History of the World by Mark Kurlansky
Mark Kurlansky is probably one of my favorite authors. I’ve read several books by him and all have been incredible, opening my eyes often to things I never considered. Like how the history of Cod is a huge part of human history in general! Or how Salt has played a role in our history since the beginning! In A Basque History of the World, he talks about the incredible resilient and resistant people from Northern France and Southern Spain and their untold influence on the entire planet, something I never even heard about in school.
(A Basque History of the World)[https://www.amazon.com/Basque-History-World-Story-Nation/dp/0140298517]
12) Road to Serfdom by Freidrich Hayak
I tossed myself into philosophy and the capitalist/socialist debate in college because I very quickly became aware that I didn’t have a good understanding of where I stood on that. I read both Marx and Hayak and found particularly Road to Serfdom to be useful in determining the illegitimacy of the system I was stuck in. It wasn’t long before I was an anarchist and this book is one of the first I read on the way down the rabbit hole. In college I did everything from attend Socialist Democrat events (okay, I could manage to deal with ONE, and I wanted to leave early) to getting involved in local legalization politics. At the end of the day the only thing that does for me in terms of an actual solution to change the world is agorism.
(The Road to Serfdom)[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Road_to_Serfdom]
13) The Prince by Machiavelli
This was a book recommended to me by John, who read it in prison at the suggestion of his lawyer. It’s all about politics at the end of the day, a sort of handbook on how to be a leader that backfired on the guy who wrote it. It’s served useful for identifying the systems in place and how control systems work, at the end of the day it’s all a power play especially for those at the top.
(The Prince)[https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/28862.The_Prince]
14) Anthem by Ayn Rand
I’ve read most of Rand and while I’ve agreed with a lot of it, not all of it has hit home. The Fountainhead was entertaining but kind of crazy, same with Atlas Shrugged. My favorite of her books is Anthem, the shortest one but I think it hits home the hardest. The story is clear and direct and its easy to read getting the point across in a way that makes it memorable. My high school librarian recommended I read it and when I tried and had difficulty she told me “try again later, you’ll like it”. She was right.
(Anthem)[https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/667.Anthem]
15) Year of the Black Rainbow by Claudio Sanchez and Peter David
My favorite band is Coheed and Cambria and they’re my favorite because the story. The music is all based on an epic slightly dystopian sci fi love story comic series written by Claudio Sanchez, who writes at least the majority of the music as well. Year of the Black Rainbow the novel explains much of what’s talked about in the album titled the same thing. In many ways its inspiration because its an amazing multimedia way to tell a story.
(Year of the Black Rainbow)[https://www.amazon.com/Year-Black-Rainbow-Amory-Wars-ebook/dp/B006OUEBIC]
I could list more but this is what I came up with. These are in no particular order other than the order they managed to come to mind.
Currently I’m reading Thaddeus Russell’s The Renegade History of the United States and I’m about halfway through. I can already tell it too deserves to be on this list but I’ll finish it and share my official review before I do that. What I can tell you is its both stuffed with a lot of information and easy to read.
Stay tuned for more!
Wow! You read a lot.. i can relate to you.. to escape from reality i also read books.. it somehow made you forgot your burdens or worries or whatever you have that is goin on with life.
hi @highlyfunctional ..i rcommend your post to the #up-gage challenge initiated by my dear friend @zephalexia .. you too are welcome to join as well.. engage and earn steem, upvotes and plkn.
Hi, thanks for the comment! I think books are an escape in a mental way and a real way too cause it allows you to dream about other lives, which is the first step to making them happen. Thanks for sharing the upgage challenge too
thanks for this recommendation sis
Those are some serious books. I read a lot too but mostly Harry Potter lol... I didn't get into machiavelli until much later 😉
I read Harry Potter too but no series got to me more than the Dark Tower series.
Congratulations @highlyfunctional! You have completed the following achievement on the Steem blockchain and have been rewarded with new badge(s) :
You can view your badges on your Steem Board and compare to others on the Steem Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word
STOP
Do not miss the last post from @steemitboard:
Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness to get one more award and increased upvotes!
i wish i could be this book lover too. but i want my kids to be like this. love to read books.
Your post has been recommended by @dizzyapple for my up-gage challenge
You are welcome to join as well , engage and get rewarded with upvote+steem+plkn
Thanks for the comment! Yeah I just mimicd what I saw my mom doing all the time, that's how I ended up like this!
That's a good list - with a few that are new to me.
It sounds like you've had plenty of adventures of your own as well!
Feel free to share any recommendations you have that are not on my list, I'm making a list with suggestions!