Originally Posted by Purandara88
Fiction:
1. Gravity's Rainbow Thomas Pynchon
2. V. Thomas Pynchon
3. Snowcrash Neal Stephenson
4. American Fuji Sara Becker
5. The Sound and the Fury William Faulkner
Non-Fiction:
1. Thus Spoke Zarathustra Friedrich Nietzsche
2. Being and Time Martin Heidegger
3. The Lightning and the Sun Savitri Devi
4. Men Among the Ruins Julius Evola
5. Meditations Marcus Aurelius
Poetry:
1. Iliad Homer (prefer Fagles translation)
2. The Poetic Edda
3. Bhagavad Gita
4. The Complete Poems of William Blake
5. Rig Veda
Another Pynchon and Stephenson fan, although I prefered Cyptonomicon to Snow Crash. Have you read the Baroque cycle novels too? I admire Stephenson's knowledge and refusal to cut down on detail for brevity. A good antidote to most contemporary fiction.
And the Bhagvad Gita explains the Purandara name, at least.
Anyway, it's hard for me to choose favourites. I'll just list the ones I find myself re-reading the most in no particular order.
Fiction:
#1 Catch 22 - Joseph Heller
#2 The Castle - Franz Kafka
#3 The Difference Engine - William Gibson and Bruce Sterling.
#4 Flowers for Alganon - Daniel Keyes
#5 If on a winter's night a traveller - Italo Calvino
Non-Fiction:
#1 A Treatise of Human Nature - David Hume.
#2 Globalization and Its Discontents - Joseph Stiglitz
#3 The End of History and the Last Man - Francis Fukuyama
#4 The Doors of Perception/Heaven and Hell - Aldous Huxley
#5 The Lexus and the Olive Tree - Thomas Friedman
Poetry:
#1 Hidden Words - Spike Milligan
#2 Songs of Innocence and Experience - William Blake
#3 Paradise Lost - John Milton
#4 The Complete Poems of Andrew Marvell
#5 The Complete Poems of T.S. Elliot