- Recursion
- Red Rising (on book 2 now and I assume I'll want to re-read it)
- Ender's Game series (I've read some of them multiple times)
- The Martian (I've read multiple times)
- An Absolutely Remarkable Thing (series)
Non-ficton
- The Model Thinker (super dense, I'll need multiple re-reads)
- Chief Joy Officer
- Work Clean
- Outlive
Been looking forward to reading it again almost a decade since reading it for the first time.
I'm also thinking of going back to The Plague by Albert Camus. It felt really surreal when I read it over the pandemic. Want to see how I would feel now that COVID has become an endemic disease.
The merry adventures of Robin Hood by Howard Pyle
The Magicians Book #1 by Lev Grossman
Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson
https://store.mcsweeneys.net/products/the-childrens-hospital
I've also read A Prayer For Owen Meany (John Irving) more than once.
"1984" is a big one for me.
"Lord of the Rings" as well.
I Am That by Nisargadatta Maharaj. It’s a collection of recorded conversations in QA format. I read from it on a weekly basis.
To prepare for writing the book, Eric Flint, the primary author, did an extensive survey and interviews with a number of people in the town of Mannington, West Virginia. In the book, he renames the town to Grantville, and "aliens" throw it (and a 6 mile diameter sphere centered on the town) backwards in time to late 1632 in the middle of Germany, from the year 2000.
The alternative history, with struggles for survival, is a great read. The series that developed taught me a lot about the things necessary to keep civilization going, in terms of supply chains and infrastructure.
I lost a few of the physical books, and I may rebuy them, once my retirement pay kicks in.
re-read: 1984, Animal Farm and flowers of algernon.
Amusing Ourselves to Death.
Tubes.
Banana: The Fate of the Fruit that Changed the World.
Neil Postman is great at pointing out the trade-off that new technologies introduce.