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    4 Comments

    1. Frankthehamster on

      I think it massively depends on where in the world you are, but very good question.

      A few that I would recommend:

      **Kim – Rudyard Kipling**
      A lovely read, with cultural and religious references that I don’t pretend to know the accuracy of, but a very interesting viewpoint into India during the late 19th century.

      **The Stranger – Albert Camus**
      A French translation, also called I believe the pretender and the outsider in other titles. A unique inside into absurdism, mental illness etc. As a side note, I always recommend **The Plague by Albert Camus**, a very good represention of a slice of life telling of a smallish population in French Algeria dealing with a pandemic

      **Crime and Punishment – Fyodor dostoevsky** and **Anna Karenina – Leo Tolstoy** both Russian classics in their own right and absolutely deserved to be called classics. Both a representation of Russian life and outstanding characterisation from both authors in very contrasting ways.

      I could go on and on but I tend to lean towards the classics for this kind of desire – however it depends on what you are after.

      **Edit – also sorry I realise you asked for one book but I started recommending a book that changed my viewpoints on life and people and couldn’t pick just one lol, probably Kim for the cultural aspect**

    2. NeuroTribes by Steve Silberman
      Scarcity by by Sendhil Mullainathan, Shafir Eldar, Eldar Shafir

      I gained immense compassion and perspective on my husband and son from reading NeuroTribes.

      Scarcity explained so much of what I didn’t understand in my own life. Helped me not to judge but be curious about other’s lives.

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