Dostoyevsky books like brothers karamzov or crime and punishment
sd_glokta on
Notes from the Underground by Fyodor Dostoevsky
All the works of Friedrich Nietzsche
elizajaneredux on
Anything by Martin Amis, but especially The Information and London Fields. So dark yet also so sharp and funny
Postingatthismoment on
Babel. It’s about imperialism. And brilliant.
Artoriani on
The Conspiracy against the Human Race by Thomas Ligotti. He’s not just critical of society, but of the very idea of consciousness itself. Seems like it would be right up your alley.
Lcatg on
Anything by Brett Easton Ellis. This is kind of his thing. Fair warnings: American Psycho is in fact about a serial killer & BEE doesn’t pull punches on his crimes.
imwithburrriggs on
Fight Club
turkleton-turk on
{{Boomsday by Christopher Buckley}}
sterlingzeppelin on
Germinal by Emile Zola
A_Bridgeburner on
Low Town: if you’re looking for a depressed drug addict/drug dealer in a fantasy world who hates himself yet struggles on regardless. Full of philosophical monologues. Extremely dark and extremely witty.
I encourage you to consider as I have never seen a more fitting request of this book and I loved it.
11 Comments
Industrial Society and Its Future
Dostoyevsky books like brothers karamzov or crime and punishment
Notes from the Underground by Fyodor Dostoevsky
All the works of Friedrich Nietzsche
Anything by Martin Amis, but especially The Information and London Fields. So dark yet also so sharp and funny
Babel. It’s about imperialism. And brilliant.
The Conspiracy against the Human Race by Thomas Ligotti. He’s not just critical of society, but of the very idea of consciousness itself. Seems like it would be right up your alley.
Anything by Brett Easton Ellis. This is kind of his thing. Fair warnings: American Psycho is in fact about a serial killer & BEE doesn’t pull punches on his crimes.
Fight Club
{{Boomsday by Christopher Buckley}}
Germinal by Emile Zola
Low Town: if you’re looking for a depressed drug addict/drug dealer in a fantasy world who hates himself yet struggles on regardless. Full of philosophical monologues. Extremely dark and extremely witty.
I encourage you to consider as I have never seen a more fitting request of this book and I loved it.