If you e seen the movie *Memento*, you probably understand the basic plot. The main character has no memories of himself or his past. He has a clinical psychiatrist trying to help him recover any memories with a mix of medication and therapy sessions. However, the main character starts to find what he suspects are clues from himself suggesting that the doctor isn’t telling him everything. The title is a misunderstanding of the phrase “Rorschach test,” a nod to the idea that reality isn’t really a fixed construct. There is a lot of interpretation that goes into it too.
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[Foucault’s Pendulum](https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17841.Foucault_s_Pendulum) by Umberto Eco and [The Illuminatus! Trilogy](https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/57913.The_Illuminatus_Trilogy) by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson.
Last Days by Bryan Evenson
If you want something *really* weird – and don’t mind taking on a much more [active role](https://medium.com/illumination/what-is-ergodic-literature-c4f015b4d40a) in your reading experience e, you might check out the **Raw Shark Texts** by Steven Hall.
If you e seen the movie *Memento*, you probably understand the basic plot. The main character has no memories of himself or his past. He has a clinical psychiatrist trying to help him recover any memories with a mix of medication and therapy sessions. However, the main character starts to find what he suspects are clues from himself suggesting that the doctor isn’t telling him everything. The title is a misunderstanding of the phrase “Rorschach test,” a nod to the idea that reality isn’t really a fixed construct. There is a lot of interpretation that goes into it too.