-Oy-
Bloke with a camera
- Location
- Lancashire
Feel the fear and do it anyway - Susan Jeffers. About 30 years ago.
Yes, that could teach us some things we may need to know, if you get what I mean.The Grapes of Wrath
The Stranger Beside Me by Ann Rule, about Ted Bundy which I've read a few times.
By Reason of Insanity by Shane Stevens I read about 12 times. A book about a serial killer and Stephen King said is one of scariest books he's read.
a sign from the gods or administering angels??A few books have made a deep impression, but I can't think of any that made an impact on my life. Although I'm not sure what "making an impact" means in the context of this thread. Consequently, I pondered this for a long time before I even started reading the responses, and even before I got to MACKTEXAS's comment, The Grapes of Wrath Came to Mind. Life changing? No, but as a literary work, it blew my mind. I've read others that were even more mind blowing, but back in 1964, Grapes was the first book I read that had that effect.
OK, now when I think in terms of an impact on my life, there was a book. But I'll bet no one here has ever heard of it. In the summer of 69, I was suffering with a lot of anxiety, at times feeling like I was going crazy. I was getting gas at a gas station, and at the cash register there was one of those wire rotating book displays. It had one of those self help books that were popular back then. This one was called Psycho Cybernetics, and was filled with directions on how to examine your mind. I bought it, tried it, and studied it. It was life changing, probably because at that time of my life, it was exactly what I needed.
It fixed my brain, so to speak. I quit my job, went back to college, started a new life, and I've never regretted it.
Vaguely remember hearing about that book. I know what you mean about a book helping a person understand their own behaviors better. What i find interesting is that sometimes they are most helpful as we are going thru something--helping us find a path out of difficulties, but other times they are more useful in doing a postmortem on a stage of life we've already gotten thru-- because human beings when in throes of sorting out who we are, well we often resist being 'pidgeon-holed' even if the 'shoe fits' perfectly.Very narrow audience, but The Velvet Rage by psychologist Alan Downs. It explains why living in a Straight world causes Gay men issues of shame, rage and self-hatred. It also outlines the corresponding actions, like promiscuity, perfectionism, cattiness and the inability to form long-term relationships. I had already moved past these when I read it but it made me think "so that's why I acted that way when I was younger". It was eye-opening.
Ursula LeGuin's novella The Word for World Is Forrest, i so identified with the people indigenous to the planet.Some of the books that have had a great impact on me are science fiction in which I wish I lived.
Just thought of another one, The Waste Makers by Vance Packard. I read it when it was first published in 1960, about how people in the US consume a whole lot more than they should or even need to. We still do 65 years later. If anything, we consume even more. It used to be that advertising was "find a need and fill it." Now it's a case of "create a need and fill it."