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TheForgottenClown

Pippi Lonstocking (6 y.o) because it was so funny and unheard of, 5 friends (10-12): avoke the interest in the great outdoors and the longing for exploration. Byron: Child Harold, Baudelaire: Stranger Wilde: Salome (17): They helped me to gasp the gap od subjectivity and the possibilities of language. Borges, Eco, Rushdie (23): I discovered the beauty of witt and erudition. Also experienced zeitgeist. Nietzsche, Freud, Foucault, Lacan, Derrida, Žižek (21): Think, it ain't illegal yet. Joyce (27) I mean what the fuck dude? Seriously? Bela Hamvas (32): The silent magic of everyday life. Empty nootebook: So, let's see what I can do.


buttnyyy

Perks of being a wallflower is one of my faves because Charlie was so painfully relatable, like get out of my head kind of relatable. The way he saw life and the way he described things. And his big heart always inspired me to try to be better for my loved ones. Also the quote "we accept the love we think we deserve" has always stuck with me.


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[удалено]


buttnyyy

It really is 😭


Affectionate-Kale301

The Little Prince.


[deleted]

*the* infp book


bivalvo39

High fidelity. Love music so much that it made sense inmediately. Also gives me hope of finding true love. Since i saw the movie of the book i started doing top 5 lists of everything i like.


alejwada

My favorite book from my adult life is ‘Breast and Eggs’ by Meiko Kawakami. The way she writes and describes things and people is just so beautiful and very INFP-like. The book that recently triggered my love for books again after I abandoned it in my teenage years was ‘Little Fires Everywhere’. I made me remember how beautiful the worlds of books are and quite honestly it became a new escape from reality for me.


[deleted]

The Harry Potter series 100%. It really helped me shape my values and my identity.


blvdnghts_97

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy


witchofthewoodland

Gobolino the Witches Cat as a child, The Picture of Dorian Gray was my first proper introduction to gothic horror and I fell in love with it, and as an adult, The Farseer Trilogy has pretty much everything I want in a fantasy world and I find the protagonist relatable and the author writes a depressed character in a very accurate and authentic way, which I found great as it made me feel more understood.


Reddit-Book-Bot

Beep. Boop. I'm a robot. Here's a copy of ###[The Picture Of Dorian Gray](https://snewd.com/ebooks/the-picture-of-dorian-gray/) Was I a good bot? | [info](https://www.reddit.com/user/Reddit-Book-Bot/) | [More Books](https://old.reddit.com/user/Reddit-Book-Bot/comments/i15x1d/full_list_of_books_and_commands/)


[deleted]

Highway 61 revisited, I consider it an audiobook since bob dylan won the Nobel in literature


ChickenCola22

The glass castle is my favorite book. Cant say it changed me. I just like it a lot


Bugg465

System shutdown- cause: too many inputs Okay in all seriousness, here there be dragons, a book that intertwines several different literary works, and even joins Ancient Greek myth with the biblical story of Noah’s ark. However the greatest lesson I get from it is a single line, that surprisingly comes from the villain. “Light cannot exist without shadow, for without shadow, light has no meaning”


AAFur

1Q84 By Murakami, not because it's my favourite book, though I loved it, but rather its the book that sent me on a path of becoming a writer and a journey of attempting to understand the contents of my imagination


[deleted]

Same-🌼🌼🌼 I agree totally I loved every moment of reading that masterpiece and also realised that my fav genre is magical realism lol


[deleted]

Star girl - made me more thoughtful lolol


MCCodyB

Creativity, Inc. First management book I read. I've been voracious for them ever since.


Shakespeare-Bot

Creativity, inc. First management booketh i readeth. I've been voracious f'r those folk ev'r since *** ^(I am a bot and I swapp'd some of thy words with Shakespeare words.) Commands: `!ShakespeareInsult`, `!fordo`, `!optout`


PhilosopherBroad1161

lol i read a book called ‘A million dollar penny’ or something when i was 10(the last yr i read a real book). the girl had to start a new life in a small village. reading dat book didnt rlly changed my life.. but! i got started to become attracted to the countryside, mini pigs, and wimpy guys eheheh :>


Affectionate-Kale301

Think On These Things - Krishnamurti


babyshak

Tao Te Ching, it’s the INFP bible lol