Between your workouts, careers, and personal life, what type of books do you guys like to enjoy in your free time? Fiction, non-fiction, history, financeā€¦ Iā€™m curious to see what this demographic of people is into literature wise. Letā€™s get talking about some books!

Personally I particularly enjoy history & philosophy, with some psychology thrown in. Favorite authors have to be Robert Greene & Jordan Peterson, and my favorite book right now is probably The Discourses by Machiavelli.

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Oh my goodness yes! Everyone has read ā€œThe Princeā€: no one really got to know Machiavelli.

My favorite book remains ā€œThus Spake Zarathustaā€. I love the presentation of it, how each chapter holds something to ponder and decode. The premise: taking the prophet and putting him into ā€œmodernā€ times. And I love the feeling of fun you can perceive that Nietzsche had in writing it.

For a quicker read, ā€œIn the Penal Colonyā€ by Kafka is SO much better than Metamorphosis while still very much capturing the spirit of Kafka. The Trial was also a solid piece of his. Honestly: I just didnā€™t care for Metamorphosis.

I also love just about anything that Arthur Schopenhauer wrote.

On the lifting front, I make it a policy to read ā€œPowerlifting Basics Texas Styleā€ by Paul Kelso at least once a year. Itā€™s that good, and I always pick up something from it. And itā€™s just enjoyable. And anything Dan John writes is worth reading. Also, every lifter needs to read ā€œThe Complete Keys to Progressā€ by John McCallum.

I could go on, but thatā€™s good for now.

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One of my personal favorite is Heart of Darkness. Itā€™s so much more meaningful reading as an adult over when I had to read it in HS.

It is my personal opinion that every man should read The Things They Carried and Going after Cacciato by Tim Oā€™brien

Lately I have been reading books on bees/beekeeping to try and overcome my fear of bees.

Other books I like to read at this point in my life: anything that improves my knowledge of the physical world (nature, physics, mathematics,etc), discourses (Suttas) of the Buddha, the occasional horror novel (read a lot of stephen king as a teenager), getting more into biographies as I get older too.

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Moby Dick is my favorite book and the 1956 film adaptation is probably my favorite movie. The special effects are laughable but Gregory Peck was sensational as Captain Ahab. I realize people are split on this book many people love it but a lot hate it.

ā€œThe Harder they Fallā€ by Budd Schulberg was a 1940s novel about the Mobā€™s involvement in boxing, also a great film adaptation which I think was Humphrey Bogartā€™s last film, and also featured boxing legends Max Baer and Jersey Joe Walcott.

ā€œThe Purposeful Primitiveā€ by Marty Gallagher was very informative in terms of strength training methods and I think Mr. Gallagher is also a very talented writer and storyteller.

Another book Iā€™d add is ā€œThe 4-hour Workweekā€ by Tim Ferriss - I should add Iā€™m not a big fan of his overall (and personally didnā€™t find most of the specific advice in the book particularly helpful) but I did fall in love with the concept of figuring out what he called the ā€œminimum effective doseā€ - which is probably the ā€œPareto principalā€ repackaged -

rather if we can take a minimalist approach and end up at ā€œgood enoughā€ for things that are not really a top priority in life we have more time/energy we can focus that on things that are a higher priority.

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Fiction-wise, I get drawn into hard[er] sci fi. Iain Bankā€™s Culture Series; Charlie Strossā€™ Accelerando, Glasshouse, Halting State; Neal Stephensonā€™s Diamond Age.

Iā€™m reading a long kind-of-silly Chinese webnovel with my five-year-old, kind of a hybrid Chinese/Western fantasy story: Coiling Dragon. Hardly quality writing, but itā€™s entertaining. Dragons, swords, honor, betrayal, magic, etc. Itā€™s very very long. In ebook form, weā€™re 3,600 pages into 21,000. Maybe a year left until we finish itā€¦ But there lots of opportunities for educational discussions among the themes.

As far as what I mostly spend my time reading, itā€™s just a bunch of random things around constantly-changing interests. Iā€™m partway through an 1800s navigation book. Read a few diet books recently. Working through some stuff on learning Classical Chinese, which occasionally bounces out into re-reading bits of the Dao De Jing and Confucius.

Slowly making my way through Dune, but Iā€™m not really much of a fiction-reader.

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My number one pick is the Holy Bibleā€¦i read a few chapters every night before bedtime

Other books I absolutley love are the Jack Reacher novels, Jesse Stone novels and if i am in the old wild west mood then its the Smoke Jensen novels, i also read the Womens Murder Club series from Patterson and the Texas Ranger series from Patterson

I also have read most of Ellington Dardens books and Bruce Leeā€™s striking thoughts and his Jeet Kune Do book that i have had since the early 80s

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Growing up, i read all of the Edgar Rice Burroughs Tarzan booksā€¦total adventure and fantasy, loved pretending to be Tarzan thru those stories

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Penthouse Letters

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I completely agree with you about Machiavelli. The Prince was just a letter send by Machiavelli to a Medici that happened to be published. The Discourses and especially his History of Florence are what I think he should really be defined by.

I have heard many good things about Thus Spoke Zarathustra, and obviously Nietzsche as a whole, but I havenā€™t read any of his work as Iā€™ve prioritized other philosophers.

I also havenā€™t read any Kafka, nor Schopenhauerā€¦ I feel like Iā€™ve been slacking!

Any particular recommendations for Schopenhauer?

I havenā€™t read The Things They Carried since high school, but I would love to go through it again sometime. Tim Oā€™Brien is a very talented author.

Are there many books about bees? Seems like a super specific topic lol.

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Iā€™ve heard Moby Dick is a very dry novel, and Iā€™ve definitely heard that thereā€™s a split consensus on it. Iā€™d love to read it sometime.

I think a lot of people struggle with that, and try to be super good at so many different things. I definitely will look into Tim Ferriss. I do struggle with reading fiction, but I am working on allowing myself to let go and be immersed into a ā€˜fantasyā€™ world. The Harder They Fall sounds interesting!

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21k pages?! How dense is each page, cause thatā€™s outrageous! Iā€™ll definitely check it out, it seems like the type of thing that you could go through over the course of a couple years.

Seems like you have an interest in Chinese literature particularly. Is Confucius hard to read?

Canā€™t go wrong with The Bible haha.

Have you read any of the Lonesome Dove series? It was written sometime in the 1920s/30s, but the first book is a Pulitzer Winner, and itā€™s western themed. Iā€™ve been meaning to buy it for a while.

I didnā€™t know Tim Patterson wrote books! /s

I guess I may be too young, but I did not realize Tarzan was a book seriesā€¦

A man of culture I see :wink:

More than you would initially think though only a couple are available at my local library.

The books is where Tarzan came fromā€¦late 1800ā€™s

James Patterson, lol

never read the lonesome dove series

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Isaac Asimov, Tolkien, Frank Herbert and few others.