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Some Of The Most Influential Books I’ve Read

I read a book recently that really spoke to me. It GOT me. It connected with me.

Which made me start thinking about all the books I’ve read through the years that have caused a similar reaction in me. Some have been influential because I’ve been able to relate to them, some have been influential because they’ve inspired me in some way, some have been influential because they’ve hauntingly stuck with me. Regardless, they were all important. So I thought I’d share some of those here.

A few notes about this list:

Okay, here goes, in no particular order:

“It was because someone who was a real friend was having the exact same feelings I was having, about something that was more important to me than anything else. I bet there are people who go through a whole life and never experience that.”

“The fact that it was hard didn’t mean I was failing. These were growing pains. In hindsight, I wouldn’t have sped up a second of it. I needed every second of the challenge to make me who I am today.”

“When we met I was wrecked, blasted, and damned, and I am slowly pulling myself together because I can see that you are a human being and I would like to be one, too.”

“‘We need a place,’ she said, ‘just for us. It would be so secret that we would never tell anyone in the whole world about it.’ … She lowered her voice almost to a whisper. ‘It might be a whole secret country,’ she continued, ‘and you and I would be the rulers of it.'”

“Every human being makes mistakes and does things they’re not proud of. They can be everyday, or they can be catastrophic. And the unfortunate truth of being human is that we all have moments of indifference to other people’s suffering. To me, that’s the central thing that allows crime to happen: indifference to other people’s suffering. If you’re stealing from someone, if you’re hurting them physically, if you’re selling them a product that you know will hurt them—the thing that allows a person to do that is that they somehow convince themselves that that’s not relevant to them. We all do things that we’re not proud of, even though they might not have as terrible consequences.”

“Whenever people ask me what I’d most like to change about the white working class, I say, ‘The feeling that our choices don’t matter.'”

“The worst part of holding the memories is not the pain. It’s the loneliness of it. Memories need to be shared.”

“Freedom, like everything else, is relative.”

“Because true belonging only happens when we present our authentic, imperfect selves to the world, our sense of belonging can never be greater than our level of self-acceptance.”

“I read and walked for miles at night along the beach, writing bad blank verse and searching endlessly for someone wonderful who would step out of the darkness and change my life. It never crossed my mind that that person could be me.”

What books have made a lasting impression on your life?

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