Lit, I want a book that you don't read for pleasure, I want a book that you read for knowledge beyond your wildest imagination. I want it to be knowledge akin to this moment in Le Sacre Du Printemps which I marked in the video https://youtu.be/9wK8fSkjOy0?t=458 wait for the end of the buildup.
>>8415177
>https://youtu.be/9wK8fSkjOy0?t=458
>>Young Boulez
Also baka the bassoonist rushed the whole solo, and the grace notes barely came out baka.
But to your point, Ulysses is probably the closest literary equivalent to Rite.
>>8415942
It's a matter of taste, I suppose. I actually think this piece is a bit more urgent, which is why I find it more exciting than other renditions of Rites of Spring that I've heard.
Just read the dictionary you moron, front to back.
I'm reading chemistry books although I have no background in science.
>>8415177
>knowledge beyond your wildest imagination
The Upanishads and Bhagavad Gita
>>8415177
>>8415177
Phenomenology of Spirit
Moby Dick because you really gain perspective on what someone who is obsessed with "landing that whale" can do.
Faust because it shows people how greed can undo every ounce of cleverness and they then become so powerful that they become their own downfall as well as the only ones who can bring them to it.
The Odyssey, it's both pleasure and perspective. Every thing is perspective.
Michael and the Sex Goblin that someone actually wrote about a year ago on a wattpad. He wrote other things as well, but you gain some perspective on obsession once again with that story.
>Everything is perspective.
>>8417901
I looked up that Michael and the sex goblin and I'm not sure what I learned over that brief but... Deeply penetrating read and.. You're not wrong. I learned a lot. I'm not sure what I've learned but I learned it. I'm gonna go kill my self. Peace.
>>8417861
Yooooooooooo