7 Books that Changed My Life

in books •  7 years ago  (edited)

"Some books you read. Some books you enjoy. But some books just swallow you up, heart and soul."

Joanne Harris

Books can change lives. The transformational power of literature has helped build companies, start new careers, expand the knowledge or explore the unknown. They can inspire and bring new perspectives and wipe of the prejudices.

I took some time to think about the ones that truly inspired me or changed my life in a way. It's a mix of fiction and general knowledge or self help books. Let me know what you think. :)

1. Tides of War - Steven Pressfield

Best known for his incredibly vivid and precise descriptions of battles, political intrigues and memorable characters of ancient Greece, Pressfield has a narrative gift like no other.

You might have heard about his best selling novel, "Gates of Fire", a breathtaking story about three hundred brave Spartan men who kept the invading Persian forces. However, as I already wrote about it here, I decided to share the other one here, as it had equal impact on me.

The main character was an inspiration for my username on this amazing platform. This is a story about Alcibiades, unprecedented in warfare, smart in politics, irresistible lover, he was a man that seduced the entire nation. He led his armies, invincible in battles on sea and land, but his high aspirations turned him into a tragic hero.

Attention Pressfield gives to all the little historical details is unmatched.

2. Rich Dad, Poor Dad - Robert Kiyosaki

Many people work hard their entire life, but they never seem to earn enough. In his book, Kiyosaki explains how to break out of this vicious circle and achieve financial independence.

Schools teach us how to work for money, but they never teach us how to make money work for us. So we just wait for that paycheck at the end of the month or hope for a raise or better position.

Robert Kiyosaki developed a unique perspective about money and economics by learning from his two fathers. One is his real father, highly educated man, but with poor fiscal understanding which led him to always struggle financially. The other is a father of his friend, 8-grade drop-out and a self-made millionaire.

This book shows how both of these approaches shaped author's thoughts about money.

3. Narcissus and Goldmund - Hermann Hesse

Among so many of his amazing titles, this might not be considered as one of his best work. However, besides Siddhartha, this one influenced me the most.

It's a story about relations between spirit and senses, art and science, presented in the characters of teacher and a monk Narcissus and Goldmund, his student, who eventually decides to escape the monastery and wander across the world, falling in love and growing as an artist along the way.

4. Obstacle is the Way - Ryan Holiday

In his third book, Ryan Holiday brings the wisdom of ancient Stoics like Seneca, Marcus Aurelius and Epictetus into a modern world. If you find their writings a bit too dry, you might enjoy this.

With the main message of "what stands in the way becomes the way" he is teaching that overcoming obstacles is a discipline like every other and that it can be acquired by practicing well known ancient wisdoms.

5. For whom the Bell Tolls - Ernest Hemingway

This classic is a the most touching document about the Spanish Civil War. It's a story about war intertwined with a beautiful love story, lust, adventure, comedy and, eventually, tragedy.

It tells about Robert Jordan, an American who leaves the United States and travels behind the enemy lines to work with Spanish guerrilla fighters, hiding in the mountains.

Like in his other novels, Hemingway's descriptions are sometimes too extensive. Other than that, this classic is a must read for every avid reader out there.

6. The 4-Hour Workweek - Tim Ferriss

Have you ever wondered how would it be to create a new reality of life, to take a small retirement, travel the world and not risk your business or financial security. As you are on Steemit, I'm guessing these thoughts cross your mind often.

In this book, Tim Ferriess shares his own experience and also comes up with a strategy on how to eliminate all distractions and streamline your business.

By following the steps of definition, elimination, automation and eventually liberation he shows how everyone can escape the deferred life plan and create absolute freedom.

7. Lord of the Rings - J.R.R. Tolkien

Ok, this one is the most obvious. If you followed any of my stories, you know how much I love the world of Middle Earth and everything that Tolkien created.

What is there not to adore? Adventures, dragons, misty mountains, dark lords and magic rings - it's a fantasy world like no other, and the way Tolkien writes about it, you really have a feeling like you are out there, living the adventure and not just leafing through pages in the comfort of your hobbit home.


Share in the comments books that influenced you the most. :)


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I've heard so many great reviews about "Rich dad, poor dad" I feel like I need to read that book as soon as possible!
Great post! :)

Great motivational book. I would recommand even better one : felix dennis how to get rich. Unlike Kiyosaki's fiction, this one follows true story.

Thanks for the recommendation, I will try to find that one too.

It's a great book to help understand better how financial and fiscal system works and how to think about money. It sure helped me a lot so I definitely recommend it. :)

It's on my "to read" list. :)

I would strongly suggest adding Atlas Shrugged to that list. Even though the book is a cool 1200 bible-pages, it really gives a unique perspective on how the world works. I've read a lot of selv help books, some useful, some utter waste - but to grasp the big picture of how people think and how the world in so many ways work,and how the human psyche works..Ayn Rand does an amazing job. And in my opinion the books is very well written and the plot exiting. It has gotten some critique for being a bad book, but I suppose that's because people in power don't want you to read it ;)

Have you ever had the opportunity to read *One hundred years of solitude * written by G.
Garcia Marquez? If not, well, immerge yourself in this amazing opera. It is considered the second most important book ever written in Spanish after Don Quijote!
Still, great list and thanks for ideas of next book ;)

I have read "Love in the time of cholera" by Marquez. Pretty good book, although kinda hard to read with his long paragraphs and not much dialogue. :) But I'll have to read his most popular book soon. Thanks for the reminder and glad you found something interesting on the list!

Books! Something for you maybe, @things?

Yes, spread the news! :)

Blood Meridian, by Cormac McCarthy gave me a new perspective of the English language. One of my favorite quotes: "When the lambs is lost in the mountains, he said. They is cry. Sometime come the mother. Sometime the wolf." It's a savage and terrible story, and the writing is biblical. Be prepared!

Meditations, by Marcus Aurelius. There are a few translations of this, I like the one by Gregory Hays. Aurelius and the Stoics shaped the majority of my world view.

Self Reliance, by Emerson. Aurelius and Emerson are neck and neck for most quotes written in my journal, and most effect on my thought process.

Free Spirit, Reinhold Messner, for just one sentence: "Our lives were hostage to our ability, to our will."

Kiss or Kill, Mark Twight. Twight has been down to the bottom of the well, and his anger combines with his lucid view of the world and forces you to ask important questions of yourself.

Dinosaur Training by Brooks Kubik. When I'm looking to get fired up and lift heavy, I'll usually turn to Brooks for stoke. Ain't nothing like heavy squats to check your will to power.

I'll have to catch up on some books from your list. I love Meditations!
Thanks for sharing!

If you liked Meditations you'll probably dig Epictetus' Enchiridion. Enjoy!

Recently listened the audiobook. :) I'll be checking out Seneca next.

Yeah, I dug Seneca as well. So much to read and learn out there, the world is a fascinating place!

Lately I've been writing up a piece on what it means to be a good human, definitely grateful and indebted to the Stoics for helping me come up with a reasonable answer. Will tag you in it when I post if you'd like.

Sure, I'll check it out.

Excellent choice: Meditations. Also, Epictitus!

Yep. For easier reading, A Man In Full is also excellent. Enjoy!

Tom Wolfe?

Yep, that's the one. Enjoy!

Very interesting list. I thoroughly enjoyed 4-hour work week and obviously LoTR. I've been meaning to check out Kiyosaki as well.

You can't go wrong with Kiyosaki. :)

hi. I had included your post in this compilation to share with more people :)

https://steemit.com/steembooklovers/@ygern/steembookloversmag-22-june-2017

Thanks! Great selection.

All great books!
I love especially Narcissus and Goldmund, I read it when I was 15/16 years old and I think it's one of the most touching book that I've ever read ^_^

I really enjoyed that one as well! And everything else Hesse wrote. :) Thanks for the comment!

Excellent list! I have read and enjoyed most of them. Will check out the ones I've missed.

Thanks! Glad you found something interesting on the list. :)

Ill have to check out some of these recommendations! :)
I recently listened to the audio book Rich Dad, Poor Dad. Robert Kiyosaki is soo good!

Great! I listened to the audio version as well, but then had to buy the book. :)

Rich Dad, Poor Dad had great impact on me too. My whole view of personal finance changed and this had led me to accumulate savings early in my career and invest it wisely.
Thank you for recommending The 4 Hour Workweek. As a full time employee, I need all the time that i can get to invest in this platform. Following you.

You were lucky to get your hands on it early, it's packed full with great ideas and financial wisdom.
The 4 Hour Workweek is very inspiring if nothing else. :)

I will get my hand on the book.

Great list, thanks for sharing it. I've read 2,3 and 6 from your recommendations, and I also very much appreciated them. As far as my short list of books I keep coming back to over the years, here it is:

  1. The Power of Now - Eckhart Tolle
  2. A New Earth - Eckhart Tolle
    These 2 helped me understand how to practice mindfulness and detachment of the drama I used to create.
  3. Women who love too much - Robin Norwood - it helped me figure out my issues with codependency and opened my way for healing.
  4. The Richest Man in Babylon - one of the best short books on financial education with practical advice to follow.
    These are the first that come to my mind, maybe I'll do an extensive article with more recommendations, following your inspiration. cheers!

Of course, I've read both of Eckhart's books multiple times! Should have definitely included one of them. I'll check out this number 4 as it looks like something I will benefit from.

Looking forward to reading your list. :)

Cool! I'll tag you when I'll post mine :)

I'll make sure to check it out. :)

Totally agree on "Richest Man in Babylon" I think it is a fantastic book to recommend to someone just starting out from college. Even in my fifties I love to reread it at times to remind myself that if we do the right things that the best is yet to come.

Glad you also appreciate this book. And I agree with you, even if we've read it once, it's good to come back to it from time to time, just to keep ourselves on the right track. :)

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Nice list!
However 2. Rich Dad, Poor Dad - Robert Kiyosaki is controversial. I remember its content very well. Author of that book actually used his imagination quite a bit, and his alleged wealth from book didn't exist at time of writing. He did made a lot of money afterwards, and his perspective of capitalism is accurate regardless. Great post.
Pozdrav :)

I didn't know about that backstory. However, I found it very helpful, or at least informative. As I didn't approach it to 'get reach quickly', but to get more understanding about how the financial system works. Even some obvious lessons like "you can't spend more than you earn" we don't follow through without the reminder. :)
Hvala na komentaru!

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Principle of assets and liabilities, rat race, they are educational and useful. Felix Dennis, guy that i mentioned above was extremely wealthy individual, founder of Dennis publishing. He made his first serious money selling improvised Bruce Lee posters. He explained how and why people who were smarter than him, and way more resourceful, became his employees, and not other way around. For everyone liking true entrepreneurship, and thinking out of the box, this will be a worthy read. I believe most people on this platform are anarchy-capitalists by nature, another reason for my persistence in mentioning it. How not to be worker in someone's else assembly line.

I have written down the title. Will definitely check it out. Thanks for the recommendation!

Lord of the rings and Rich Dad, Poor Dad are high on my list.

Both amazing in their own way!

Thank you for a fascinating and diverse list, @alcibiades. I enjoy learning what has influenced, and is influencing, other lovers of reading.

I'm glad you enjoyed reading this! :)

I love books! I hope all books translated in Indonesia. I think, just J.R.R Tolkien have translated. Hemingway? I love him.

I wish you that as well!

Thank you! Love suggestions for books, I will especially tell my hubby about Rich Dad, Pood Dad

He's going to love it. :)

The only one of these that I've read is Lord of the Rings. Thanks for giving me six new books to add to my reading list. 🙂

I'll have to think of my own list, although these days, I'd probably include Lord of the Flies and the Handmaid's Tale -- two disturbing stories of how quickly life as we know it can become unrecognizable depending on who has power and how they choose to wield it.

Well, I'm glad you found some inspiration in this post. :) I love Lord of the Flies! Quite dark and frightening. Wrote something about that topic a while back.

I got everyone in my family to read Rich Dad, Poor Dad. Now we have a family budget that everyone contributes to and we keep track of our monthly income and expenses. We all discussed a few of the major points of the book, like getting creative about increasing your income, making investments rather than just spending money on buying things, and in general using your thinking rather than working yourself to death.

United family action - that seems like a great idea! Indeed, there are so many great ideas in the book about how to be smart with your money and investments. Turned my life around literally.

I'll have to check out some of these books. My favorite books are Ready Player One (nerdy gaming book about the future) and Glass Castle (true story of this girls twisted life).

Ready Player One is on my reading list for a while! I'll have to speed up and read it. Thanks for the recommendation! Feel free to check out some of the titles above. :)

If you are like me, and like bedtime stories, you could even get the audio book! They did a pretty good job on the recording.

Haha I love audiobooks! I do that with Lord of the Rings - go to bed, hit play and teleport myself to Middle Earth as I fall asleep. :) I might try that with Ready Player One.

OMG! I'm already excited for you. Let me know when you finish it. :) Also Harry Potter series was great on audio. They did voice overs for all of the characters!

I'll make sure to share my experience. :) Never been a big fan of Harry, didn't watch when I was young, and later, just couldn't get used to it. Thanks anyway! :)

:)

A great list. Would be nice to share how each book actually 'changed' your life!

Thanks! They changed the way I look at things, they influenced me to drop 9 to 5 and start investing, to deal with obstacles differently... or they just made me a better person. :)

Nicely said and done. You feel free...

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Virtues of War was so fucking good. The day I finished it I began reading it a second time.

Love this moment: “Does it hurt?” he bawled, spurring up in the flush of victory, and when I answered yes, he roared, “Good, it’s supposed to!” Then turning to the officers and soldiers round about: “My son’s wound is in front, where it should be.”

I also loved The Last Amazon, by Pressfield -- worth it if you get a chance.

Virtues of War is brilliant indeed! But I see I made a mistake, as I wanted to mention Tides of War. That was the one I described. :) But basically anything Pressfield wrote is a masterpiece. Including The Last Amazon.

Have you read Gates of Fire? That's probably his best work. Mind-blowing!

Ha! I'm composing a post very similar to this right now! :) I've only read 2 on your list. Very cool. Thanks for posting!

Hope you found some inspiration from the list. :) I'll be sure to check out yours!

@alcibiades is there any book which is more addictive then steemit and can make me forget about my phone and take me towards real world any suggestions
Nice post upvoted myboy liked it image

Go outside, sit somewhere under the tree and read any of the above. :)

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You can create your own trail or follow others on streemian. As I'm an active curator, some other curators decided to follow my votes and help reward undervalued posts.

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Great list. Rich dad poor dad is a favorite, and although it's sort of "obvious" in a way, it really was THE book that pushed me in the right direction.

Eye opening book indeed. Glad you like the list. :)

This is a great list... I find so many books have influenced me and being an English Lit graduate I find every book I read offers me something new (the cheap thrillers maybe not as much)... I try to read a variety and want to start getting into African Postcolonial literature - a great way to learn more about people who live different lives to my own

I find every book I read offers me something new

Indeed! I wish I have more time to read all the books I wanted. Nice to see you are interested in wide variety of topics. Would love to read about books that influenced you the most. :)

This post received a 1.9% upvote from @randowhale thanks to @alcibiades! For more information, click here!

7 Books That changed My Life:

  1. Bible
  2. The Imitation of Christ
  3. Lives of the Saints
  4. Breviary
  5. The Fast Diet
  6. Saint Francis of Assisi
  7. Face Book

the book that changed my life the the secret .........have a look at it ........i am sure you will love it.Message me if u love it :)

I've heard many people talk about that book. I might have to check it out!

have a look its great

Hello @alcibiades. Currently following you on streemian, would like apply for premium service and move up in the que. Not sure how I apply though?

Thanks for joining! Never done it myself, but looks like you have to buy premium plan on Streemian.

Great selection!

Thanks!

Threw me for a loop with Lord of The Rings, but then again, I think every avid reader does that to me at some point. Readers are never predictable. Great list.

Oh, and for those that like the strange and hidden things, especially in old literature....

Thanks!

The book that has made the most profound impact on me is Boundaries: when to say yes, when to say no, to take control of your life, by Cloud & Townsend. It was a whole bunch of light bulb moments!

First off, great screen name. Alcibiades was the ultimate survivor. I would also recommend Walden by Thoreau. He really gets to essentials--the bare essentials of what is important in life.

Thanks! Alcibiades is a truly memorable character. I just got Walden audiobook on my phone a week ago and it's waiting in the list. :) Thanks for the recommendation!

OMG Followed and upvoted