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What book changed your life?

MPAsquared

www.musemassagespa.com
I am an avid reader. I'm always on a quest for a good book. But my preference is for books that will add something new to my life, specifically, a new perspective. I have been fortunate enough that the right book usually falls into my lap at the right time, when I need it's lessons most.

4 books have had a very significant impact on my life:

1. How to Win Friends & Influence People - Dale Carnegie

2. The Art of War - Robert Greene

3. The Secret

4. The 5 Love Languages - Gary Chapman


What books have had the biggest impact on your life, growth, perspective, & progress in your life? (amazon links are welcomed!!)
 

Mr Bret

Well-known member
Aug 13, 2012
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You won't believe this, but The Secret.
I don't normally believe in "that kind of stuff", but someone who I cared about dearly suggested I read it.
I did so with a huge grain of salt, actually a nugget.

Whether or not my thinking changed is unknown, but I do know that just mere months after I read it, my career took off like a rocket and I landed a position I never expected to even get a sniff at.

Coincidence or a result of The Secret? Who knows?
 

wazup

Well-known member
Jun 12, 2010
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i wait for the movie version
 

kkelso

Well-known member
Apr 27, 2003
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The Demon-Haunted World by Carl Sagan. Truly changed my life, read it over 15 years ago and still think about its lessons daily.

KK
 

Mr Deeds

Muff Diver Extraordinaire
Mar 10, 2013
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Here
The happy hooker it opened up a whole new world for me
 

TESLAMotors

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Apr 23, 2014
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manni

Member
Jan 19, 2010
180
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Gone Girl - taught me never to get married ....
 

JackBurton

Well-known member
Jan 5, 2012
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Dirty White Boys - Stephen Hunter. Brilliant writer who opened up the boring genre of mystery and technical writing. He had a great 20 yr run before it started to go stale.

Crazy town: Robyn Doolittle - she confirmed in detail that I wasn't the only one who thought Rob Ford was a atrocious piece of shit who derailed any progress this city could have had for 4 yrs: spoiler alert he DID raise property taxes for all you Ford nation people. Documented right here.

The Hobbit: classic literature that wasn't too long and boring to read. Discovered it one summer when I was 13 and it ignited a love of reading I have to this day

If you are looking for some great summer reading, try Stephen Hunter. Start with Dirty White Boys.

Cheers!
 

Spacealien2

Well-known member
Apr 29, 2012
1,838
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Heaven
Not a book per se. But I discovered my Myers-Briggs type indicator and reading the analysis helped me learn about myself a lot better.
 

Butler1000

Well-known member
Oct 31, 2011
29,303
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To Kill a Mockingbird. I still read it once a year.

Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus. Changed my game completely with Women. Finally figured them out(well as much as that's possible anyway).
 

Insidious Von

My head is my home
Sep 12, 2007
38,729
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Anything by Dr Seuss.

Without his books I would have had a much tougher time learning English when my family immigrated to Canada.
 

MissCroft

Sweetie Pie
Feb 23, 2004
7,095
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Toronto
Frankenstein

To Kill a Mockingbird


The Good Earth (taught me a lot about money and so-called 'wealth' and happiness)


Anything by Dr Seuss.

Without his books I would have had a much tougher time learning English when my family immigrated to Canada.

That's sweet. :) Loved Dr. Seuss as a kid.
 
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diana <3

Member
Apr 26, 2014
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I spent ages 9 through 11 living in Indonesia, so I missed a lot of the sexual and gender indoctrination that girls get socialized into at the end of elementary school. Instead I was introduced to Heinein's Stranger in a Strange Land as soon as my family returned to Canada. It was the first adult book I read that dealt with sexuality and relationships and it really shaped how I approach and think about them.
 

TeasePlease

Cockasian Brother
Aug 3, 2010
7,740
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I've never liked self-help books but find myself reading biographies all the time. I guess I don't like being told what to do but I am inspired by people who do great things.

A couple that stand out in my mind are Yeager (Chuck Yeager) and My American Journey (Colin Powell). The Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie is also a terrific read.

A departed member of our community recommended The Last Lecture by Randy Pausch(sp?) a few years ago. It is an amazing piece of work. It is moving, and probably life changing. Except it's concepts are so big that I have trouble getting my head around it.

I have a bit of a challenge now with a friend reading the Koran and the Bible. The conversations are interesting, but I can't say the reading is engrossing.
 

Mable

Active member
Sep 20, 2004
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Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand;

Intellectuals in Society, Thomas Sowell;

Conflict of Interests, Thomas Sowell;

Anything by Milton Friedman.
 

DaleyDDD

Active member
Jul 4, 2009
1,138
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The Little Prince (I know it's juvenile)
The Scarlet Letter
Paradise Lost
 

oldjones

CanBarelyRe Member
Aug 18, 2001
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I spent ages 9 through 11 living in Indonesia, so I missed a lot of the sexual and gender indoctrination that girls get socialized into at the end of elementary school. Instead I was introduced to Heinein's Stranger in a Strange Land as soon as my family returned to Canada. It was the first adult book I read that dealt with sexuality and relationships and it really shaped how I approach and think about them.
It's the book I've most often passed on with life-changing hopes for others. Heinlein's always felt like something of a wise and kindred spirit, from his boys books into the wilder fantasy stuff.

I was a Dale Carnegie fan too, in my youth, but the books that I now recall as true shaping influences were The Patrol Leader's Handbook and Scouting For Boys. Their straightforward and uncomplicated message of self-reliance, resourcefulness and commitment to larger purposes and the community and most particularly the functional knowledge and advice about leadership and management still serves me well. It's a shame it now presents as so dated, and that our age has separated itself so completely from that past that birthed it.

The other candidate is whatever book I'm currently past the first 50 pages of. Check out The Knowledge.
 

danmand

Well-known member
Nov 28, 2003
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Assembler Programming
 
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