My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Find your new favourite book or recommend one on our Book forum.

What we're reading

Books that have changed/challenged your thinking

36 replies

Twerking9to5 · 06/02/2016 20:03

Can anyone recommend a really thought provoking book? Thinking probably non fiction (although 1984 was one of the books that massively stuck with me).

Thanks!

OP posts:
Report
RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 06/02/2016 20:20

This was fascinating, terrifying and thought provoking. I thought I knew quite a lot about the Second World War, but this blew my mind a bit tbh.

Report
Twerking9to5 · 06/02/2016 20:24

Ooh that looks fascinating Remus, thank you!

OP posts:
Report
scandichick · 06/02/2016 20:25

Depending on your taste it might be a bit out there, but World War Z (about a zombie apocalypse) was genuinely thought-provoking when mapping out how modern society would react to everything breaking down.

Report
scandichick · 06/02/2016 20:26

Oh, and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley if you haven't read it!

Report
RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 06/02/2016 20:27

YY to World War Z - I really enjoyed it.

Report
LucyMouse · 06/02/2016 20:30

The Gift of Fear by Gavin De Becker has always stayed with me. The basic message is "always trust your instincts, and act upon them". Very thought provoking.

Report
FuzzyFairy · 06/02/2016 20:31

Under the Skin. It explores issues of humanity, the environment, our obsession with appearances, animal rights and so much more! The movie loses a lot of these themes in translation though. So read the book first!

"Under the Skin is a 2000 novel by Michel Faber. Set in northern Scotland, it traces an extraterrestrial who, manifesting in human form, drives around the Scottish countryside picking up male hitchhikers whom she drugs and delivers to her home planet. The novel, which was Faber's debut, was shortlisted for the 2000 Whitbread Award."

Report
noblegiraffe · 06/02/2016 20:53

Starship Troopers by Robert Heinlein.

Forget the film, the director hadn't even read the book, this is a novel and political essay with discussion of moral philosophy, war, corporal and capital punishment, citizenship, voting rights, personal responsibility and so on. It's required reading for a few branches of the U.S. Military.

I'm pretty sure I disagree with a lot of it, but it makes some compelling arguments.

Report
Twerking9to5 · 07/02/2016 09:54

These are great suggestions. Thanks!!

OP posts:
Report
Thistledew · 07/02/2016 10:05

Knowledge of Angels by Jill Paton-Walsh. It's a novel, but analyses some theological ideas in an insightful way.

Cry, the Beloved Country by Alan Paton, and To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee are great ones to explore justice and race.

Report
Sadik · 07/02/2016 16:39

The Dispossessed by Ursula Le Guin - fiction, but an exploration of what an anarchist society would look like. The subtitle is 'an ambiguous utopia', and I think that's fair enough - the author says that she's not an anarchist herself, and I think that does come through, but it explores a lot of ideas about how our society works.

I've never read Starship Troopers, noblegiraffe, but I definitely will now!

Report
Movingonmymind · 07/02/2016 18:15

Agree with Brave New World which i read as a teen. It massively challenged my thinking around the effects of nature versus nurture and now in the Ivf age about its ethics, sex selection, surrogacy etc etc on s societal level. Not sure what else has changed or challenged my thinking other than the obvious ones - guess some in feminism- Wifework, Bitch, Female Eunuch, life after birth which together made me feel that my sex had finally caught up with and trapped me like most women on giving birth.

Report
cressetmama · 09/02/2016 17:14

I like the sound of Starship Troopers. Have always largely ignored the science fiction shelf so maybe it's time to rectify that omission. Thank you.

Report
Twerking9to5 · 09/02/2016 19:23

I've also always ignored the sci fi stuff but have enjoyed any of that genre I've accidentally read!!

I'll throw one in as well-our book group chose a series of short stories by George Saunders called "tenth of December". I immediately thought I'd hate it-wasn't sure about short stories and it sounded really dark and weird. It's one of my favourite books (although really divided the book group!). Definitely made me think about the darkness of human nature.

OP posts:
Report
everydayinMK · 11/02/2016 09:20

The Theseus Paradox - because it's based around a life changing real event, was written by someone who was actually there, was investigated by the Sunday Telegraph - and people on the book forums are raving about it and desperate to know how much is real and how much is fiction! Click here: hyperurl.co/KindleTheseusParadox

Report
UnDeuxTroisCatsSank · 11/02/2016 09:28

Cosmos by Carl Sagan.

A work of genius, with his humanity and love of all humanity shining through. Definitely changed my life and I read it once a year.

Report
DansonslaCapucine · 11/02/2016 22:15

Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut. It's about an American unit who arrive in Dresden after the Allied bombing.

Also, one of his short stories about having to take a pill and commit suicide when you are 50 as society can no longer afford to look after you. Must have read it as a teen and it has stayed with me (I'm 39).

Report
DansonslaCapucine · 11/02/2016 22:18

MK - I have The Theseus Paradox on my Kindle but haven't got into it yet. Must try again this weekend (instead of buying more books).

Report
Canyouforgiveher · 12/02/2016 00:46

The Gift of Fear changed me and how I look at my safety - for the better i think.

People of the Lie by M Scott Peck made me think about how ordinary life can include evil.

Gilead by Mariilynne Robinison as well as being one of the most moving, human, lovely books ever, made me understand America.

Report
everydayinMK · 12/02/2016 09:25

I think you'll enjoy 'The Theseus Paradox', DansonslaCapucine. I found it an easy read in terms of the page-turning x-factor, but it's the ending which really made me think about how we see the world and major newsworthy events - and our place within that world. Absolutely shocking story. Shock Didn't see the ending coming. Loved it! StarStarStarStarStar

Report
DansonslaCapucine · 12/02/2016 10:19

Righto MK - I'm back on it.

Canyouforgiveher - strange thing is that straight after I posted, I remembered about Gilead. I loved that book, really loved it. Almost came back on to post about it. Of all the books ....

Report
ErgonomicallyUnsound · 12/02/2016 12:32

Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
The Cleft by Doris Lessing
Station Eleven by Emily St John Mandel

All are alternate realities, all stayed with me for years. The Cleft especially as I read it just after I'd had my first child, a boy. The other two made me really appreciate our world and my life in it.

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

PinkIndustry · 14/02/2016 00:48

To Kill a Mockingbird, The Grapes of Wrath, The Handmaid's Tale, Nineteen-Eighty-Four, Anna Karenina.

All of these books shaped my views as a teenager but they are such great novels that, when I have re-read them over the years, they have shaped and challenged my thinking all over again in different ways.

All, that is, except for To Kill a Mockingbird - the first reading was so perfect that I have never felt the desire to go back over it.

Report
WiIdfire · 14/02/2016 00:56

Shades of Grey.

(No, not '50 shades of Grey', just 'Shades of Grey' by Jasper Fforde, a totally different book)

On the surface, a light hearted comedy, but underneath an interesting commentary on social division and discrimination.

Ender's Game. Gets you thinking about ethics and morals.

Report
suzannecaravaggio · 14/02/2016 01:21

www.amazon.co.uk/The-Grip-Death-Destructive-Economics/dp/1897766408?tag=mumsnet&ascsubtag=mnforum-21

read this several years ago and it's probably a bit old hat now but it did make me start to question my assumptions about money

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.