Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

Uncle Joe

(58,916 posts)
5. "Earth in the Balance" and "The Assault on Reason"
Mon Jun 16, 2014, 04:44 PM
Jun 2014

come to mind.

On edit, When I was younger, "My Side of the Mountain" and "Swiss Family Robinson" were favorites of mine.


Thanks for the thread, Quixote.

The Rape of the A.P.E. by Allan Sherman CBGLuthier Jun 2014 #1
A classic hobbit709 Jun 2014 #206
I read that book when I was about 16 mockmonkey Jun 2014 #285
Zinn's People's History. mattclearing Jun 2014 #2
+1....me too. n/t jaysunb Jun 2014 #16
+1 Skeeter Barnes Jun 2014 #36
Black Beauty elleng Jun 2014 #3
That is my favorite book! femmocrat Jun 2014 #4
I preferred a different horse story... Scootaloo Jun 2014 #93
That one's nice too, elleng Jun 2014 #94
"Earth in the Balance" and "The Assault on Reason" Uncle Joe Jun 2014 #5
I loved 'My Side of the Mountain' so much. Bluenorthwest Jun 2014 #17
"Great Expectations" "The Grapes of Wrath" and Uncle Joe Jun 2014 #29
Grapes of Wrath. Read it in my early teens during the depression days. Struck home, although lumpy Jun 2014 #54
Three books: Maedhros Jun 2014 #6
"My First Reader". greatauntoftriplets Jun 2014 #7
Loved the catalogues my school would send home with us! Quixote1818 Jun 2014 #20
a toss up between Ed Abbey's Monkeywrench Gang and Desert Solitaire NightWatcher Jun 2014 #8
I was a monkey-wrencher before he wrote the book... Bigmack Jun 2014 #18
have you read Dave Foreman's Ecodefense? NightWatcher Jun 2014 #40
WC Hazlitt's Dictionary of Faith and Folklore My Good Babushka Jun 2014 #9
Your Money Or Your Life, by Joe Dominguez and Vicki Robin. closeupready Jun 2014 #10
That is a good book indeed. Arugula Latte Jun 2014 #13
Ulysses - I realised that either I am not crazy or I am not the only crazy one. djean111 Jun 2014 #11
Chomsky's Propaganda and the Public Mind. n/t Whisp Jun 2014 #12
How To Solve It by Polya berni_mccoy Jun 2014 #14
I feel I missed out. I read that book literally 50 years ago and wasnt influenced. rhett o rick Jun 2014 #283
I could answer a thousand ways. But I go with 'Slaughterhouse Five or The Children's Crusade' Bluenorthwest Jun 2014 #15
I've read so many books, I can't point to just one Aerows Jun 2014 #19
The Giving Tree. Raine1967 Jun 2014 #21
The Happy Hocky Family. NuclearDem Jun 2014 #22
I used to read that to my kids (now 9 and 12.) ileus Jun 2014 #168
Whatever book I happen to be reading at the moment. justiceischeap Jun 2014 #23
Indeed, there have been so many books for so long. uppityperson Jun 2014 #256
"Silent Spring" & "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee" n/t countryjake Jun 2014 #24
Mine too. I would just add Giovanni's Room by James Baldwin. LoisB Jun 2014 #163
Slaughterhouse Five perhaps tkmorris Jun 2014 #25
And Player Piano for me MannyGoldstein Jun 2014 #230
Player Piano gets badly neglected when it comes to dystopian scenarios. JVS Jun 2014 #279
Being a Rebel I am going with the Torah. dilby Jun 2014 #26
The Viet-Nam folly by Sen. Ernest Gruening louis c Jun 2014 #27
Excellent history of the early US involvement in Vietnam FuzzyRabbit Jun 2014 #37
"A Confederacy of Dunces"... that, or "Lord of the Rings" opiate69 Jun 2014 #28
"To Kill a Mockingbird". Puglover Jun 2014 #30
That and "The Social History of Art" by Arnold Hauser... CTyankee Jun 2014 #41
Me too. Lint Head Jun 2014 #57
Mine, too wryter2000 Jun 2014 #186
Catch 22 RGinNJ Jun 2014 #31
Excellent lark Jun 2014 #175
Yes an awesome read LiberalLovinLug Jun 2014 #226
If we are talking about greatest influence, "Catch 22" is high on my list. "Catcher in the Rye." rhett o rick Jun 2014 #280
Probably James Scott, Weapons of the Weak BainsBane Jun 2014 #32
As i explained in another post... Scootaloo Jun 2014 #33
My favorites as a child BainsBane Jun 2014 #146
Howards End- EM Forster. "....Only Connect" cali Jun 2014 #34
"The Jungle" MinneapolisMatt Jun 2014 #35
In my top ten for most influential. nm rhett o rick Jun 2014 #281
August 1956 issue of MAD magazne FuzzyRabbit Jun 2014 #38
welcome to DU and I will second that rurallib Jun 2014 #277
Actually, the Bible. nt kelliekat44 Jun 2014 #39
Silent Spring, Unequal Justice, PDJane Jun 2014 #42
This message was self-deleted by its author Warren DeMontague Jun 2014 #43
Riverside Shakespeare GusBob Jun 2014 #44
Thomas Paine's "Age of Reason" Skidmore Jun 2014 #45
The People's Almanac KamaAina Jun 2014 #46
The Tao Te Ching Warren DeMontague Jun 2014 #47
I would say The Tao Te Ching has had a profound impact on me as well. liberal_at_heart Jun 2014 #234
Catcher in the Rye edbermac Jun 2014 #48
I don't know what influence, exactly, Catcher in the Rye had on me, but I felt that Dark n Stormy Knight Jun 2014 #202
Whatever book confers cred upon me and makes me look hip and edgy, yet soulful. Dreamer Tatum Jun 2014 #49
You're a real jerk. japple Jun 2014 #71
You'd read 50 Shades of Grey to a roomful of orphans? You're sick, man. Real sick. Gravitycollapse Jun 2014 #83
Haha btrflykng9 Jun 2014 #97
My book is, and could be for you too is "Looking out for #1" by Robert J. Ringer nolabels Jun 2014 #102
Nothing would, for you. You're beyond that kind of help. Starry Messenger Jun 2014 #216
Cheerful fellow. hrmjustin Jun 2014 #218
You want a book that makes you look creddy and hedgeful? Warren DeMontague Jun 2014 #242
Whatever book conifers crud upon me and makes my hips look pudgy, yet slothful. betsuni Jun 2014 #244
Perhaps a book about overweight pinecones! Warren DeMontague Jun 2014 #245
We'll sign you up for "The Basketball Diaries" JVS Jun 2014 #273
Well well. Kingofalldems Jun 2014 #292
The books of Lois Lenski. My mother strongly encouraged reading. She would japple Jun 2014 #50
oh, Lois Lenski! grasswire Jun 2014 #60
Not yet, grasswire, but I still have my library card!!! Will check them out this week! japple Jun 2014 #69
the Moffat stories take place in the Depression. grasswire Jun 2014 #112
I loved Lois Lenski books when I was sufrommich Jun 2014 #118
What a find! You really were in the right place at the right time. japple Jun 2014 #152
"Warday" (1984) Newsjock Jun 2014 #51
"Warday" is a good book. James Kunetka and Whitley Strieber also wrote a book Louisiana1976 Jun 2014 #187
Yup, I have that one, too Newsjock Jun 2014 #193
Death of a Salesman elephant hunter Jun 2014 #52
Sartre's "Nausea" betsuni Jun 2014 #53
Autobiography of a Yogi. nt WhiteTara Jun 2014 #55
' The Painted Bird ' Jerzey Kosinski ' . orpupilofnature57 Jun 2014 #56
It's been years since I thought about that book mokawanis Jun 2014 #182
The Iliad. Iggo Jun 2014 #58
Moby Dick. pnwmom Jun 2014 #59
Moby Dick is an awesome book. JVS Jun 2014 #274
Paul Foster Case- all of his writing. KittyWampus Jun 2014 #61
"Be Here Now" by Ram Dass. scarletwoman Jun 2014 #62
Yes, yesphan Jun 2014 #272
Fire in the Lake: The Vietnamese and the Americans in Vietnam OutNow Jun 2014 #63
Dr. Seuss did it for me. GeorgeGist Jun 2014 #64
G.G. Simpson's The Meaning of Evolution HereSince1628 Jun 2014 #65
Proving I am not an intellectual .... etherealtruth Jun 2014 #66
The Fall by Camus. kairos12 Jun 2014 #133
Get Shorty TeamPooka Jun 2014 #67
Siddhartha kentuck Jun 2014 #68
I won't say that's my favorite, or had the 'biggest' influence on me Erich Bloodaxe BSN Jun 2014 #92
The reason it influenced me so much... kentuck Jun 2014 #293
Great pick. nt Mojorabbit Jun 2014 #170
That and ' Steppenwolf ' as a young man were mindblowing . orpupilofnature57 Jun 2014 #188
Yes, Steppenwolf was life changing for me LiberalLovinLug Jun 2014 #222
Yep G_j Jun 2014 #221
The Chalice and the Blade by Riane Eisler, read as an adult. Hekate Jun 2014 #70
That is one of mine too. Squinch Jun 2014 #101
One of my favorites, too. scarletwoman Jun 2014 #104
I have quite a few shelves in my library keeping Chalice company. It was a wonderful time for me. Hekate Jun 2014 #115
I can very much relate. Yes, it makes sense to me. scarletwoman Jun 2014 #121
spiritual midwifery - ina may gaskin hopemountain Jun 2014 #195
Ah, yes! That book was my guide when I had my 2nd child at home with midwives, after my 1st child scarletwoman Jun 2014 #196
wonderful! hopemountain Jun 2014 #197
If I had only known enough when I had my 1st child, I think I might have been able to avoid scarletwoman Jun 2014 #198
The Encyclopedia of Women's Myths and Secrets is a "must-have" IMHO Coventina Jun 2014 #297
Loved that one. Along with the following: Coventina Jun 2014 #296
Three off the bat... malokvale77 Jun 2014 #72
The 3 volume biography of Lord Byron by Leslie Marchand. randome Jun 2014 #73
Fifty Shades of Grey ohheckyeah Jun 2014 #74
For a Twlight fanfic.... moriah Jun 2014 #84
There is a really interesting book by William Pitt and Scott Ritter madinmaryland Jun 2014 #75
What's the title? btrflykng9 Jun 2014 #99
Here you go: Art_from_Ark Jun 2014 #144
Thanks so much ! btrflykng9 Jun 2014 #169
Thom Hartmann. yourout Jun 2014 #76
"What Would Jefferson Do." rhett o rick Jun 2014 #282
Horton Hears a Who The Blue Flower Jun 2014 #77
Gravity's Rainbow for fiction. The History of Sexuality for non-fiction. Gravitycollapse Jun 2014 #78
If It is Only One Book it Would Have to be the Bible, On the Road Jun 2014 #79
Dick, Jane & Sally. Puff & Spot too. catbyte Jun 2014 #80
1984. A work of genius. immoderate Jun 2014 #81
All Quiet on tthe Western Front CanonRay Jun 2014 #82
I really liked that one too A Little Weird Jun 2014 #123
Good one. Another, Johnny Got His Gun. Hoyt Jun 2014 #192
Autobiographies have always fascinated me davidpdx Jun 2014 #85
Cats Cradle abelenkpe Jun 2014 #86
Thoreau's "Walden" MineralMan Jun 2014 #87
I have a small edition of "Walden," truly a pocket book (3" x 4.5"). . . Journeyman Jun 2014 #127
Difficult to pick just one Prophet 451 Jun 2014 #88
Probably "The Grapes of Wrath" by Steinbeck... Wounded Bear Jun 2014 #89
Diet for a Small Planet roody Jun 2014 #90
+1 Make7 Jun 2014 #260
Cosmos n/t Shankapotomus Jun 2014 #91
Ditto.... JohnnyRingo Jun 2014 #235
The World According To Garp... The Electric Kool Aid Acid Test... Childhood's End...Cosmos... WillyT Jun 2014 #95
Wow, Electric Kool Aid Acid Test lark Jun 2014 #176
"A Tale of Two Cities"..Charles Dickens and "No No Boy"... John Okada... Tikki Jun 2014 #96
" A tale of two cities" Texasgal Jun 2014 #120
the bible Puzzledtraveller Jun 2014 #98
The bible Stryst Jun 2014 #209
Acts, In particular the stoning of Stephen and Saul's conversion. Puzzledtraveller Jun 2014 #217
Gotta go with the cop out answer Erich Bloodaxe BSN Jun 2014 #100
It's hard to pick just one. Blue_In_AK Jun 2014 #103
The Communist Manifesto - TBF Jun 2014 #105
Autobiography of Malcolm X H2O Man Jun 2014 #106
This is the one I always think of first. bigmonkey Jun 2014 #190
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. RandySF Jun 2014 #107
All Quiet on the Western Front, Benton D Struckcheon Jun 2014 #108
Catch-22 and War and Peace. Tierra_y_Libertad Jun 2014 #109
The Jungle - Upton Sinclair Gemini Cat Jun 2014 #110
Stephen King's IT. Drunken Irishman Jun 2014 #111
Grapes of Wrath. I read the book in high school. Autumn Jun 2014 #113
Revolutionary Non-Violence, by Dave Dellenger was one of them. Zorra Jun 2014 #114
'The Art of Loving' by Erich Fromm, given to me by my dad at age 12. freshwest Jun 2014 #116
Influence-wise, it would have to be "Sophie's Choice". blue neen Jun 2014 #117
I would have to say every Laura Ingalls Wilder sufrommich Jun 2014 #119
I was obsessed with those books! betsuni Jun 2014 #122
Roget's thesaurus. nt valerief Jun 2014 #124
1984 / Atlas Shrugged / Starship Troopers / The Jungle / Winning Through Intimidation ... Demo_Chris Jun 2014 #125
Maybe I shouldn't make this comment... BillZBubb Jun 2014 #129
Fair enough. You have to consider it in context... Demo_Chris Jun 2014 #143
I'll back you up Chris, but it was Fountainhead for me LiberalLovinLug Jun 2014 #229
I disagree. Although not influential it is an important book to read. rhett o rick Jun 2014 #284
I can't believe anyone here would admit ... oldhippie Jun 2014 #130
Most Democrats aren't afraid of ideas, and if it did... Demo_Chris Jun 2014 #140
I read Atlas Shrugged JVS Jun 2014 #275
"The Peg-Legged Pirate of Sulu" . . . Journeyman Jun 2014 #126
Lord Foul's Bane. KG Jun 2014 #128
I love Donaldson Stryst Jun 2014 #207
Alcoholics Anonymous Lil Missy Jun 2014 #131
The Sunlight Dialogs by John Gardner... Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold farmbo Jun 2014 #132
Carlos Castaneda...several books. elias49 Jun 2014 #134
"Generations" by William Strauss and Neil Howe. SheilaT Jun 2014 #135
3 books gwheezie Jun 2014 #136
Various Chilton's manuals Throd Jun 2014 #137
Yeah, I would never have rebuilt that 70 Maverick without it. WCLinolVir Jun 2014 #227
the Dictionary kentauros Jun 2014 #138
Be Here Now by Ram Dass KaryninMiami Jun 2014 #139
Jane Roberts' Seth Books PADemD Jun 2014 #141
Proudhon's "What is Property?" joshcryer Jun 2014 #142
Songs of the Doomed, by Hunter S. Thompson jmowreader Jun 2014 #145
The Giving Tree and To Kill a Mockingbird Bettie Jun 2014 #147
Truth be known, "A Child's History of the World" in 2nd grade. Began my life-long Anglophilia AND WinkyDink Jun 2014 #148
If I had to pick only one, it would be "Slaughterhouse-5" deutsey Jun 2014 #149
Wayyyyyyy back in time dixiegrrrrl Jun 2014 #150
"The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark" - Sagan scheming daemons Jun 2014 #151
The dialogues of Plato. nt ladjf Jun 2014 #153
The Ugly American RoverSuswade Jun 2014 #154
Battlefield Earth... JCMach1 Jun 2014 #155
The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins. Skinner Jun 2014 #156
So many to choose from, really! pipi_k Jun 2014 #157
Off The Top RobinA Jun 2014 #158
I remember "The Lottery" DFW Jun 2014 #184
Jitterbug Perfume and Shibumi DFW Jun 2014 #185
jitterbug perfume is on my list, as well hopemountain Jun 2014 #201
That book had SO many great passages DFW Jun 2014 #231
"Godel, Escher, Bach" by Hofstadter was an important one 0rganism Jun 2014 #159
What do you tell people if/when they ask what GEB is about? Taitertots Jun 2014 #213
The true test of the immediate greatness of text is when its contents evade summation. Gravitycollapse Jun 2014 #214
Rise and Fall of the Great Powers by Paul Kennedy. LanternWaste Jun 2014 #160
A couple of obsurities... Atman Jun 2014 #161
I remember 21 Balloons. As for Herlihy, RufusTFirefly Jun 2014 #252
Thank you for that great recommendation!! I will get it! And thanks for the Jefferson quote. DesertDiamond Jun 2014 #162
You're welcome. nt Quixote1818 Jun 2014 #180
Grapes of Wrath, F&L in Las Vegas and Slaughterhouse Five. raouldukelives Jun 2014 #164
Back when I was just out of school, I read "Fahrenheit 451" It turned me into a reader. alfredo Jun 2014 #165
As I read through all of these great books, panader0 Jun 2014 #250
A friend gave us Bukowski as a wedding gift. Being newlyweds, we wrote our own Bukowski. alfredo Jun 2014 #257
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance stranger81 Jun 2014 #166
High on my list. nm rhett o rick Jun 2014 #286
Like others here... freebrew Jun 2014 #167
The Boat Rocker by Terrence Mann RedSpartan Jun 2014 #171
Most political influence: The Jungle LeftInTX Jun 2014 #172
'The Lords of Discipline,' Pat Conroy shenmue Jun 2014 #173
That would probably have been my number three DFW Jun 2014 #183
Be Here Now lark Jun 2014 #174
The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins. nt arthritisR_US Jun 2014 #177
Where the Red Fern Grows. N/T deathrind Jun 2014 #178
Tarzan of the Apes exboyfil Jun 2014 #179
This classic nadinbrzezinski Jun 2014 #181
'The Sound and the Fury' (Faulkner), 'The Metamorphosis' (Kafka). nomorenomore08 Jun 2014 #189
"The Sound and the Fury" is one of my favorites, too. LuvNewcastle Jun 2014 #239
He could do epic tragedy ('SatF,' 'Absalom Absalom!') or dark comedy ('As I Lay Dying') equally well nomorenomore08 Jun 2014 #243
Black Like Me. (2) - Atlas Shrugged in that it illustrated how dreary right wingers' Hoyt Jun 2014 #191
Read Griffen when I was 12. malthaussen Jun 2014 #204
I was 12 when BLMe was first published. Didn't read it until probably around 68. Hoyt Jun 2014 #228
The Glorious Burden secondvariety Jun 2014 #194
The Secret Life of Dust Agony Jun 2014 #199
Godel Escher Bach Taitertots Jun 2014 #200
I began reading I am a Strange Loop about a year ago and stopped. Gravitycollapse Jun 2014 #215
I recently bought I am a strange loop and I've stalled out on it too Taitertots Jun 2014 #223
Probably Steiner's Treblinka, since I take my sig from there. malthaussen Jun 2014 #203
The Bible, yes, and a few more Nonhlanhla Jun 2014 #205
Tough choice between Stryst Jun 2014 #208
Be Here Now by Ram Dass bananas Jun 2014 #210
What a difficult question. 3catwoman3 Jun 2014 #211
Anything by George Orwell antiGOPin294 Jun 2014 #212
Olaf Stapledon-Last And First Men hobbit709 Jun 2014 #219
There's a growing list of books that have influenced me... elzenmahn Jun 2014 #220
What a tough question. So many good reads. WCLinolVir Jun 2014 #224
I love "Notes From Underground." betsuni Jun 2014 #237
What a great idea. WCLinolVir Jul 2014 #298
Three standouts LiberalLovinLug Jun 2014 #225
My pet goat The Straight Story Jun 2014 #232
The Pali Canon liberal_at_heart Jun 2014 #233
Spiderman by Stan Lee Midnight Writer Jun 2014 #236
Book, or wilderness area? grahamhgreen Jun 2014 #238
The Complete Plays of William Shakespeare. snot Jun 2014 #240
When I think about it, a few very different ones come to mind. LuvNewcastle Jun 2014 #241
Les Miserables... Godot51 Jun 2014 #246
Since it is Not mentioned I have to say that one of the books that so influenced me was fasttense Jun 2014 #247
One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish eShirl Jun 2014 #248
The Sneetches and Other Stories, by Dr. Seuss. Really RufusTFirefly Jun 2014 #249
One of the first I remember.... panader0 Jun 2014 #251
Even Cowgirls Get the Blues - Tom Robbins angel823 Jun 2014 #253
A Tale of Two Cities..... bowens43 Jun 2014 #254
Cannibals and Kings: Origins of Cultures -- by Marvin Harris Petrushka Jun 2014 #255
Marvin Harris' books should be required reading in high school betsuni Jun 2014 #267
The Findhorn Garden ~ toby jo Jun 2014 #258
Hustler - I know a magazine but close enough! Exposethefrauds Jun 2014 #259
Green Eggs and Ham Dr. Seuss bobGandolf Jun 2014 #261
"Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintainance" and "Another Roadsie Attraction" Armstead Jun 2014 #262
Salem's Lot by Stephen King SomethingFishy Jun 2014 #263
"Bury my Heart at Wounded Knee" ismnotwasm Jun 2014 #264
50 Simple Things You Can Do To Save The Earth WatermelonRat Jun 2014 #265
biggest influence... kardonb Jun 2014 #266
Don Quixote... (kidding)... "Man's Search for Meaning", maybe? devils chaplain Jun 2014 #268
Tom Corbett and the Space Cadets. Rozlee Jun 2014 #269
Illusions by Richrd Bach icarusxat Jun 2014 #270
Baby Steps Shankapotomus Jun 2014 #271
I'm sailing, I'm really sailing.... giftedgirl77 Jun 2014 #278
LOL. I approve. nm rhett o rick Jun 2014 #287
The Chemical Rubber Tables rogerashton Jun 2014 #276
"The Shock Doctrine" is high on my list. nm rhett o rick Jun 2014 #288
Many! KatyMan Jun 2014 #289
Cavett by Dick Cavett mockmonkey Jun 2014 #290
Swiss Family Robinson dem in texas Jun 2014 #291
The Cosmos...Carl Sagan. nt clarice Jun 2014 #294
As a child: The Chronicles of Narnia by C. S. Lewis Coventina Jun 2014 #295
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»What Book had the biggest...»Reply #5