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* [https://www.amazon.co.uk/What-Name-This-Book-Recreational/dp/0486481980 What is the Name of this Book]: Raymond Smullyan | * [https://www.amazon.co.uk/What-Name-This-Book-Recreational/dp/0486481980 What is the Name of this Book]: Raymond Smullyan | ||
* [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Thought-Contagion-International-Engineering-Paperback/dp/B00FDVRANQ Thought Contagion]: How Ideas Act Like Viruses - Aaron Lynch | * [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Thought-Contagion-International-Engineering-Paperback/dp/B00FDVRANQ Thought Contagion]: How Ideas Act Like Viruses - Aaron Lynch | ||
* [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Language-Thought-Other-Biological-Categories/dp/0262631156 Language, Thought, and other Biological Categories]: New Foundations for Realism - Ruth Garrett Millikan | * [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Language-Thought-Other-Biological-Categories/dp/0262631156 Language, Thought, and other Biological Categories]: New Foundations for Realism - Ruth Garrett Millikan | ||
Paperbacks: | Paperbacks: | ||
* Born on a Blue Day - Daniel Tammet | |||
* Pellis - [https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1851687602/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?ie=UTF8&dib_tag=se&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.H3yYZI7yMy8UMo0DZRtBXC7wbyUv2gRGlVcNGkDlLMJgXzHKvH1465fjUMkPxFfF6Gy4SxJZF5iHJj2-KPFajMqmXBiYahwhe5kfd66JSukAwSqbKylXct02KUMpWpWQCIW6bCM_Ht6bSd14GU33N14R__7O6CnhnzxNZy9X2zb3i5AfMj6mzwHRCKmg4ksQwKR6te7VhUOppALivblKNw.VKJXzbK6PkVwM-NWQcVACHw9NKJAMBuwXSLAEcjus40&qid=1775903643&sr=8-1 The Playful Brain] | |||
* Strauss - The Three Waves of Modernity | |||
* Peter Handke - Insulting the Audience | * Peter Handke - Insulting the Audience | ||
* Lorrie Moore - Self Help | * Lorrie Moore - Self Help | ||
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* [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Alpha-Omega-Jane-Ellen-Harrison/dp/1961341417 Alpha and Omega] - Jane Ellen Harrison | * [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Alpha-Omega-Jane-Ellen-Harrison/dp/1961341417 Alpha and Omega] - Jane Ellen Harrison | ||
* [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Willard-Gibbs-Whole-Simpler-Parts/dp/1961341158 the Whole is Simpler than its Parts] - Willard Gibbs | * [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Willard-Gibbs-Whole-Simpler-Parts/dp/1961341158 the Whole is Simpler than its Parts] - Willard Gibbs | ||
* [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Stranger-Than-Fiction-Lives-Twentieth-Century/dp/152992572X Stranger Than Fiction]: Lives of the Twentieth-Century Novel - Edwin Frank | * [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Stranger-Than-Fiction-Lives-Twentieth-Century/dp/152992572X Stranger Than Fiction]: Lives of the Twentieth-Century Novel - Edwin Frank | ||
* [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Gray-Matters-Biography-Brain-Surgery/dp/1836430396 Gray Matters]: A Biography of Brain Surgery - Theodore Schwartz | * [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Gray-Matters-Biography-Brain-Surgery/dp/1836430396 Gray Matters]: A Biography of Brain Surgery - Theodore Schwartz | ||
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Hardbacks: | Hardbacks: | ||
* Mark Solms - The Only Cure - Freud and Neuroscience | |||
* [https://kottke.org/26/03/beginning-comes-after-the-end The Beginning Comes After the End] - Rebecca Solnit | * [https://kottke.org/26/03/beginning-comes-after-the-end The Beginning Comes After the End] - Rebecca Solnit | ||
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* [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Story-CO2-Everything-Planetary-Experiment/dp/0241631165 The Story of CO2 Is the Story of Everything]: A Planetary Experiment | * [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Story-CO2-Everything-Planetary-Experiment/dp/0241631165 The Story of CO2 Is the Story of Everything]: A Planetary Experiment | ||
* [https://www.amazon.co.uk/M%C3%B6bius-Book-Catherine-Lacey/dp/1803511494 the moebius book] - Catherine Lacey | * [https://www.amazon.co.uk/M%C3%B6bius-Book-Catherine-Lacey/dp/1803511494 the moebius book] - Catherine Lacey | ||
* Chance and Necessity - Jacques Monod | * Chance and Necessity - Jacques Monod | ||
* L'homme microscopique - Pierre Auger | * L'homme microscopique - Pierre Auger | ||
* Why Machines Learn: The Elegant Maths Behind Modern AI (out in paperback Jan 30 2025) | * Why Machines Learn: The Elegant Maths Behind Modern AI (out in paperback Jan 30 2025) | ||
* A History of the Muslim World: From Its Origins to the Dawn of Modernity (awaiting paperback) | * A History of the Muslim World: From Its Origins to the Dawn of Modernity (awaiting paperback) | ||
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== Books to Read == | == Books to Read == | ||
* [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Gertrude-Stein-Afterlife-Francesca-Wade/dp/0571369316][https://www.amazon.co.uk/Open-Socrates-Case-Philosophical-Life/dp/0141994835 Gertrude Stein: An Afterlife] | |||
* Reading to Learn - William Zinger | * Reading to Learn - William Zinger | ||
* Breakfast of Champions - Kurt Vonnegut | * Breakfast of Champions - Kurt Vonnegut | ||
== Currently Reading == | == Currently Reading == | ||
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*[[Understanding Media]] - Marshall McLuhan (re-read) | *[[Understanding Media]] - Marshall McLuhan (re-read) | ||
*[[The Practice of Not Thinking]]: A Guide to Mindful Living - Ryunosuke Koike | *[[The Practice of Not Thinking]]: A Guide to Mindful Living - Ryunosuke Koike | ||
* | * | ||
== Books Read == | == Books Read == | ||
=== 2026 (week | === 2026 (week 24) === | ||
* 25. [[Once Upon a Prime]]:The Wondrous Connections Between Mathematics and Literature - Sarah B. Hart | |||
* 24. [[Short Stories in German for Beginners]] - Olly Richards (reread - with Ricky) | |||
* 23. Books v. Cigarettes - George Orwell | |||
* 22. Der Nasse Fische - Volker Kutscher (in German!) | |||
* 21. [[We Are Our Brains: From the Womb to Alzheimer's]] - Dick Swaab | |||
* 20. [[Gertrude Stein: An Afterlife]] - Francesca Wade | |||
* 19. [[How the World Made the West]] - Josephine Quinn | |||
* 18. [[Formulations on the Two Principles of Mental Functioning]] - Sigmund Freud | |||
* 17. [[This is Your Mind on Plants]]: Opium - Caffeine - Mescaline - Michael Pollen | |||
* 16. [[Open Socrates]]: The Case for a Philosophical Life - Agnes Callard | |||
* 15. [[Consciousness: How Our Brains Turn Matter Into Meaning]] - John Parrington | |||
*14. [[The Happiness of Dogs]]: Why the Unexamined Life is Most Worth Living - Mark Rowlands | |||
*13. [[The Hidden Spring]] - Mark Solms | |||
*12. [[The Interpretation of Dreams]] - Sigmund Freud | |||
*11. [[A Certain Lucas]] - Julio Cortazar | |||
*10. [[The Intentional Stance]] - Daniel Dennett | |||
*9. [[La Conquête de Plassans]] ([[Les Rougon-Macquart]] 4) - Zola | *9. [[La Conquête de Plassans]] ([[Les Rougon-Macquart]] 4) - Zola | ||
*8. [[Why We Read Fiction]]: Theory of Mind and the Novel - Lisa Zunshine | *8. [[Why We Read Fiction]]: Theory of Mind and the Novel - Lisa Zunshine | ||
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* [[Gödel, Escher, Bach]] - Douglas Hofstadter | * [[Gödel, Escher, Bach]] - Douglas Hofstadter | ||
* [[From Bacteria to Bach and Back]] - Daniel Dennett | * [[From Bacteria to Bach and Back]] - Daniel Dennett | ||
== Challenging Books (per ChatGPT) == | |||
That’s a great (and slippery) question, because “challenging” can mean different things: difficulty of language, density of allusion, fractured narrative structure, philosophical depth, or even sheer length. Here’s a map of novels often considered among the most challenging, grouped by ''what makes them hard'': | |||
---- | |||
=== 1. Language & Style Difficulties === | |||
* '''James Joyce – ''Finnegans Wake''''' (1939) Probably the hardest novel in English: dream-logic, multilingual puns, and invented words. | |||
* '''William Gaddis – ''The Recognitions'' (1955)''' and ''JR'' (1975) Huge cast, little exposition, dialogue-driven (often without quotation marks). | |||
* '''Samuel Beckett – ''The Unnamable'' (1953)''' Interior monologue collapsing into language itself; syntax dissolves. | |||
---- | |||
=== 2. Length & Scope === | |||
* '''Marcel Proust – ''In Search of Lost Time''''' (1913–27) ~4,000 pages, long sentences, obsessive detail, profound reflections on memory. | |||
* '''David Foster Wallace – ''Infinite Jest'' (1996)''' ~1,000 pages + 100 pages of endnotes; encyclopedic, fragmented plotlines. | |||
* '''Norman Mailer – ''Harlot’s Ghost'' (1991)''' or ''Ancient Evenings'' (1983) Dense, sprawling, philosophically ambitious. | |||
---- | |||
=== 3. Experimental Structure === | |||
* '''Thomas Pynchon – ''Gravity’s Rainbow'' (1973)''' Fragmented narrative, technical language, paranoia, hundreds of characters. | |||
* '''Clarice Lispector – ''The Passion According to G.H.'' (1964)''' A single, intense interior monologue; metaphysical and unsettling. | |||
* '''Julio Cortázar – ''Hopscotch'' (1963)''' Offers multiple reading orders; disruptive structure. | |||
---- | |||
=== 4. Philosophical / Esoteric Depth === | |||
* '''Hermann Broch – ''The Sleepwalkers'' (1931–32)''' Mixes fiction with philosophy and essay. | |||
* '''Robert Musil – ''The Man Without Qualities'' (1930–43)''' Massive unfinished modernist work, blending narrative with philosophical treatises. | |||
* '''Thomas Mann – ''Joseph and His Brothers'' (1933–43)''' Retells biblical myth with immense erudition and depth. | |||
---- | |||
=== 5. Dense Intertextuality === | |||
* '''James Joyce – ''Ulysses'' (1922)''' Homeric parallels, stylistic experiments, deep allusion to Irish politics and myth. | |||
* '''Roberto Bolaño – ''2666'' (2004)''' Five interlinked novels, ranging from literary criticism to detective fiction to Holocaust history. | |||
* '''José Lezama Lima – ''Paradiso'' (1966)''' Baroque Cuban prose, mythic density. | |||
---- | |||
=== 6. Postmodern Labyrinths === | |||
* '''Mark Z. Danielewski – ''House of Leaves'' (2000)''' Multiple narrators, typographical experimentation, layered commentary. | |||
* '''Viktor Pelevin – ''The Sacred Book of the Werewolf'' (2004)''' (or ''Generation “P”'') Satirical, reality-bending narratives. | |||
---- | |||
=== A few contenders often called “the hardest of the hard”: === | |||
* ''Finnegans Wake'' (Joyce) | |||
* ''The Recognitions'' (Gaddis) | |||
* ''The Man Without Qualities'' (Musil) | |||
* ''Gravity’s Rainbow'' (Pynchon) | |||
* ''In Search of Lost Time'' (Proust) | |||
[[Category:Books]] | [[Category:Books]] | ||
Latest revision as of 16:04, 5 June 2026
Books to Buy
Used:
- i know that you know that I know - George Butte Einstein, Gertrude Stein, Wittgenstein and Frankenstein : Reinventing the Universe by John Brockman
- Gormenghast - Mervyn Peake
- What is the Name of this Book: Raymond Smullyan
- Thought Contagion: How Ideas Act Like Viruses - Aaron Lynch
- Language, Thought, and other Biological Categories: New Foundations for Realism - Ruth Garrett Millikan
Paperbacks:
- Born on a Blue Day - Daniel Tammet
- Pellis - The Playful Brain
- Strauss - The Three Waves of Modernity
- Peter Handke - Insulting the Audience
- Lorrie Moore - Self Help
- La Modification - Michel Butor
- Un Homme qui dort - Georges Perec
- How Like a God - Rex Stout
- Time and Narrative - Paul Ricoeur
- Flight of Icarus - Raymond Queneau
- Nausea - Sartre
- Seven, Zed, etc by Joanna Kavenna. See blog.
- Building a second brain
- how to solve it
- Adam and Eve in Paradise - eca de queiros
- The Bounds of Possibility - Philosophy book about categories
- Nicola Barker - Tony Interrupter Happy, etc
- On Growth and Form - D'Arcy Thompson
- Alpha and Omega - Jane Ellen Harrison
- the Whole is Simpler than its Parts - Willard Gibbs
- Stranger Than Fiction: Lives of the Twentieth-Century Novel - Edwin Frank
- Gray Matters: A Biography of Brain Surgery - Theodore Schwartz
Hardbacks:
- Mark Solms - The Only Cure - Freud and Neuroscience
- The Beginning Comes After the End - Rebecca Solnit
- Being and Time Annotated or paraphrased ?
- Capitalism: A Global History-Sven Beckert
- Violent Saviors: How the West Conquered the Rest - William Easterly
- The master of contradictions: Thomas Mann and the making of the Magic Mountain
- The Story of CO2 Is the Story of Everything: A Planetary Experiment
- the moebius book - Catherine Lacey
- Chance and Necessity - Jacques Monod
- L'homme microscopique - Pierre Auger
- Why Machines Learn: The Elegant Maths Behind Modern AI (out in paperback Jan 30 2025)
- A History of the Muslim World: From Its Origins to the Dawn of Modernity (awaiting paperback)
- The New Roman Empire: A History of Byzantium
- Magnetic Mountain: Stalinism as Civilization
- Consolations - David Whyte
Books to Read
- Reading to Learn - William Zinger
- Breakfast of Champions - Kurt Vonnegut
Currently Reading
- Atomic Habits - James Clear
- Die Montez-Juwelen - Sabine Vôhringer
- The Book: A Cover-to-Covet Exploration of the Most Powerful Object of Our Time - Keith Houston
- Understanding Media - Marshall McLuhan (re-read)
- The Practice of Not Thinking: A Guide to Mindful Living - Ryunosuke Koike
Books Read
2026 (week 24)
- 25. Once Upon a Prime:The Wondrous Connections Between Mathematics and Literature - Sarah B. Hart
- 24. Short Stories in German for Beginners - Olly Richards (reread - with Ricky)
- 23. Books v. Cigarettes - George Orwell
- 22. Der Nasse Fische - Volker Kutscher (in German!)
- 21. We Are Our Brains: From the Womb to Alzheimer's - Dick Swaab
- 20. Gertrude Stein: An Afterlife - Francesca Wade
- 19. How the World Made the West - Josephine Quinn
- 18. Formulations on the Two Principles of Mental Functioning - Sigmund Freud
- 17. This is Your Mind on Plants: Opium - Caffeine - Mescaline - Michael Pollen
- 16. Open Socrates: The Case for a Philosophical Life - Agnes Callard
- 15. Consciousness: How Our Brains Turn Matter Into Meaning - John Parrington
- 14. The Happiness of Dogs: Why the Unexamined Life is Most Worth Living - Mark Rowlands
- 13. The Hidden Spring - Mark Solms
- 12. The Interpretation of Dreams - Sigmund Freud
- 11. A Certain Lucas - Julio Cortazar
- 10. The Intentional Stance - Daniel Dennett
- 9. La Conquête de Plassans (Les Rougon-Macquart 4) - Zola
- 8. Why We Read Fiction: Theory of Mind and the Novel - Lisa Zunshine
- 7. On the Calculation of Volume: 3 - Solvej Balle
- 6. Unnatural Voices: Extreme Narration in Modern and Contemporary Fiction - Brian Richardson
- 5. The Seven Dials Mystery - Agatha Christie
- 4. Le Ventre de Paris (Les Rougon-Macquart 3) - Zola
- 3. The Cambridge Introduction to Narrative (2nd Edition) - H. Porter Abbott
- 2. Autocracy Inc: The Dictators Who Want to Run the World - Anne Applebaum
- 1. The Secret Life of the Periodic Table - Dr Ben Still
2025
- 55. The White Priory Murders - Carter Dickson (re-read)
- 54. How Life Works: A User's Guide to the New Biology - Philip Ball
- 53. Who Killed Father Christmas? and Other Seasonal Mysteries - Martin Edwards
- 52. Chemistry: A Very Short Introduction - Peter Atkins
- 51. The Scheme of Things - Allen Wheelis
- 50. La Fortune des Rougon (Les Rougon-Macquart 1) - Zola
- 49. Cause for Alarm - Eric Ambler
- 48. The Man from the Future: The Visionary Life of John Von Neumann - Ananyo Bhattacharya
- 47. Everything is Predictable: How Bayes' Remarkable Theorem Explains the World - Tom Chivers
- 46. The Book on the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are - Alan Watts
- 45. La Curée (Les Rougon-Macquart 2) - Zola
- 44. The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer - Siddhartha Mukherjee
- 43. La Bête Humaine (Les Rougon-Macquart 17) - Zola (re-read)
- 42. The Society of Mind - Marvin Minsky
- 41. Le Père Goriot - Honore Balzac
- 40. Gravity's Rainbow - Thomas Pynchon (re-read)
- 39. Le Colonel Chabert - Balzac
- 38. Damned to Fame: The Life of Samuel Beckett - James Knowlson (re-read)
- 37. Reading for the Plot: Design and Intention in Narrative - Peter Brooks (re-read)
- 36. Steps to an Ecology of Mind - Gregory Bateson (re-read)
- 35. Le Bilan de L'intelligence - Paul Valéry
- 34. Zero - Charles Seife
- 33. Alan Turing: The Enigma - Andrew Hodges
- 32. How to Do Things with Words - J L Austin
- 31. The Human Use of Human Beings: Cybernetics and Society - Norbert Wiener
- 30. The Mind is Flat: The Illusion of Mental Depth and the Improvised Mind - Nick Chater
- 29. Possible Minds: 25 Ways of Looking at AI - John Brockman
- 28. A Little History of Philosophy - Nigel Warburton
- 27. All Fours - Miranda July
- 26. Metamagical Themas: Questing for the Essence of Mind and Pattern - Douglas R Hofstadter
- 25. The French Lieutenant’s Woman - John Fowles
- 24. Short Stories in German for Beginners - Olly Richards
- 23. On the Calculation of Volume: 2 - Solvej Balle
- 22. Deep Simplicity: Chaos, Complexity, and the Emergence of Life - John Gribbin
- 21. Das Ludwig Thoma Komplott- Sabine Vöhringer
- 20. Maus - Art Spiegelman
- 19. On the Calculation of Volume: 1 - Solvej Balle
- 18. The Concept of Mind - Gilbert Ryle
- 17. Cognitive Neuroscience: A Very Short Introduction - Richard Passingham
- 16. The Experience Machine - Andy Clark
- 15. Why We Remember: Revealing the Hidden Power of Memory - Dr Charan Ranganath
- 14. From Bacteria to Bach and Back - Daniel Dennett (re-read)
- 13. The Village of Eight Graves - Seishi Yokomizo
- 12. Science: A History - Richard Crockett
- 11. Vienna: How the City of Ideas Created the Modern World - John Gribbin
- 10.The Inugami Curse - Seishi Yokomizo
- 9. The Rise and Reign of the Mammals
- 8. Four Ways of Thinking - David Sumpter
- 7. I've Been Thinking - Daniel Dennett
- 6. Serendipities: Language and Lunacy - Umberto Eco
- 5. I Am Dynamite: A Life of Friedrich Nietzsche - Sue Prideaux
- 4. A Brief History of Intelligence - Max S. Bennett
- 3. Foucault’s Pendulum - Umberto Eco (re-read)
- 2. Kant and the Platypus - Umberto Eco
- 1. Le cerveau m’a beaucoup déçu. L’esprit, non - Antoine Sénanque
2024
- The Plot - Will Eisner
- The Prague Cemetery - Umberto Eco
- The Nonjin Murders - Seishi Yokomizo
- When We Cease to Understand the World - Labatut
- Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance - Robert Pirsig (reread)
- The Way We Think: Conceptual Blending and the Mind’s Hidden Complexities - Fauconnier and Turner
- The Singularity is Nearer - Ray Kurzweil
- Physics and Philosophy - Werner Heisenberg
- Le Ton Beau de…
- The Origins of Creativity - Edward O Wilson
- Psychonauts -
- The MANIAC - Benjamin Labatut
- In Search of Memory - Eric R. Kandel
- Dreaming: A Very Short Introduction - Hobson
- Les Effinger - Gabriele Target
- Triad - Tom Keve
- Nietzsche - Stefan Zweig
- The Weirdest People in the World - Joseph Henrich
- How Language Works - David Crystal
- The Invention of Nature - Andrea Wolf
- The Song of the Cell - Siddhartha Mukherjee
- Gödel, Escher, Bach - Douglas Hofstadter
- From Bacteria to Bach and Back - Daniel Dennett
Challenging Books (per ChatGPT)
That’s a great (and slippery) question, because “challenging” can mean different things: difficulty of language, density of allusion, fractured narrative structure, philosophical depth, or even sheer length. Here’s a map of novels often considered among the most challenging, grouped by what makes them hard:
1. Language & Style Difficulties
- James Joyce – Finnegans Wake (1939) Probably the hardest novel in English: dream-logic, multilingual puns, and invented words.
- William Gaddis – The Recognitions (1955) and JR (1975) Huge cast, little exposition, dialogue-driven (often without quotation marks).
- Samuel Beckett – The Unnamable (1953) Interior monologue collapsing into language itself; syntax dissolves.
2. Length & Scope
- Marcel Proust – In Search of Lost Time (1913–27) ~4,000 pages, long sentences, obsessive detail, profound reflections on memory.
- David Foster Wallace – Infinite Jest (1996) ~1,000 pages + 100 pages of endnotes; encyclopedic, fragmented plotlines.
- Norman Mailer – Harlot’s Ghost (1991) or Ancient Evenings (1983) Dense, sprawling, philosophically ambitious.
3. Experimental Structure
- Thomas Pynchon – Gravity’s Rainbow (1973) Fragmented narrative, technical language, paranoia, hundreds of characters.
- Clarice Lispector – The Passion According to G.H. (1964) A single, intense interior monologue; metaphysical and unsettling.
- Julio Cortázar – Hopscotch (1963) Offers multiple reading orders; disruptive structure.
4. Philosophical / Esoteric Depth
- Hermann Broch – The Sleepwalkers (1931–32) Mixes fiction with philosophy and essay.
- Robert Musil – The Man Without Qualities (1930–43) Massive unfinished modernist work, blending narrative with philosophical treatises.
- Thomas Mann – Joseph and His Brothers (1933–43) Retells biblical myth with immense erudition and depth.
5. Dense Intertextuality
- James Joyce – Ulysses (1922) Homeric parallels, stylistic experiments, deep allusion to Irish politics and myth.
- Roberto Bolaño – 2666 (2004) Five interlinked novels, ranging from literary criticism to detective fiction to Holocaust history.
- José Lezama Lima – Paradiso (1966) Baroque Cuban prose, mythic density.
6. Postmodern Labyrinths
- Mark Z. Danielewski – House of Leaves (2000) Multiple narrators, typographical experimentation, layered commentary.
- Viktor Pelevin – The Sacred Book of the Werewolf (2004) (or Generation “P”) Satirical, reality-bending narratives.
A few contenders often called “the hardest of the hard”:
- Finnegans Wake (Joyce)
- The Recognitions (Gaddis)
- The Man Without Qualities (Musil)
- Gravity’s Rainbow (Pynchon)
- In Search of Lost Time (Proust)