>Try reading Bell Curve >First three chapter is light background on history of IQ and lots of repeating themselves>Get bored and read Wealth of Nations>It's a lot of 'no shit' as I have a degree in economicsI can't tell if me not reading seriously for a decade is the reason or I they were bad picksI had The Prince and The Republic lined up but now I'm too intimidatedWhat's a fun book in a similar line to the books mentioned above to get me back into reading?
>>23628658>I can't tell if me not reading seriously for a decade is the reason or I they were bad picksIt's definitely the prior, as you should be aware of the importance of historical context when reading works. Of course the Wealth of Nations will go over some obvious points, but it's also valuable for you to understand the development of economics. Just read what you LIKE, start with more entertaining easy stuff. Maybe read fiction instead of non-fiction.
>>23628664I'll try reading The Silmarilliion again, thanks for the advice.
>>23628658There is so much fucking irony in your post, you racist sack of normie shit.
>>23628682
>>23628658>>Get bored and read Wealth of NationsWell I've never personally read it, but the idea of a foundational work is that it influences everything that came after. So if you're familiar with modern economics, you're probably not going to learn much from Wealth of Nations because you've had a dozen classes that are all downstream from it. Same for random tech guys that read Art of War expecting to get a deep understanding of how to deal with people interpersonally or whatever they read it for, it's a book that was extremely meaningful for a specific purpose (giving nepotism generals an idea of good tactics) and will be less meaningful outside of that. Unfortunately I can't give you much advice on your actual question as I do not read books, but I when I read a third of Moby Dick a few months ago I thought it was very good and didn't deserve it's reputation. Maybe start there and see if it catches you.
>>23628717>but I when I read a third of Moby Dick a few months ago I thought it was very good and didn't deserve it's reputationWhat reputation? I read the book and liked it as did many others as can be seen from it being continued to be culturally relevant to this day.Who doesn't like Moby Dick?
>>23628682>have a heccin normal one immediately or you are a normieThat doesn't quite compute, does it?
>>23628728Me, it's shit
>>23628822Yeah only thing about the book I remember is finding the part with the indian and his casket funny
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