What’s her name
>>25303356Gargantua and Pantagruel. I've never met someone irl who's even heard of Rabelais.
>>25303360I've read it in both English and French. It's also often mentioned by anons here when someone asks for French lit recs
>>25303356Aurelien
Ulysses, GR etc. My family seems to be more into magical realism, your standard realists and Mann, while my coworkers are into sci-fi. STEM field so I guess that's a given.
>>25303356Buddha's Little Finger by Victor Pelevin
>>25303360I've read the Urquhart translation, which is an English classic.
Andrei BelyHamannSchellingHeraclitus
>>25303406I always forget, is that by Nerval or Aragon?
>>25303481Aragon. Aurelia is the one by Nerval
>>25303439>HeraclitusYeah if you are to go by stuff the average normie doesn’t know about (basically only excluding Plato and Marcus Aurelius) I’d go with Heraclitus. He got it all - Monism and physics of change- correct almost 3,000 thousand years ago.
porius
>>25303356Dunno. I haven't read it.
>>25303481Retard
>>25303356The Greek Alexander Romance
>>25303680harsh
>>25303356The Bible.
>>25303356Memoirs of hadrian is one of my favorite books and i don't even see threads of it on /lit/
>>25303380which is better, the english or the french original
A Tale of the Tub is the funniest resign on church history in existence
Pseud thread.