Books I Wish I Had Known About A Few Years Ago But Not So Long Ago That I Would Have Annoyingly Regurgitated Their Content:- The Outsider (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Outsider_%28Colin_Wilson%29) by Colin Wilson.
I picked up this book for $1.25 at the local library, after the name on the spine caught my attention. It turned out to be exactly what I hope to find, but never do--amidst the random sea of text in libraries and book stores, the titles are on the whole more inspiring and imaginative than their content.
The Outsider is one who "sees too deep and too much", who cannot accept the noxious, meager worldview we are spoon-fed from infancy, who does not need religion to be religious. This is not an endorsement of the obnoxious, co-opted "spiritual but not religious" crap that came later, because practicing at self-delusion is anathema to the Outsider's mission. The essence of religion is the affirmation of life (which can be reached from an initially life-denying trajectory).
Because the concept of the Outsider and the goals of the Outsider are somewhat nebulous, Wilson's exposition draws heavily upon examples of real-life outsiders and characters from fiction. Dostoevsky, Nietzsche, Sartre, Van Gogh, and Hesse are among those who fill the pages of the book. The result is a survey of pertinent philosophy and literature that whets the appetite for reading.
The Joyous Adventures of Snakey Boo by some British Dude
A fabulous adventure where Snakey Boo and his friends Snow Rabbit, Hogarth, Komodo, Asp and Tiger take their steam boat Foley up to the Milkey Way, where they meet Jin to listen to a story about a unicorn and a rose. I was afraid it would be too scary but thankfully some poetry is added to lighten the mood. Stuff like, "When children go out to play with their mums. They walk on their legs and not their tums."
Jesus Christ, Thorny, show some respect.
Donald Bisset is a great man.
Angel Tech - Antero Ali
Desert Solitare - Edward Abbey
Works of Homer