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The cosmos
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The cosmosThe cosmos

A novel that really is more curious than any other I know. As you can see, the reader is disoriented right from the start. The uneasy fascination brought on by this opening sentence never lets up. It’s akin to music in the chromatic scale—say Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring—discordant, not exactly pleasant, but dynamic and compelling its own way.
 
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The castle
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The castleThe castle

The Castle (German: Das Schloß) is a novel by Franz Kafka. In it a protagonist, known only as K., struggles to gain access to the mysterious authorities of a castle who govern the village where he wants to work as a land surveyor. Kafka died before finishing the work, but suggested it would end with the Land Surveyor dying in the village; the castle notifying him on his death bed that his "legal claim to live in the village was not valid, yet, taking certain auxiliary circumstances into account, he was permitted to live and work there".
 
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Hunted (House of Night, Book 5)
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Hunted (House of Night, Book 5)The fifth book of the House of Night series

Audio added Thanks to olya54

 
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The fall
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The fallThe fall

The Fall (French: La Chute) is a philosophical novel written by Albert Camus. First published in 1956, it is his last complete work of fiction. Set in Amsterdam, The Fall consists of a series of dramatic monologues by the self-proclaimed "judge-penitent" Jean-Baptiste Clamence, as he reflects upon his life to a stranger. In what amounts to a confession, Clamence tells of his success as a wealthy Parisian defense lawyer who was highly respected by his colleagues; his crisis, and his ultimate "fall" from grace, was meant to invoke, in secular terms, The Fall of Man in the Garden of Eden.
 
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The lives of animals
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The lives of animalsThe lives of animals

Fluent, challenging lectures on the ethics that shape the human-animal relationship, from South African novelist and essayist Coetzee (The Master of Petersburg, 1994, etc.). Princeton's Tanner Lectures are usually philosophical essays exploring human values. Here Coetzee subverts that formula by shaping his talks into fictional lectures given by an elderly novelist, Elizabeth Costello, on ``an enterprise of degradation, cruelty, and killing which rivals anything that the Third Reich was capable of'': our treatment of animals.
 
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