boundless_reads
11 reviews

J. P. Steed
Divisive for a reason. The people who hate it missed the subtext. The people who love it felt seen.

Bram Stoker
A slow burn by modern standards but the atmosphere is unmatched. Best read on dark, stormy nights.

Herman Melville
The greatest American novel. Not the most readable, but the most ambitious and rewarding.

Mary Shelley
Every time someone creates something without thinking about consequences, they're repeating Victor's mistake.

Daniel Kahneman
A masterwork of behavioral psychology made accessible. The "what you see is all there is" concept is unforgettable.

George R. R. Martin
The lack of resolution is frustrating but that's Martin's style. He's building a tapestry, not telling a simple story.

Emily Brontë
A gothic masterpiece. Emily Bronte wrote one novel and it was this perfect, savage thing.

J.R.R. Tolkien
Not just fantasy - it's a meditation on industrialization, war, friendship, and the corrupting nature of power.

Bram Stoker
Perfect October read. The atmosphere is thick and the horror builds slowly but effectively.

Aldous Huxley
A disturbing utopia that makes you question what progress really means. Brilliant and unsettling.

Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
Tilting at windmills has become a metaphor for a reason. This book is foundational.