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Paulo Coelho’s 6 Best-Loved Books's Reading List

Notable reader profiled on radicalreads.com. 6 favorite books recommended in their radicalreads feature.

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Favorite books (2020)

Favorite books recommended by Paulo Coelho’s 6 Best-Loved Books, as compiled by radicalreads.com. Source article: https://radicalreads.com/paulo-coelho-favorite-books/.

Source: radicalreads.com

Henry Miller (also rec’d by Bob Dylan ) · Buy on Amazon
"Miller is the writer who gave me the initial stimulus to write. When I read Miller, I said to myself, ‘Okay, this is literature.’ He was a rebellious writer whose books were censored for years, and that in itself was meaningful for me."
Cover of Ficciones
Jorge Luis Borges · 1944 · Buy on Amazon
"I read one of Borges’ short stories in a science-fiction magazine when I was 20, and I immediately fell in love with his style and his universe. Later on, I discovered that the short story, ‘The Babel Library,’ was part of this collection of short stories. Borges is the only South American writer all of whose books I have read and reread."
Dominique Lapierre and Larry Collins · Buy on Amazon
"This novel narrates the trajectory of one of last century’s most famous bullfighters, El Cordobés. The interesting point in the narrative of the book is the interpolation of the great bullfight in Madrid—where he will receive what is called the ‘alternativa’ (that is, become a fully fledged bullfighter)—with the story of his life and of the bullfighting culture."
Jorge Amado · Buy on Amazon
"Amado is the best Brazilian writer. He portrayed the Brazilian spirit to the world."
Albert Camus (also rec’d by Philip Seymour Hoffman ) · Buy on Amazon
"The very first pages of this violent book mesmerized me. I read it in my 30s and was fascinated by Camus’ simple and direct language. Given the increasing xenophobic tendencies in the world nowadays, the book is very topical."
George Orwell (also rec’d by John Lennon , Stephen King & Steve Jobs ) · Buy on Amazon
"I recent­ly reread this book and was impressed by its visionary quality. Orwell’s thinking is implacable, unraveling our desires for freedom as well as our craving for power. This capacity to dive into the very essence of man makes 1984 timeless."

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