The Reading Project

I do not want to die before building a mind worth listening to.

The Reading Project: I’m reading and writing about demanding works across literature, philosophy, psychology, intellectual history, and the sciences of mind.

Suggestions: If you have a book recommendation for this project, comment, message or email me at saiyanaramisetty@substack.com

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The Reading List

Many texts read prior to when I began writing publicly are not included in the list. The books selected here are those that fall within the genres defined for this project.

How it’s organized (quick navigation)

Reading statues: ▶ Reading | 🔜 Next Pick | ◐ Partially Complete | ✔️ Completed


Tier 1 = Foundations

The oldest, most formative texts. Stuff that built the basic vocabulary of tragedy, virtue, reason, politics, and the novel.

  1. The Iliad — Homer (c. 750 BCE) ▶

  2. The Odyssey — Homer (c. 725 BCE) 🔜

  3. Oresteia — Aeschylus (458 BCE)

  4. Antigone — Sophocles (441 BCE) ✔️

  5. Oedipus Rex — Sophocles (429 BCE) ✔️

  6. The Frogs — Aristophanes (405 BCE)

  7. Apology — Plato (399 BCE)

  8. Symposium — Plato (385 BCE)

  9. The Republic — Plato (c. 375 BCE)

  10. Phaedo — Plato (c. 360 BCE)

  11. De Anima — Aristotle (c. 350 BCE)

  12. Poetics — Aristotle (c. 350 BCE)

  13. Nicomachean Ethics — Aristotle (c. 340 BCE)

  14. The Aeneid — Virgil (19 BCE)

  15. Discourses — Epictetus (c. 125 CE)

  16. Meditations — Marcus Aurelius (c. 180 CE)

  17. Beowulf — Anonymous (c. 1000) ✔️

  18. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight — Anonymous (c. 1400) ✔️

  19. The Canterbury Tales — Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1400) ◐

  20. The Second Shepherd’s Play — The Wakefield Master (c. 1500)

  21. Utopia — Thomas More (1516)

  22. A Midsummer Night’s Dream — William Shakespeare (1595)

  23. Twelfth Night — William Shakespeare (1602)

  24. Hamlet — William Shakespeare (1603)

  25. Othello — William Shakespeare (1603)

  26. Don Quixote — Miguel de Cervantes (1605)

  27. King Lear — William Shakespeare (1606)

  28. Macbeth — William Shakespeare (1606) ◐

  29. Meditations on First Philosophy — René Descartes (1641)

  30. Paradise Lost — John Milton (1667) ◐

  31. An Essay Concerning Human Understanding — John Locke (1689)

  32. A Treatise of Human Nature — David Hume (1739)

  33. Joseph Andrews — Henry Fielding (1742)

  34. An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding — David Hume (1748)

  35. Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals — Immanuel Kant (1785)

  36. Pride and Prejudice — Jane Austen (1813) ✔️

  37. Leaves of Grass — Walt Whitman (1855)

  38. Great Expectations — Charles Dickens (1861)

  39. 1984 — George Orwell (1949)


Tier 2 = Mind & Morality

Books that stay close to the inner life. Desire, guilt, meaning, confusion, breakdown, repair. Also a few works that try to describe the mind more directly.

  1. Doctor Faustus — Christopher Marlowe (1604)

  2. The Duchess of Malfi — John Webster (1623)

  3. Emma — Jane Austen (1815)

  4. Jane Eyre — Charlotte Brontë (1847)

  5. Wuthering Heights — Emily Brontë (1847)

  6. David Copperfield — Charles Dickens (1850)

  7. The Scarlet Letter — Nathaniel Hawthorne (1850)

  8. Notes from Underground — Fyodor Dostoevsky (1864) ◐

  9. Anna Karenina — Leo Tolstoy (1878)

  10. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn — Mark Twain (1884)

  11. The Death of Ivan Ilyich — Leo Tolstoy (1886)

  12. Heart of Darkness — Joseph Conrad (1899)

  13. The Interpretation of Dreams — Sigmund Freud (1899)

  14. Beyond the Pleasure Principle — Sigmund Freud (1920)

  15. Psychological Types — Carl Jung (1921)

  16. Siddhartha — Hermann Hesse (1922)

  17. Steppenwolf — Hermann Hesse (1927)

  18. Civilization and Its Discontents — Sigmund Freud (1930)

  19. Modern Man in Search of a Soul — Carl Jung (1933)

  20. The Myth of Sisyphus — Albert Camus (1942) ◐

  21. The Stranger — Albert Camus (1942) ✔️

  22. Man’s Search for Meaning — Viktor Frankl (1946)

  23. The Plague — Albert Camus (1947)

  24. The Fall — Albert Camus (1956)

  25. Exile and the Kingdom — Albert Camus (1957)

  26. The Divided Self — R. D. Laing (1960)

  27. On Becoming a Person — Carl Rogers (1961)

  28. The Bell Jar — Sylvia Plath (1963)

  29. Man and His Symbols — Carl Jung (1964)

  30. Identity: Youth and Crisis — Erik Erikson (1968)

  31. The Will to Meaning — Viktor Frankl (1969)

  32. Playing and Reality — Donald Winnicott (1971)

  33. The Denial of Death — Ernest Becker (1973)

  34. Consciousness Explained — Daniel C. Dennett (1991)

  35. Descartes’ Error — Antonio Damasio (1994)

  36. The Emotional Brain — Joseph LeDoux (1996)

  37. Being No One — Thomas Metzinger (2003)

  38. Self Comes to Mind — Antonio Damasio (2010)

  39. The Four Realms of Existence — Joseph LeDoux (2023)


Tier 3 = Society & Culture

Books that zoom out from the individual. How people build worlds together. Power, institutions, history, freedom, cruelty, and the stories societies tell about themselves.

  1. History of the Peloponnesian War — Thucydides (c. 400 BCE)

  2. Gulliver’s Travels — Jonathan Swift (1726) ✔️

  3. She Stoops to Conquer — Oliver Goldsmith (1773)

  4. The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire — Edward Gibbon (1776)

  5. Phenomenology of Spirit — G. W. F. Hegel (1807)

  6. Frankenstein — Mary Shelley (1818) ◐

  7. Lectures on the Philosophy of History — G. W. F. Hegel (1837)

  8. Madame Bovary — Gustave Flaubert (1856)

  9. Tess of the d’Urbervilles — Thomas Hardy (1891)

  10. The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism — Max Weber (1905)

  11. Easter 1916 — W. B. Yeats (1921)

  12. The Story of Philosophy — Will Durant (1926)

  13. A Room of One’s Own — Virginia Woolf (1929)

  14. Brave New World — Aldous Huxley (1932) ◐

  15. The Abolition of Man — C. S. Lewis (1943)

  16. The Open Society and Its Enemies — Karl Popper (1945)

  17. Why I Write — George Orwell (1946) ✔️

  18. The Concept of Mind — Gilbert Ryle (1949)

  19. The Hedgehog and the Fox — Isaiah Berlin (1953)

  20. The Human Condition — Hannah Arendt (1958)

  21. To Kill a Mockingbird — Harper Lee (1960) ✔️

  22. Eichmann in Jerusalem — Hannah Arendt (1963)

  23. The Discarded Image — C. S. Lewis (1964)

  24. The Order of Things — Michel Foucault (1966)

  25. Four Essays on Liberty — Isaiah Berlin (1969)

  26. The Sovereignty of Good — Iris Murdoch (1970)

  27. Discipline and Punish — Michel Foucault (1975)

  28. Poetry Is Not a Luxury — Audre Lorde (1977) ✔️

  29. The Life of the Mind — Hannah Arendt (1978)

  30. After Virtue — Alasdair MacIntyre (1981)

  31. Reasons and Persons — Derek Parfit (1984)

  32. Sources of the Self — Charles Taylor (1989)

  33. The End of Certainty — Ilya Prigogine (1990)

  34. The Ethics of Authenticity — Charles Taylor (1992)

  35. Dependent Rational Animals — Alasdair MacIntyre (1999)

  36. The Making of the Modern Mind — Peter Watson (2002)

  37. A Secular Age — Charles Taylor (2007)

  38. The Origins of Political Order — Francis Fukuyama (2011)

  39. The Human Predicament — David Benatar (2016)


Tier 4 = Consciousness

Books that keep circling one question: what is it like to be a mind? Attention, perception, selfhood, language, time, and the strange fact of being aware.

  1. Tristram Shandy — Laurence Sterne (1759)

  2. The World as Will and Representation — Arthur Schopenhauer (1818)

  3. The Idiot — Fyodor Dostoevsky (1869)

  4. Middlemarch — George Eliot (1871)

  5. Demons — Fyodor Dostoevsky (1872)

  6. The Brothers Karamazov — Fyodor Dostoevsky (1880)

  7. The Portrait of a Lady — Henry James (1881)

  8. The Gay Science — Friedrich Nietzsche (1882)

  9. Thus Spoke Zarathustra — Friedrich Nietzsche (1883)

  10. Beyond Good and Evil — Friedrich Nietzsche (1886) ◐

  11. On the Genealogy of Morals — Friedrich Nietzsche (1887)

  12. Dubliners — James Joyce (1914)

  13. Kokoro — Natsume Sōseki (1914)

  14. The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock — T. S. Eliot (1915)

  15. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man — James Joyce (1916)

  16. Mrs Dalloway — Virginia Woolf (1925)

  17. The Trial — Franz Kafka (1925)

  18. The Castle — Franz Kafka (1926)

  19. Being and Time — Martin Heidegger (1927)

  20. To the Lighthouse — Virginia Woolf (1927)

  21. The Sound and the Fury — William Faulkner (1929)

  22. Being and Nothingness — Jean-Paul Sartre (1943)

  23. The Ethics of Ambiguity — Simone de Beauvoir (1947)

  24. Philosophical Investigations — Ludwig Wittgenstein (1953)

  25. Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind — Wilfrid Sellars (1956)

  26. The Dragons of Eden — Carl Sagan (1977) ✔️

  27. Mortal Questions — Thomas Nagel (1979)

  28. The Mind’s I — Douglas Hofstadter & Daniel C. Dennett (1981)

  29. The Book of Disquiet — Fernando Pessoa (1982)

  30. Blood Meridian — Cormac McCarthy (1985)

  31. The View from Nowhere — Thomas Nagel (1986)

  32. Mind and World — John McDowell (1994)

  33. Maps of Meaning — Jordan Peterson (1999)

  34. Kafka on the Shore — Haruki Murakami (2002)

  35. The Road — Cormac McCarthy (2006)

  36. The Truth of Fact, The Truth of Feeling — Ted Chiang (2013) ✔️


Tier 5 = Spirituality & Literature

Books I go to when I want to be changed more than informed. Scripture, contemplative philosophy, and literature that feels like prayer, ache, or attention.

  1. Upanishads — Anonymous (c. 500 BCE)

  2. The Bacchae — Euripides (405 BCE)

  3. Dhammapada — Anonymous (c. 300 BCE)

  4. Tao Te Ching — Laozi (c. 300 BCE)

  5. The Complete Writings — Zhuangzi (c. 300 BCE)

  6. Bhagavad Gita — Anonymous (c. 200 BCE) ◐

  7. Mulamadhyamakakarika — Nagarjuna (c. 150 CE)

  8. Commentary on the Brahma Sutra — Adi Shankara (c. 800)

  9. Shōbōgenzō (Selections) — Dōgen (1231)

  10. The Divine Comedy — Dante Alighieri (c. 1320) ◐

  11. The Faerie Queene (Book I) — Edmund Spenser (1590)

  12. Pensées — Blaise Pascal (1670)

  13. Expostulation and Reply — William Wordsworth (1798) ✔️

  14. Lines Written a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey — William Wordsworth (1798)

  15. Lucy Poems — William Wordsworth (1798) ✔️

  16. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner — Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1798)

  17. The Tables Turned — William Wordsworth (1798) ✔️

  18. We Are Seven — William Wordsworth (1798) ✔️

  19. Michael — William Wordsworth (1800) ✔️

  20. Ode: Intimations of Immortality — William Wordsworth (1807)

  21. Ode on a Grecian Urn — John Keats (1819)

  22. Ode on Melancholy — John Keats (1819)

  23. Ode to a Nightingale — John Keats (1819)

  24. Ode to Autumn — John Keats (1819)

  25. La Belle Dame sans Merci — John Keats (1820)

  26. The Red and the Black — Stendhal (1830)

  27. Bright Star — John Keats (1838)

  28. White Nights — Fyodor Dostoevsky (1848) ✔️

  29. Moby-Dick — Herman Melville (1851)

  30. War and Peace — Leo Tolstoy (1869)

  31. The Stolen Child — W. B. Yeats (1886)

  32. The Lake Isle of Innisfree — W. B. Yeats (1890)

  33. Resurrection — Leo Tolstoy (1899)

  34. Ideas I — Edmund Husserl (1913)

  35. I Have More Souls Than One — Fernando Pessoa (1918) ✔️

  36. The Second Coming — W. B. Yeats (1919)

  37. The Waste Land — T. S. Eliot (1922)

  38. Leda and the Swan — W. B. Yeats (1924)

  39. The Magic Mountain — Thomas Mann (1924)

  40. Sailing to Byzantium — W. B. Yeats (1927)

  41. Among School Children — W. B. Yeats (1928)

  42. Letters to a Young Poet — Rainer Maria Rilke (1929) ✔️

  43. Murder in the Cathedral — T. S. Eliot (1935)

  44. The Circus Animals’ Desertion — W. B. Yeats (1939)

  45. Four Quartets — T. S. Eliot (1943)

  46. What Is Life? — Erwin Schrödinger (1944)

  47. Waiting for Godot — Samuel Beckett (1952)

  48. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions — Thomas Kuhn (1962)

  49. One Hundred Years of Solitude — Gabriel García Márquez (1967)

  50. The Selfish Gene — Richard Dawkins (1976)

  51. The Unbearable Lightness of Being — Milan Kundera (1984)

  52. Beloved — Toni Morrison (1987)

  53. The White Book — Han Kang (2016) ✔️

  54. The Order of Time — Carlo Rovelli (2017)


I’ll keep updating this space as new books get added. Follow along, or jump in aywhere.

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