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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Season of Migration to the North by Tayeb Salih

A young Sudanese man returns from England to his village on the Nile, where he meets Mustafa Sa'eed—a mysterious figure whose life in Europe mirrors the colonial encounter in reverse. A masterpiece of postcolonial literature.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jul 08, 2026

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Children of Gebelawi by Naguib Mahfouz

An allegory of humanity's relationship with God, set in a Cairo alley. Mahfouz's controversial novel retells the stories of Adam, Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad through the lives of ordinary Egyptians. Banned for years, it cemented his Nobel Prize.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jul 08, 2026

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain

Huck Finn fakes his death and flees down the Mississippi with Jim, an escaped slave. Twain's masterpiece is the book that, as Hemingway said, 'all modern American literature comes from.' A devastating critique of racism wrapped in a boy's adventure.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jul 08, 2026

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Tristram Shandy by Laurence Sterne

The most eccentric novel in English. Tristram tries to tell his life story but gets so sidetracked that he isn't born until page 200. Sterne's 18th-century comic masterpiece anticipated postmodernism by two centuries—with black pages, diagrams, and endless digressions.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jul 08, 2026

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

The Golden Notebook by Doris Lessing

A novel that changed how we think about women, politics, and creativity. Anna Wulf keeps four notebooks trying to hold her fracturing self together. A landmark of 20th-century feminism.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jul 07, 2026

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift

Shipwrecked surgeon Lemuel Gulliver discovers Lilliput, Brobdingnag, Laputa, and the land of the Houyhnhnms. Swift's savage satire of human nature remains devastatingly funny after 300 years.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jul 07, 2026

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel García Márquez

A luminous meditation on love that spans half a century. Florentino Ariza waits 51 years, 9 months, and 4 days for his beloved Fermina Daza. García Márquez's masterpiece asks whether love can truly endure—and whether waiting a lifetime is romantic or pathological.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jul 07, 2026

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell

Big Brother is watching you. Orwell's terrifying vision of totalitarianism remains the most influential dystopian novel ever written. Winston Smith's rebellion against the Party—and his devastating fate—is a warning that has only grown more urgent with each passing decade.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jul 07, 2026

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Hamlet by William Shakespeare

To be, or not to be. Shakespeare's greatest tragedy—a prince paralyzed by grief and doubt, a ghost demanding revenge, a court rotten with corruption. Hamlet is the most profound exploration of consciousness, mortality, and the burden of action ever written.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jul 07, 2026

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Middlemarch by George Eliot

Few novels capture the full breadth of human experience quite like George Eliot's Middlemarch. Published in 1871-72, this sprawling masterpiece is a profound examination of marriage, ambition, idealism, and the quiet compromises that shape ordinary lives. Often called the greatest English novel ever written, it weaves together multiple storylines into a rich tapestry of provincial life.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jul 07, 2026

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Post Top 10 Most Influential Philosophers in World History

Thomas Aquinas — Faith, Reason, and the Harmony of Life

The philosopher who bridged heaven and earth through reason and faith. Imagine a mind so curious that it seeks not only to understand the world but also to understand God, morality, and the ultimate purpose of life. This was the mind of Thomas Aquinas, a 13th-century philosopher and theologian whose work harmonized faith and reason, showing that belief and logic need not conflict, but can illuminate one another.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jan 12, 2026

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