• @8000gnat@reddthat.com
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    36 months ago

    Gary Jennings’ Aztec. Come for the historical accuracy of pre-columbian exchange Central America, stay for the depressing twisted sickening outlook.

  • @ams@lemmy.ml
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    136 months ago

    China Miéville - The City & the City is one that I don’t think I’ll ever forget. Wild because as far out as it feels, it’s also a pretty accurate portrayal of how we’ve trained ourselves to intentionally not see. I find myself thinking of the book often.

    • @copymyjalopy@sh.itjust.works
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      26 months ago

      The premise for this book was so strange I often had to reread passages to fully understand the differing perspectives of people standing next to one another and yet be in two different realities.

  • @MicrowavedTea@infosec.pub
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    496 months ago

    Definitely House of Leaves. A story inside of a story, inside of a story, with all narrators being just a bit crazy. Text of different fonts, going all over the place and even upside down based on the story. Just make sure to get the physical copy.

  • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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    6 months ago

    Wild Animus

    It’s about a Berkeley graduate who takes a bunch of acid and then dresses up like a mountain Ram in Alaska and becomes increasingly more deranged.

    It was on a reading list for a college class. Pirate the book if you decide to read, because the author is a raging asshole.

    • @RebekahWSD@lemmy.world
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      16 months ago

      I only know of this book because it was included in a Showcase Showdown style…thing I saw once, where everything in the showcase was…well, if not bad, highly impractical.

      Mostly bad.

  • I Cast Fist
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    26 months ago

    Wildest as in…?

    I finished reading Maldita Guerra, which is the current de facto book detailing the Paraguay War (1864-1870). Francisco Solano López, Paraguay’s dictator at the time, is possibly the worst thing to have happened to the country. The fucking psycho established a cult of personality (saint figures in churches were removed to put photos of him), the only newspaper allowed to print was always cheering on how great and perfect he was, plus a secret police to ensure nobody would dare rise up against him. Oh, and the population was incentivized to denounce anyone that didn’t show enough love for the president.

    To make matters worse, there was no real justice system. If you were accused of treason or conspiracy, you were as good as dead, no recourse. Oh, and López’ head was deep inside his own ass, any war reports that showed difficulties or stated losses from the Paraguayan army were rebuked and the person could end up dead for giving the bad news. The fucking asshole willfully ignored facts while giving orders to his army. He could’ve wiped the Triple Alliance’s forces when they began the counterattack, but his “strategic genius” was composed of himself and nobody else.

  • classic
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    16 months ago

    Depends in what way you mean ‘wild.’ Crazy even psychedelic, but nonetheless benign? Or are we including disturbing?

  • ProdigalFrog
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    6 months ago

    The Book of Rack the Healer by Zach Hughes was pretty wild.

    It’s ‘New wave’ sci-fi from the 1970’s, and revolves around these mutated humans in a deeply poisonous and radioactive world where it’s forbidden to dig into the earth.

    The humans have evolved a carapice and internal air sacks that they fill to hold their breath before leaving their safe organic dome homes that change color depending on their mood. Some of the domes have women in them that don’t seem capable of complex thought, and live purely through sensory input, are telepathic, and are basically constantly edging themselves all day.

    It’s a drug fueled fever dream, for sure.

    • @Hugin@lemmy.world
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      26 months ago

      I found my next read. Copy ordered.

      I read Mother Load by Zach Huges decades ago. Not as strange as the one you describe but I still remember it.

    • @viking@infosec.pub
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      36 months ago

      That sounds a bit like “The Prince in Waiting” by John Christopher (more famous for “The Tripods”), it’s a trilogy also set in the distant future after a nuclear war, where all machines have been outlawed and humans exist alongside dwarfs and mutants. Over the course of the trilogy, the protagonists (living in fairly alright areas) venture deeper into more and more radiated areas and encounter grotesque stuff.

      • ProdigalFrog
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        26 months ago

        Oh man, I adore the tripods, so I’ll be giving that a read for sure. Cheers for sharing!

  • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠
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    306 months ago

    I went into Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? blind. Hadn’t seen the movie, hadn’t read any other Dick, hadn’t even had it hyped to me by a friend. What a series of mindfucks.

    • RuBisCO
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      126 months ago

      Lies, Inc. is another by PKD that will leave your head spinning.

    • ProdigalFrog
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      6 months ago

      The only Philip K. Dick I’ve read is Flow my tears the policeman said (epic title for a book). It’s pretty linear and coherent until one point towards the end where, without question, 'ol Dick popped some acid.

  • JackGreenEarth
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    76 months ago

    The one that included the most wildlife might be hard to know exactly, but ‘The Lost World’ by Arthur Conan Doyle might be a contender.

    One of my favourite books, and one that gave me lots to think about was His Dark Materials by Phillip Pullman.

    The most ‘different’ setting for a book that I’ve read might be The Planiverse by AKA Dewdney, which takes place in a 2d world with thought out and realistic physics and societies.

  • @bi_tux@lemmy.world
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    26 months ago

    anarcho-syndicalism theory and practice by rudolf rocker, it was let’s say enligthening, I was already an anarchist before reading it, but now I’m an anarcho-syndicalist

    currently reading networking in the rust programming language btw

  • @greedytacothief@lemmy.world
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    36 months ago

    I don’t know about wild, but UNSONG has been a very weird trip. It’s like science fiction, except instead of science its Jewish kabbalah. There’s angels, demons, alt history American politics, religious references that are truly esoteric, and puns… lots and lots of puns.