Easy to read? I don’t know about that, but I just started reading Ben Hur, and though it’s rather massive, I’m already very excited about it.
“The Life of God in the Soul of Man”
by Henry Scougal, modern English translation by Paul Lamb
“Knowing God” by J.I. Packer
“The Freedom of Self Forgetfulness” by Timothy Keller
The Forgotten Man (A. Schlaes)
Brave New World (A. Huxley)
Anything by C.S. Lewis
Heart of Darkness - Joseph Conrad
See I told you so.
And any and all other books by Rush Limbaugh.
For a very well crafted non-fiction that should be an example to writers - “In Cold Blood”.
Extremely easy to read, well-written, “Reasons to Vote Democrat”
Amazon has it. It has rave reviews, even by conservatives
Ecclesiastes.
The Critique of Pure Reason
The Critique of Practical Reason
The Critique of Judgment
Original Intent by David Barton
Forced Exit: The Slippery Slope From Assisted Suicide to Euthanasia by Wesley Smith
The Year Of The Rat: How Bill Clinton Compromised National Security by Edward Timberlake and William Triplett
How to Lie with Statistics.
Short book and quick read. A bit dated but after reading that, you’ll never believe another poll or *study* again.
The Bible (it also qualifies as the hardest, as well)
Evangeline and the Sovereignty of God by J I Packer
Peace Child by Don Richardson
1.The Bible.
2. The AA Big Book.
3.The Rise And Fall Of The Third Reich by William L. Shier.
Doing business on credit is asking for failure.
:)
The Old Man And The Sea. Classic Hemingway!
Green Eggs and Ham.
1. History - Empire of the Summer Moon by S.C. Gwynne
2. Faith - The Pursuit of God by Tozer
3. Wrastlin' - Slobberknocker: My Life in Wrestling by Jim Ross
Proverbs
Reminded me of some fellows who stood up against tryanny; and, of fellows who were good fathers.
Those Who Love
John and Abigail Adams
Washington
by Douglas Southall Freeman
Ayn Rand, “Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal”. A collection of short non-fiction essays by Rand and a few others. It functions like a Cliff Notes primer for understanding her political philosophy without having to wade through hundreds of pages of tedious monologues in her novels.
David Horowitz, “The Politics of Bad Faith”. It’s basically a condensed version of his autobiography “Radical Son” with less bio info and more explication of how the mind and soul of the Left works. Incredibly powerful stuff.
Anything Thomas Sowell. I especially liked “The Quest for Cosmic Justice” which I haven’t seen mentioned in this thread.
Anything by Thomas Sowell but his Basic Economics book should be in every high school.