What's a good book for someone who never had a father figure in his life?
What's a good book for someone who never had a father figure in his life?
Bible
Meditations by Marcus Aurelius
Funny how this book gets recommended a lot on this board yet the author was adopted which Jow Forums insists is absolute cuckoldry.
Beat me to it
Heinlein's Citizen of the Galaxy.
This, although no book is gonna substitute a father like figure.
I had an uncle, grandfather & older brother who acted like that for me growing up. Now it's my girlfriends dad. Guy loves me & treats me like a son more than his own son lmao.
dragonball z
You'll fucking love it, nigger.
manga
12 rules for dating my teenage daughter or whatver by jorden petersson
Lost in the barrens
For whom the bell tolls. Some hard men. But also brave men.
This is my personal favorite.
I never had a father figure and really relate to the main protagonist.
Goosebumps classics Let's Get invisible!
Aristotle - Nicomachean Ethics
(In fact, the book was dedicated to his son. It was never meant to be released to the public).
Marcus Aurelius - Meditations
(This also wasn’t meant to be released to the public. It was his personal diary).
some good books already posted but also a guide to confident living by norman vincent peale
Come on the answer is obvious
Search your feelings you know it to be true. /pol is your true father.
Mein Kampf
>yet the author was adopted which Jow Forums insists is absolute cuckoldry.
>thinking the Roman concept of adoption is in any way similar to the modern concept
Most Roman emperors were adopted as adults.
Starship troopers by Robert Heinlein.
The military in this book is paternalistic.
Teaches you the lessons a father should have.
Then look at the Moon is a harsh mistress.
Teaches you about being a man and shows you multiple paths to that end.
Divine Comedy
Can't go wrong with this one.
Meditations is good for self reflection and developing leadership traits but it will never substitute a father figure.
the godfather by mario puzo
read it until you know how the don thinks and how the same thinking changed Michael.
Final Exit
The Way of Men.
Catcher in the Rye
Seneca - Letters
The Catcher in the Rye
Based. Fpbp.
while revealing we don't get to read that one here in europe.
...
>that flag
>Those book suggestions
user, you're just more of an example that libertarianism and fascism can get along quite well.
Yuyu hakusho
King, Warrior, Magician, Lover: Rediscovering the Archetypes of the Mature if i had to say first thing which comes to mind
Pushing to the Front - Orisen Swett Marden
Available for free at LibriVox.org
My Two Dads
Culture of Critique
>I had an uncle, grandfather & older brother who acted like that for me growing up.
>Now it's my girlfriends dad. Guy loves me & treats me like a son more than his own son lmao.
I feel like a broken clock. I'm tired of everything. Never show it and never let it interfere with anything. Ivy league degree, good leadership, great social skills, but I feel like I'm out of steam, like I shouldn't exist. I don't want coddling or hand-holding. I just wanted a good family life.
>I just wanted a good family life.
Create for the next generation what you never had
Satyarth Prakash
Idk why this book and books by evola and Hans Herman Hoppe aren’t appearing on Jow Forums anymore. These used to be prerequisites for posting. I guess the volume of >being this new’s and shills have pushed out the essential material in exchange for eceleb “books”.
>Create for the next generation what you never had
I can't put into words how badly I want to build a good, strong, happy household with a traditional family.
But I feel I'll never trust anyone enough for that. I didn't see the light until after I graduated college this year, by then I'd seen so much of what makes people these days fickle and ungodly, I couldn't fool myself into trusting anyone enough to start a family if I wanted.
I know how easy it is to get girls to put out, how tempting it is to stay bluepilled, how hopeless it is to expect any kind of awakening in the people around me. None of it stops me from excelling, succeeding, thriving the way I did at my school. I've gotten through shit you wouldn't believe and still come out on top. Ivy league schools are a meme these days, but I shouldn't even be alive after some of the shit that happened to me when I was young. I'm at a point where nothing gets to me now.
But all that degeneracy, drinking, girls, it all hollowed me out. I'm insanely independent but I only know how to stay strong and confident as long as I'm an island. The idea of a family, of people with whom I can actually share my life, seems so out of reach. I still love my country and I'm ambitious and hard-headed so I'll probably get through a top 5 law school, maybe become a judge someday and do my best to push back against leftist faggotry, all through sheer hatred and strength of will.
But I feel like I died a long time ago and now I'm wandering in a place where I don't belong.