Suggest Linguistically Profound Books

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My vocabulary's taken a hit the past year. Every second statement I say either has the word fuck or shit in it and I'm literally incapable of writing sentences that don't look like they've been written by a sixteen year old. It doesn't help that the last time I read an actual novel was more than two years ago. I mostly just peruse manga and the occassional light novel.

Anybody have any books, non-Shakesperean-esque, that would help me somewhat regain/improve again? It can be a novel, web novel, or literally anything. No preferences. :blobsip:

(Also, just realized I posted this in the wrong forum. Save me, Tony.)
 

Hans.Trondheim

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My vocabulary's taken a hit the past year. Every second statement I say either has the word fuck or shit in it and I'm literally incapable of writing sentences that don't look like they've been written by a sixteen year old. It doesn't help that the last time I read an actual novel was more than two years ago. I mostly just peruse manga and the occassional light novel.

Anybody have any books, non-Shakesperean-esque, that would help me somewhat regain/improve again? It can be a novel, web novel, or literally anything. No preferences. :blobsip:

(Also, just realized I posted this in the wrong forum. Save me, Tony.)
Know what? Aside from reading novels, webnovels and other related books, you can enrich your vocabulary just by reading educational articles, reading at news sites and/or some interesting article online. Just be ready with your dictionary if you're unfamiliar with the word.

It's a proven 'technique'; our school journalists are doing it, and their English vocab is good.
 

Cipiteca396

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Try Searching through the Stubbed tag on Royal Road. You don't even need to bother with the plot, you just want to see how it's written, so not having the full story is fine.

If it was good enough to sell, it should have high quality language, right? /s

You could also try playing a game where you and other participants try to rewrite each other's sentences 'better'. Like Telephone, but nothing like Telephone.
 

ConansWitchBaby

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Metamorphosis the hentai.

I love going through at least once every 2 years:

The Empress Josephine A Historical Sketch of the Days of Napoleon, by L. Mulhbach. I have an 1867 copy.

The History of Tom Jones: A foundling, by Henry Fielding. Got myself an OG 1749. My first "real" book I got into back in seventh grade.
 
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ElijahRyne

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My vocabulary's taken a hit the past year. Every second statement I say either has the word fuck or shit in it and I'm literally incapable of writing sentences that don't look like they've been written by a sixteen year old. It doesn't help that the last time I read an actual novel was more than two years ago. I mostly just peruse manga and the occassional light novel.

Anybody have any books, non-Shakesperean-esque, that would help me somewhat regain/improve again? It can be a novel, web novel, or literally anything. No preferences. :blobsip:

(Also, just realized I posted this in the wrong forum. Save me, Tony.)
Les Miserables and Frankenstein
 

Dieter

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Moby Dick by Herman Melville, for reasons you probably alr know why. Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad. Charles Dickens's stories, which is a good rec imo cus he plays arnd w words and some of his novels are easier to read, like Christmas Carol, to hard, like A Tale of Two Cities. Aubrey & Maturin Series, if you wanna learn how to sound British during the Napoleonic Wars. Gore Vidal's Burr if you wanna sound like an American fighting for independence. Isak Dinesen's short stories. Titus Groan by Mervyn Peake, which is gothic. That's all I can think up rn.

Translated Novels sound more or less the same once you've read enough of them, and you can group their diction based on their parent language: German (Kafka, Faust's Werther), Russian (Tolstoy, Chekov, &c.), French (Les Misérables, Diderot's Jacques), Italian (Calvino).

Modernists sound quite diff., so you can go there too. I haven't read much of it though, but John Cheever is one of my fav. Love his voice. Post-modernists go off n do their own thing. Some of them try to imitate verisimilitude. But sometimes it feels like they're trying to make up a hard puzzle for you to solve, instead of trying to convey through to you understandably, so I won't recommend you go there (but do).
 

Loewenmensch

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If you want something that's more of a stepping stone, consider browsing TV Tropes. It's mostly light and colloquial language, with an emphasis on clarity. There's relatively little swearing, and occasionally you'll run across surprisingly sophisticated vocabulary.
 
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