What an astonishing thing a book is. It’s a flat object made from a tree with flexible parts on which are imprinted lots of funny dark squiggles. But one glance at it and you’re inside the mind of another person, maybe somebody dead for thousands of years. Across the millennia, an author is speaking clearly and silently inside your head, directly to you. Writing is perhaps the greatest of human inventions, binding together people who never knew each other, citizens of distant epochs. Books break the shackles of time. A book is proof that humans are capable of working magic.
– Carl Sagan, Cosmos, Part 11: The Persistence of Memory (1980)
Bookshelf
Currently Reading

Introduction to Algorithms, 3rd Edition
by Thomas H. Cormen, Charles E. Leiserson, Ronald L. Rivest, Clifford Stein
Read

Kafka on the Shore
by Haruki Murakami

House of Leaves
by Mark Z. Danielewski

The Catcher in the Rye
by J.D. Salinger
To Read

Infinite Jest
by David Foster Wallace