Perhaps the most important book he wrote was
The Communist Manifesto. It's short and a very simple read. For it's day and age, it was quite the eye opening book. I had three or four college classes that had it as part of the required reading. Luckily for me, I don't sell books back, so I got some good value out of it.
If you want to get into the thick and heavy of Marxism and econmics, check out
Das Kapital.
The Grundrisse is his other work of economic density. I didn't like it so much, but if a person is inclined to economics, perhaps you'll like it as well.
...SNIP.....
Thanks for the links
though I can't read all of them
. I am not interested mainly in Karl Marx but rather I am interested mainly in understanding different political structures and their underlying foundations, so that I can build one for my country, INDIA. Presently, my country is too much corrupted, you can not do anything without offering some bribe and even charges are fixed for different types of domains like 300 INRs (INdian Rupee) for Driving-License, 20,000 for the Murder of a general man, 500 for not having the Registration-Certificate of the vehicle you are driving etc etc. Nearly all of the talented individuals leave India and go to some Foreign land and improve that country but I want to build a sound architecture for my own country and I know I can do that by developing some specialized skills and for that I am reading these kind of books. Political and Economical structures are the basic foundations of a country.
BTW, My job as a Software Engineer does not leave me with much time on my hands. Anyway This is my next reading list:
though none of them are available in my country, except Neal Stephenson and Isac Asimov, which are again very-very difficult to obtain. The only book I have found yet is, "The Confusion (The Baroque Cycle, Vol. 2) -- Neal Stephenson" , which again is not the place to start reading Neal. Here is my Non-Fiction list:
The Communist Manifesto -- Karl Marx
Capitalism and Freedom -- Milton Friedman
The Social Contract -- Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Politics -- Aristotle
The Wealth of Nations -- Adam Smith
The Road to Serfdom -- F. A. Hayek
The Constitution of Liberty -- F. A. Hayek
The General Theory of Employment,
Interest, and Money -- John Maynard Keynes
Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy -- Joseph A. Schumpeter
Everyone has different tastes. Do you have any recommendations or advice or addition or reduction on my 2 lists ?
I also have a Sci-Fi list:
Isaac Asimov :
Foundation
Foundation and Empire
Olaf Stapledon:
Last and First Men and Star Maker ( 2 in 1 novel)
Verner Vinge:
Across Realtime
True Names
Robert A Heinlein:
Time Enough For Love
Moon is a Harsh Mistress
Double Star
Neal Stephenson:
Snow Crash
Cryptonomicon
Tim Winton:
Cloud Street