popular culture would have you believe that in order to be 'cool' you have to listen to obscure music, be in a band, wear stylish clothing, be very good at a sport or game or have some other talent or ability, know hella languages, have hella cash, etc etc. but it's wrong all you need to do to be cool is to read all the time
srsly nothing is so sophisticated as reading, it's so much more of an intellectual commitment than listening to an album or watching a movie because it's impossible to progress unless you're paying attention. whether you're actually listening to the music or not the record will keep on spinning but pages don't just turn themselves bro. also since literature is (almost) always conveyed on analog media (fuck you nook kindle etc) it gives you a badass kickin-it-old-school aesthetic which is awesome for the same reason that listening to music on vinyl is cooler than having cheap piece of shit apple headphones ostentatiously & uncomfortably stuck in yr ears all the time
you probably are thinking oh that is all well and good but how am i supposed to know what new stuff to read, i've read a lot of good famous stuff but idk where to go from here. because the 'content' of the media that i consume actually matters. and it's a sad and unfortunate truth that 'popcorn lit' is proliferating (popcorn lit is the type of shit you can buy @ little giftshops or bookstores at airports, you know what i'm talking about, the big thick books with showy covers by no-name authors, they're literature's analog of like miley cyrus (also shit like twilite)) and there isn't a source like rottentomatoes or pitchfork that covers books as in-depth or as broadly as music or movie review sites. well i have got some good news for you bro! i have here some great lit for you to read that you probably have not read before
(note. you don't actually need to read these to be cool. you theoretically could just walk around pretending to read and making sure that the cover is visible to everyone you're trying to impress. but unless you aren't as shallow as a bowl of soup, you should actually read them to expand yr mind etc)
1. heart of darkness

"but i already read this in my high school english class!" no you fucking didn't you scrubby piece of shit, you looked up chapter summaries online. this is easily one of the best books ever written and as a bonus it's universally recognizable. most people think it's about how terrible imperialism is etc but i think it goes deeper than that, imo heart of darkness is a book about literature. but i always look into things too much. reading this book does require a bit of stamina however, despite the fact that it's p. short it's hella dense. shit's denser than tokyo (not as dense as a black hole tho)
2. a man without a country

everyone's heard of kurt vonnegut and his most famous books like cat's cradle and slaughterhouse five. this is most likely a shitty analogy but i guess maybe that kv is the pink floyd of modern literature because he was able to achieve mainstream success with a new unique alternative style. and then you could say that cat's cradle and slotty five are like the wall and dark side of the moon. but just like pink floyd, kv has a lot of little-known underrated material that is just as good or even better than the better-known stuff. amwoc is the last thing he published when he was alive, it's a semi-autobiographical collection of essays about his life as well his opinions about culture politics america the world etc. and instead of hinting at his message behind a façade of 'symbolism' and 'characters' like he does in his novels, kv tells it straight in amwoc. reading this book is like being face to face with him and listening to him speak it's awesome
3. the stranger

similar to heart of darkness above, you've almost certainly heard of the stranger but almost certainly not read it. the stranger is about a chill bro who doesn't give a shit about anything except eating, sleeping, and fucking, he is a true 'nihilist.' small warning, just make sure that you don't start randomly killing ppl after reading this, it's going to be v. tempting
4. too loud a solitude

i read this very recently and i loved it, it's really short and beautiful. it's about this poor guy who trash-compacts wastepaper and books. it's pretty 'meta' in this sense bc it's a book about books. also it's translated from czech so you can be all like "yeah i read foreign language lit, english is so passé" and then watch as everyone around you is blown away by yr impressive alternative-ness
5.
house of leaves

k so to be honest i haven't read this yet (i've been meaning to) but apparently it's a total mindfuck where the very presentation of the work itself is part of the story. it has like 500 footnotes and hidden codes and backwards pages and colored text and a goddamned appendix. very 'edgy,' i'll start reading tomorrow hopefully
aight now get off the internet and start reading. although i apologize in advance if these books don't measure up to expectation, if you're used to reading springwells then this stuff might seem a bit weak in comparison