Library

Library

Books, films and ideas — the ones that shaped me.

Not a complete list. Not required reading. Only what truly left something behind — in thought, in feeling, in the way I work.

Islamic Golden Age Science

Three men who reimagined the world — centuries before modernity claimed the idea as its own.

  • Al-Qanun fi al-Tibb — The Canon of Medicine

    Ibn Sina (Avicenna) · 11th century

    He wrote the medical standard work taught for 600 years across Europe and the Orient. As a Kurd living between worlds, Avicenna is not merely history — he is evidence.

  • Al-Kitab al-Mukhtasar fi Hisab al-Jabr

    Al-Khwarizmi · 9th century

    The man who gave the world algebra. His name became 'algorithm'. Every AI model that exists today carries part of his DNA.

  • Abu Rayhan al-Biruni — Polymath

    Al-Biruni · 11th century

    Mathematician, astronomer, anthropologist, physician. He measured the Earth before Europe understood what it was standing on.

Physics & Mathematics

Minds that did not fit their time — and changed time precisely because of it.

  • Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!

    Richard Feynman

    Physics as a philosophy of life. Curiosity as the only religion.

  • A Beautiful Mind

    Sylvia Nasar

    John Nash. Genius, madness, equilibrium. A life that shows the mind as both the most dangerous and most beautiful place.

  • The Man Who Knew Infinity

    Robert Kanigel

    Ramanujan — with no formal training, from India, he transformed mathematics. Origin is not a boundary.

Medicine & Science

Books that show science at its strongest when it remains human.

  • The Emperor of All Maladies

    Siddhartha Mukherjee

    A biography of cancer. Science that remains human.

  • Being Mortal

    Atul Gawande

    What medicine cannot do — and what it must do anyway.

  • The Body

    Bill Bryson

    The human body as nature’s greatest wonder. Every page an opening.

Technology & Hacking

Understanding systems — from within.

  • The Art of Intrusion

    Kevin Mitnick

    Hacking is not merely criminality — it is the deepest form of understanding a system.

  • Ghost in the Wires

    Kevin Mitnick

    An autobiography about systems, boundaries and the question: what is actually forbidden?

  • Tesla: Man Out of Time

    Margaret Cheney

    Nikola Tesla — the man who invented the future and was forgotten for it. Until the world needed him.

Identity & Migration

Books I did not merely read — but, in a way, lived.

  • Persepolis

    Marjane Satrapi

    Iran, childhood, exile — in images. Close to my own story.

  • The Stranger

    Albert Camus

    The feeling of never quite belonging. I know it.

  • Man's Search for Meaning

    Viktor Frankl

    Finding meaning — even when everything collapses.

Films

Not popcorn cinema. Films that ask a question and refuse an easy answer.

  • A Beautiful Mind (2001)

    Ron Howard

    Nash. Mathematics. Madness. Beauty.

  • The Imitation Game (2014)

    Morten Tyldum

    Alan Turing — the man who helped end the Second World War and was punished for who he was.

  • The Man Who Knew Infinity (2015)

    Matt Brown

    Ramanujan. Intuition beyond proof.

  • Interstellar (2014)

    Christopher Nolan

    Physics as poetry.

  • Ex Machina (2014)

    Alex Garland

    AI, consciousness, ethics — in 108 minutes.

  • Persepolis (2007)

    Vincent Paronnaud & Marjane Satrapi

    Animation. Iran. Truth.

This list keeps growing. Not everything that shaped me can be measured in titles.