No worries about forgetting to tell me, I've forgotten too, since partway through the August book. Recommendations:
The Things they Carried, by Tim O'Brien. It's a very well-done, somewhat inaccurate autobiography O'Brien's experience in the Vietnam War, but with frequent digressions into more meta but related topics which I won't really describe because of spoilers. He manages to do this in a non-affected and meaningful way, and it would be worth reading as a good war story even without them, for people who are into that. Unsurprisingly, this one is pretty violent, even somewhat disturbing in a sort of surreal way. It's also a very short book, less than a finger thick, and I would recommend reading it twice - some of the things talked about in the later parts put the earlier ones in a new light.
One Hundred Years of Solitude, by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. A book which follows one family, and the Colombian town they helped to found, across an unspecified hundred-year period. It's the canonical example of magical realism - having mystical and unexplained elements, but not treating them as anything special beyond the amazement of some characters who interact with them - and metaphorically describes the progression of postcolonial imperialism in Latin America. This one's pretty long and dense, and while there are some squicky bits of various types nothing's particularly bad or explicit. Hopefully everyone hasn't already read it, as it's pretty popular book; if so, I guess I can find another unless it's too late.