Yeah, I wasn't really impressed with Mein Kampf either. It's just the ramblings of a man without a clear view of the world. Luckily it's short, so if you do decide to read it, it won't take you forever, it just won't be particularly interesting. Unless criminal psychology is your schtick. I did enjoy reading Dante's Inferno, although it is long and tedious. The copy of the Divine Comedy I have has the original Italian, as well as the English translation, which makes the book massive.
These days I really don't read fiction anymore. I spend so much time reading about the intelligence community and the cold war for my second degree, that I have time for little else. There are excellent books on these topics, in case history is something you can more easily read and be entertained by. "The Dark Side of Camelot", by Seymour Hersh is about John Kennedy, and is actually very good. It's a different perspective, that at the time was very new and has changed what is taught about him today. Another book which I found incredibly interesting is "Back to Our Future", by David Sirota. It discusses how the western world, especially The United States, is stuck in the 1980s. Culturally, politically, economically, everything. Once you read it, it makes things look a bit different. Back to Our Future is a book I'd recommend to pretty much everyone.