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Thread: Read Any Good Non-Fiction Lately?

  1. #1
    Master OptiBoarder Cindy Hamlin's Avatar
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    Read Any Good Non-Fiction Lately?

    I wanted to share 3 really good books I have read lately. I recommend them highly. I have never been a fan of fiction and prefer to read non-fiction.

    Here are the latest I would recommend:

    1. Devil In The White City by Eric Larson (ISBN 0609608444)
    This book is about the building of the Chicago World's Fair and a serial killer that was loose at the same time. It is well written and tangles the two stories well.

    2. Isaac's Storm by Eric Larson (ISBN 0375409335)
    This book is about the 1900 hurricane that devastated Galveston. It is the largest loss of life in any one event in US history. It is told through the perspective of the local weather forcaster.

    3. Love on Trial by Earl Lewis and Heidi Ardizzone (ISBN 0393050130)
    It is about the annulment trail of the marriage of Leonard Rhinelander and Alice Jones. It is well written and explores the racial divide that still affects our country.
    Last edited by Cindy Hamlin; 05-29-2003 at 03:03 PM.
    ~Cindy

    "If you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to be a horrible warning." -Catherine Aird-

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    OptiWizard Suzy W's Avatar
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    Thanks for sharing Cindy, I'm always looking for something
    new and different to read. I may have to pick one of those up this weekend.



    Suzy

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    Bad address email on file Darris Chambless's Avatar
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    Hello Cindy

    I'm currently reading Grays Anatomy, Micro biology (food intoxications and food infections presently) and for a break in the technical stuff I'm reading Useful Idiots which I highly recommend and a book that Pete suggested by Ravi Zacharias called Can Man Live Without God?

    While I recommend all of these books, for entertainment purposes I would say Useful Idiots is the most entertaining of the group.

    Take care and we'll take all the rain you can send our way if it wouldn't be too much trouble ;) To get a basic idea of how bad the water situation is around here the average drought condition water grade level is 12 to 18 inches below grade (or below the surface) before you hit moisture in the soil. Currently we are at more than 3 feet below grade so we're at more than two times what would be considered drought conditions which hasn't happened in this area since the 1950's. Wells are going dry all around this area but then we are in a desert :)

    Take care and take a look at the books when you get a chance.

    Darris C.

  4. #4
    sub specie aeternitas Pete Hanlin's Avatar
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    The book Can Man Live Without God, which Darris mentioned is a great read.

    Our Story by the Quecreek miners (I believe I spelled that correctly) was an interesting read that didn't take all that long.

    The autobiography of Ulysses Grant is perhaps one of the most insightful biographies of all time (IMHO). Also, as with most biographies, it gives one a unique look at an interesting period in history. What intrigues me most is the fact that U.S. Grant only succeeded at two things in his entire life- being a general and writing about his life. Other than that, he was a spectacular failure at everything he did (business, the Presidency, etc.).

    Just to be contrary, I have to throw a fictional work in here (but one that is so substantial in its content that it should satisfy the non-fiction fan). C.S. Lewis authored a book called The Screwtape Letters. In fact, here is a link to Amazon where you can purchase the book: The Screwtape Letters

    Here is a snippet from a review of the book...
    Each letter is a masterpiece of reverse theology, giving the reader an inside look at the thinking and means of temptation.
    The most brilliant feature of The Screwtape Letters may be likening hell to a bureaucracy in which "everyone is perpetually concerned about his own dignity and advancement, where everyone has a grievance, and where everyone lives the deadly serious passions of envy, self-importance, and resentment." We all understand bureaucracies, be it the Department of Motor Vehicles, the IRS, or one of our own making. So we each understand the temptations that slowly lure us into hell. If you've never read Lewis, The Screwtape Letters is a great place to start. And if you know Lewis, but haven't read this, you've missed one of his core writings.

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    Master OptiBoarder chm2023's Avatar
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    Good fiction: The Lovely Bones, The Dive from Clauson's Pier. Non: Salt, Nothing Like it in The World (this last out a couple of years, about the building of the trans-continental RR, very interesting stuff). Also, ditto on Issac's Storm.

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    Forever Liz's Dad Steve Machol's Avatar
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    I just finished Lefties: The Origins & Consequences of Being Left-Handed by Jack Fincher. I was expecting the litany of famous and infamous Lefties throughout history that is typical of books like this. However I was pleasantly surprised to learn this was a very thoughtful and scholarly look at the origins or left-handedness with topcics ranging from the anthropological evidence of handeness (approximately 50-50 in Stone Age peoples), to evidience of sidedness in molecular stuctures and indeed throughout chemistry and physics, and to recent studies indicating the existence of mirror image brain symmetries between human males and females.

    As a Leftie myself I learned a lot of new information about my condition and I recommend this book to anyone who is curious about this subject.

    Speaking of which, I've added a new poll based on a study in this book:

    Are you a Hooker?

    My next non-fiction book will be: The Buddhist Handbook by John Snelling.


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    Cape Codger OptiBoard Gold Supporter hcjilson's Avatar
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    In search of the Grail......

    edited: I posted after reading through the thread without paying close attention to the title of the thread. Sorry about the fictional confusion! The following are fictional.


    The Archer and The Vagabond by a fellow Cape Codder (formerly a Brit) Bernard Cornwell. These books are the first 2 of a 3 volume series about an longbowman Thomas of Hookton set in medievil times. It is a fascinating story of the quest for the Grail which takes place in England and France during the reign of Edward III. There is a particularly good account of the battle of Crecy. I am nearing the end of the Vagabond. The third volume will be published this fall. If you like good historical fiction this series is for you.

    Note, the author is the same one who created the Sharpe's Rifles series set in the Napoleonic Wars.

    hj

    Steve, how long did it take you to learn to tie your shoes....and do you know why?
    "Always laugh when you can. It is a cheap medicine"
    Lord Byron

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    Forever Liz's Dad Steve Machol's Avatar
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    Re: In search of the Grail......

    hcjilson said: Steve, how long did it take you to learn to tie your shoes....and do you know why?
    I'll let you know when I finally learn! :D

    Actually I don't remember having much difficulty learning to tie my shoes. But maybe I've blacked this experience out.


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    Bad address email on file optigoddess's Avatar
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    Not too long ago, I read Demon in the Freezer by Richard Preston (of The Hot Zone fame.) Mostly about small pox, biological warfare etc...it's chilling! or .... as I like to call it ~ a real "creepy thriller" !!!

    Karen

  10. #10
    sub specie aeternitas Pete Hanlin's Avatar
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    Excellent Non-fiction television...

    Egads, dare someone mention non-fiction TV in a thread originally pertaining to literature???

    Anyway, I will... One of the finest documentaries I have ever seen was A Fighter Pilot's Story. My wife and I sat spellbound through the entire three hours as Quentin C. Aanerson took us through his time as a fighter pilot in WWII. Capt. Aanerson served in all five campaigns, and took pictures through all of them. He and his wife share their correspondence, mementos, photos, and some combat footage. You see a picture of one of his tent mates as he describes in exacting detail exactly how he was shot down or crashed.

    Here is what appears to be a homemade website created by Capt. Aanerson: A Fighter Pilot's Story. The documentary was simply unbelievable!

    Shows like this re-confirm what I already believe. That being, the generation that fought and survived WWII was simply the finest group of human beings that have walked this planet (surely the finest example of Russian, American, British, French- and in some respects- even German citizenship).

    Did anyone else catch this program? If so, any thoughts?

  11. #11
    Master OptiBoarder chm2023's Avatar
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    Pete: did not catch this. I also have a keen interest in those times and people. For a great non-fiction look at England civilian life during that time, rent Honor and Glory.

    Great reads: Churchill: The Last Lion (my favorite of the Churchillian body of bios) and J.K.Goodwin's No Ordinary Time, a bio of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt (war years). It makes you realize what we settle for now in our public figures, and what passes for character.

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    fortwo eye jediron's Avatar
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    Big Smile

    Right now I'm reading the book listed below:
    In His Image (The Christ Clone Trilogy, Book 1)
    by James BeauSeigneur

    Also just finished: Armageddon
    by Tim F. LaHaye, Jerry B. Jenkins

    Also the Twisted Cross about Adolf Hitler. Can't remember the author.

    And the Bible.

    :D :bbg:

  13. #13
    Master OptiBoarder Cindy Hamlin's Avatar
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    I know a lot of you have your hands full right now with Harry Potter (literally), but I recently started a new non-fiction book and wanted to share it.

    Midnight Dreary
    The Mysterious Death of Edgar Allan Poe
    by John Evangelist Walsh

    I visited the Poe Museum here in Richmond (http://www.poemuseum.org/index.html) and bought the book there. It is amazing to me that with all the changes in forensic science in the 150 years since his death nobody has thought to exhume him and solve it once and for all. Anyway the book is a good read and I am half way through. It is a must for all Poe fans.
    ~Cindy

    "If you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to be a horrible warning." -Catherine Aird-

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    Master OptiBoarder chm2023's Avatar
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    Just finished "Cod. A Biography of the Fish that Changed the World"--really fascinating. Has anyone read the one (fiction) about a murder mystery associated with the works of Da Vinci? Heard it was good.

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    Master OptiBoarder Night Train's Avatar
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    I just started "A History of Just about everything" by Bill Bryson. As usual. Bryson does not disappoint!

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    Forever Liz's Dad Steve Machol's Avatar
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    I finished The Buddhist Handbook by John Snelling a couple of weeks ago. It started out okay but in the end there was far too little history of Buddhism and way too much 'Who's Who' in Buddhisn for my likeng. Nonetheless it has spurred my interest and I think I'll read one or more of the Dalai Lama's books.

    However for now I've gone back to fiction having finished both Harry Potter and the first book of the Thomas Covenant the Unbeliever trilogy.


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    Master OptiBoarder Cindy Hamlin's Avatar
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    You are a fluke of the universe.
    You have no right to be here.
    And whether you can hear it or not
    The universe is laughing behind your back. - Deteriorata (1972)


    Interesting quote, Steve!
    ~Cindy

    "If you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to be a horrible warning." -Catherine Aird-

  18. #18
    Forever Liz's Dad Steve Machol's Avatar
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    Does anyone remember this parody of Desiderata?
    ---
    You are a fluke
    Of the universe.
    You have no right to be here.....
    Deteriorata! Deteriorata!

    Go placidly
    Amid the noise and waste.
    And remember what comfort there may be
    In owning a piece thereof.

    Avoid quiet and passive persons
    Unless you are in need of sleep.

    Ro-tate your tires.

    Speak glowingly of those greater than yourself
    And heed well their advice,
    Even though they be turkeys.

    Know what to kiss.....and when!

    Consider that two wrongs never make a right
    But that THREE.........do.

    Wherever possible, put people on hold.

    Be comforted that in the face of all aridity and disillusionment
    And despite the changing fortunes of time,
    There is always a big future in computer main-te-nance.

    Chorus

    You are a fluke
    Of the universe.
    You have no right to be here.
    And whether you can hear it or not
    The universe is laughing behind your back.

    Remember the Pueblo.

    Strive at all times to bend, fold, spindle and mu-ti-late.

    Know yourself.
    If you need help, call the FBI.

    Exercise caution in your daily affairs,
    Especially with those persons closest to you.
    That lemon on your left, for instance.

    Be assured that a walk through the ocean of most souls
    Would scarcely get your feet wet.

    Fall not in love therefore;
    It will stick to your face.

    Gracefully surrender the things of youth:
    The birds, clean air, tuna, Taiwan
    And let not the sands of time
    Get in your lunch.

    Hire people with hooks.

    For a good time call 606-4311;
    Ask for "Ken."

    Take heart amid the deepening gloom
    That your dog is finally getting enough cheese.

    And reflect that whatever misfortune may be your lot
    It could only be worse in Milwaukee.

    Chorus

    You are a fluke
    Of the universe.
    You have no right to be here.
    And whether you can hear it or not
    The universe is laughing behind your back.

    Therefore, make peace with your god
    Whatever you conceive him to be---
    Hairy thunderer, or cosmic muffin.

    With all its hopes, dreams, promises and urban renewal
    The world continues to deteriorate.

    GIVE UP!

    Reprise

    You are a fluke
    Of the universe.
    You have no right to be here.
    And whether you can hear it or not
    The universe is laughing behind your back.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Performed by National Lampoon on "National Lampoon Radio Dinner," a 1972 recording by Blue Thumb Records. Lyrics by Tony Hendra.


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  19. #19
    Master OptiBoarder Cindy Hamlin's Avatar
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    Be assured that a walk through the ocean of most souls
    Would scarcely get your feet wet.
    That is great! I love the Desiderata, but never heard of this one!
    ~Cindy

    "If you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to be a horrible warning." -Catherine Aird-

  20. #20
    Master OptiBoarder Cindy Hamlin's Avatar
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    I had seen the movie, but now I am finally reading the book and it expands a lot on the movie. I am truly enjoying it.

    Midnight In the Garden of Good and Evil
    A Savannah Story

    By John Berendt
    ISBN 0679751521
    ~Cindy

    "If you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to be a horrible warning." -Catherine Aird-

  21. #21
    Cape Codger OptiBoard Gold Supporter hcjilson's Avatar
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    I'm reading a corker now!

    Lone Star Justice- Utley is the author (first name forgotten)

    A history of the Texas Rangers....from the beginning to about 1911. This is a scholarly work and the author tends to inundate the reader with footnotes. I haven't seen that many footnotes since my last term paper in 1965!:)

    Its an amazing story from their origin, made necessary by frequent indian raids, to their participation in the Mexican American War, and on to the bad guys. The origin of the animosity between "texians and mexicans is chronicled extremely well and gives considerable insight to why it still exists today to some extent. The Rangers were not noted for their gentleness and massacre's were conducted by both sides.
    A fascinating tale.

    hj
    "Always laugh when you can. It is a cheap medicine"
    Lord Byron

    Take a photo tour of Cape Cod and the Islands!
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  22. #22
    Master OptiBoarder chm2023's Avatar
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    good summer reading non-fiction and fiction

    If you enjoy a good laugh, pick up any of David Sedaris' stuff: Naked is the only title I can bring to mind. But he is flat out the funniest writer on the scene today. His essays are hysterical, though be forewarned some of his stuff is pretty blue. And for fiction, my vote for the all time funniest book (ok 20th century) is "A Confederacy of Dunces" by John O'Toole. If you've not read it, do yourself a favor and pick it up. Just picked up the Da Vinci Code for vacation reading, hope it's good!!

  23. #23
    Master OptiBoarder Cindy Hamlin's Avatar
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    I just finished another really good book:

    Under the Banner of Heaven-A Story of Violent Faith
    by Jon Krakauer
    ISBN: 0-385-50951-0

    It is a look at mormonism, plural marriages and a murder commited by some over-zealous fundamentalists. It is a geat read and explains a lot about the Mormon faith. From its beginning until the current day.
    ~Cindy

    "If you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to be a horrible warning." -Catherine Aird-

  24. #24
    Forever Liz's Dad Steve Machol's Avatar
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    The Despotism of the Petticoat!

    After reading 7 fictions/fantasy books (Harry Potter and the two Thomas Covenant trilogies) I just finished reading David McCullough's excellent biography John Adams.

    I have to admit I had never given our second President much thought prior to reading this. However I can now see that he was arguably the most important single individual in both the decision to seek independence from England and the formation of the U.S. system of government.

    What I found extremely surprising was the less than noble character of Thomas Jefferson. While John Adams was thoroughly honest in his dealings with people and institutions, Jefferson was much less so - often to the point of extreme hypocrisy.

    Much of the book is taken from the thousands of letters written by John Adams, his equally remarkable and politically astute wife Abigail, and the noble-sounding Jefferson. In fact, Abigail Adams emerges as one of the true treasures of U.S. history - easily matching in both word and quality of thought the brightest minds of the Founding Fathers. My favorite was this clever and humorous exchange of letters between John and Abigail while Adams was in Philadelphia during the Second Continental Congress in 1776 (the one that wrote and signed the Declaration of Independence):

    Abigail Adams to John:

    "Remembers all men would be tyrants if they could. If particular care and attention is not paid to the ladies we are determined to foment a rebellion, and will not hold ourselves bound by any laws in which we have no voice or representation.

    "That your sex are so naturally tyrannical is a truth so thoroughly established as to admit of no dispute, but such of your as wish to be happy willingly give up the harsh title of master for the more tender and endearing one of friend. Why then not put it out of the power of the vicious and the lawless to use us with cruelty and indignity with impunity. Men of sense in all ages abhor those customs which treat us only as vassals of your sex. Regard us then as being placed by providence under your protection and in imitation of the Supreme Being make use of that power only for our happiness."


    To which John replied:

    "I cannot but laugh. We have been told that our struggle loosened the bands of government everywhere; that children and apprentices were disobedient; that schools and colleges were grown turbulent; that Indians slighted their guardians and Negroes grew insolent to their masters. But your letter was the first intimation that another tribe more numerous and powerful than all the rest were grown discontented. This is rather too coarse a compliment but you are so saucy, I won't blot it out.

    "Depend on it, we know better than to repeal our masculine systems. Although they are in full force, you know they are little more than theory. We dare not exert our power in its full latitude. We are obliged to go fairly and softly, and rather than give up this, which would complete subject us to the despotism of the petticoat, I hope General Washington and all our brave heroes would fight."


    Abigail also exchanged frequent letters with some of the leading Revolutionary's and Founding Fathers, including letters to Jefferson calling to him task for his many hypocrisies.

    This biography is is definitely a must-read for anyone interested in the time and people of the American Revolution and the founding of our government. It is very well written and provides glimpses into the leading characters of American history in their own words an the words on their contemporaries.

    As a continuation of this period I'm now reading Duel by Thomas Fleming. While not written as well as John Adams, this book nonetheless gives a fascination insight to two of the most intriguing people in American history - Alexander Hamilton, the aid to General Washington who became the first Secretary of the Treasury, and Aaron Burr, a true Revolutionary War hero who became the country's first consummate politician and the third Vice President of the U.S. This book explains the growing rivalry between these men that resulted in the famous duel in which Vice President Burr killed Hamilton.


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  25. #25
    Master OptiBoarder OptiBoard Gold Supporter CuriousCat's Avatar
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    I just finished "Marie Antoinette, The Journey" by Lady Antonia Fraser, an excellent work based on extensive research and "Mary Called Magdalene" by Margaret George, while an historical novel, the quality and quantity of her research is impressive. I can recommend both books very highly.
    Proud OptiBoarder since 1995!

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