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2007-08-10 3:06 PM
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Elite
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?
Cool - I just put Ghost Soldiers on hole at the library.  I'll go get it tomorrow! 


2007-08-10 3:12 PM
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?
I am currently reading 1776 by David G McCullough and a history of Vietnam.  I can't remember the author of that one.  I also have read many books on Custer and the Battle at Little Big Horn. 
2007-08-10 3:37 PM
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COURT JESTER
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?

I will keep reading it eventually, “We Were Soldiers Once…and Young.”  Not exactly a history book but a recount of one battle in Vietnam.

 

Hogwarts, A History

2007-08-10 7:53 PM
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Elite
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?

 

"Skeletons on the Zahara" - the true story of an American merchant sailing crew who shipwrecked in Africa in the early 1800's and were taken into slavery by Saharan nomadic Arabs. Compiled from the journals that they kept during their captivity. Would make a great movie.

"Over the Edge of the World" - a very easy-to-read account of Magellan's attempt to circumnavigate the Earth.

"Collapse" by Jared Diamond (the Guns, Germs & Steel guy) - kind of academic and dry, but very interesting analysis of several failed societies and looks at the complex reasons why they failed.

Calendar: Humanity's Epic Struggle to Determine a True and Accurate Year - all about man's quest to keep time and mark the passing of the seasons coupled with the development of mathematics, astronomy, and trade. Fascinating and very easy-to-read.

and my favorite historical book of all-time:

"Longitude" - very easy to read (and short) account of the development of the first clocks able to keep accurate time at sea (necessary to determine longitude) in the 1700's. Several of the clocks are in the Naval Observatory Museum at Greenwich England and some of them still run!

 

 



Edited by ScottoNM 2007-08-10 8:04 PM
2007-08-10 8:42 PM
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Pro
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?

Now tackling:  Robert and Isabelle Tombs, That Sweet Enemy:  The French and the British from the Sun King to the Present.

The authors are a husband-and-wife team of historians.  He's British and specializes in French history; she's French and specializes in British.  It got a great review in the Atlantic a couple of months back; will let you know how I like it. 

Hey Renee, thanks for starting this!  There's hope for civilization/CoJ after all.   

2007-08-10 8:45 PM
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Runner
Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?
For an interesting read on the Middle East, I recommend "From Beiruit To Jerusalem", by Thomas Friedman.  Good author.  Also, "Longitudes and Attitudes".


2007-08-10 9:10 PM
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Elite
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?

China and the Vietnam Wars, 1950-1975 (Zhai)

The Heritage of Chinese Civilization (Craig)

bts 

2007-08-10 11:53 PM
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?
ScottoNM - 2007-08-10 5:53 PM

 

"Skeletons on the Zahara" - the true story of an American merchant sailing crew who shipwrecked in Africa in the early 1800's and were taken into slavery by Saharan nomadic Arabs. Compiled from the journals that they kept during their captivity. Would make a great movie.

 

Another favorite of mine is "They Poured Fire on us From the Sky".  It's an amazing story about three small boys that fled their war torn villages in Sudan and trekked to the Ethiopia/Kenya border to a refugee camp.  I can't imagine surviving all that as an adult let alone as a seven year old child. 

2007-08-11 12:26 PM
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?
Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong by James W. Loewen - this was a really good one. His other book was interesting as well. Lies Across America: What Our Historic Sites Got Wrong

People's History of the United States: 1492 to Present by Howard Zinn - this one i have not read in its entirety, but i skim it from time to time.
2007-08-11 2:36 PM
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?
I have enjoyed everything I've read that was written by Stephen Ambrose.
2007-08-11 4:30 PM
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Elite
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?

mdg2003 - 2007-08-11 2:36 PM I have enjoyed everything I've read that was written by Stephen Ambrose.

 I was on an Ambrose kick for a while. He makes me feel like the average American today is a selfish complaining bloated comsumer compared to the men that fought in WWII.



2007-08-11 7:53 PM
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Elite
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?
Band of Brothers is particularly moving, and Maj Dick Winters memoirs.

War and Peace might as well be history because it so accurately describes what life in Russia was like at the time.

Jeeze - I read so many Russian/Soviet history books in college - I can't remember them all.
2007-08-12 6:59 AM
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Champion
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?

+1 for Lies My Teacher Told me.

 

Another one that comes to mind is Bill Bryson's Made in America, about how the "American language" developed; where our words come from, grammatical idiosyncracies, and all kinds of interesting nuggets.

2007-08-12 8:32 AM
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?

"Ordeal By Hunger" by George Stewart.  It's the history of the Donner Party.  I am pretty much a nut-job about this event in history, and have a collection of books about it.  Some other good ones to read are:

"History of the Donner Party" by C.F. McGlashan

"Winter of Entrapment" by Joseph A. King.  King is also a good Civil War historian, as is the late Wallace Stegner who also might have done some Donner Party work, though I have yet to uncover it.

"The Expedition of the Donner Party" by Eliza P. Donner Houghton, a surviving member or the ordeal.

"The Emmigrant's Guide to Oregon and California" by Lansford W. Hastings.  This is a reprint of the original guide that the Donners and the Reeds used to get themselves into their drastic situation.

A good addition to the above is the PBS documentary of The Donner Party, available on DVD.

 

 

2007-08-12 6:33 PM
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Elite
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?

 

Speaking to the medium of video, I really really really like Ken Burns' documentary Lewis & Clark

2007-08-12 6:53 PM
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?
"Faith of my Fathers" by McCain. I read this a few months ago but really like it.

"White Devil" about Robert Rogers. Great read.

"Montcalm and Wolfe: The French and Indian War" Very dense but VERY good.

Not sure if it counts but "Little Big Man." What an awesome, fun book. Fiction but a lot of history tied into it.


2007-08-12 9:29 PM
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Champion
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The Green Between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh
Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?
You forgot The Donner Party Cookbook....
2007-08-12 9:49 PM
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Runner
Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?

FishrCutB8 - 2007-08-12 10:29 PM You forgot The Donner Party Cookbook....

I thought it was the Donner Party of 9.  Gotta include Santa, you know, and the rest of the reindeer. 

2007-08-12 9:57 PM
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Subject: RE: What history books have/are you reading?
dontracy - 2007-08-10 7:52 AM

Just finishing up Art and Beauty in the Middle Ages.

And just starting History of Beauty.

Both by Umberto Eco.

I have this habit of starting a new book before I finish the previous one. It's kind of a cross fade effect.

 

Ooh, History of Beauty's been on my to-read list for a long time. Just have to remember to get it from the library! 

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