What We Are Reading In October 2016
DiscussionsNon-Fiction Readers
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1Seajack
Having liked Eric Weiner's first two books, The Geography of Bliss and Man Seeks God, I had high hopes for his newest title: The Geography of Genius. His self-deprecatory humor, and decent travel narrative style, just hasn't held my interest well; a couple of times I've had to stop myself from bailing on the book. With the last section on Silicon Valley to finish, I'll finish it, but wouldn't blame others who didn't.
2Daniel.Estes
I was thinking about reading The Geography of Genius but you recommend his other two? Which one should I start with?
3LynnB
I'm starting A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson
4trav
I just finished Let Them Eat Dirt and learned a lot. Not sure I'm 100% on board with all of the connections they try and make, but I was amazed at all the inroads and discoveries science is making in the area of bacteria/biomes. Much of it made sense.
I'm starting Randy Robert's Blood Brothers tonight and am pretty excited. I hear good things about this book.
I'm starting Randy Robert's Blood Brothers tonight and am pretty excited. I hear good things about this book.
5trav
>>3 LynnB: I thought that Bryson book was wonderful. Hope you enjoy it as much as I did. I recommend it all the time. It is so interesting.
62wonderY
>4 trav: I love that title Let Them Eat Dirt and I'm so glad the science world is turning the corner on this issue.
7Seajack
Daniel - read them in order The Geography of Bliss, Man Seeks God and then The Geography of Genius. I like them as audiobooks; his ... nebbish-y humor comes through better that way.
9framboise
About 2/3 done with Lab Girl. Interesting and well-written but the science stuff sometimes gets to be too much and puts me to sleep.
10JulieLill
Nutshell
by Ian McEwan
5/5 stars
I loved this latest book by McEwan. Told through the viewpoint of a mother's unborn child, the author weaves a tale of betrayal of a husband by his wife and brother. This was so well written it made me think that maybe McEwan remembered his time in the womb.
by Ian McEwan
5/5 stars
I loved this latest book by McEwan. Told through the viewpoint of a mother's unborn child, the author weaves a tale of betrayal of a husband by his wife and brother. This was so well written it made me think that maybe McEwan remembered his time in the womb.
11snash
I finished Good Time Girls which was an amazing account of those who invariably are poorly documented, illustrating their adventurous, hearty, generous, and enterprising nature and their contributions to the Alaskan-Yukon frontier. The numerous pictures add immensely to the story.
12LynnB
I'm going to preview Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail by Cheryl Strayed for a book club.
13ktho
Currently reading my way through:
"Franklin and Winston: An Intimate Portrait of an Epic Friendship," by Jon Meacham;
"American Leviathan: Empire, Nation, and Revolutionary Frontier," by Patrick Griffin;
"The Perfect Horse: The Daring U.S. Mission to Rescue the Priceless Stallions Kidnapped by the Nazis," by Elizabeth Letts;
and I'm reading my review copy of "Powered By Girl: A Field Guide for Supporting Youth Activists," by Lyn Mikel Brown.
"Franklin and Winston: An Intimate Portrait of an Epic Friendship," by Jon Meacham;
"American Leviathan: Empire, Nation, and Revolutionary Frontier," by Patrick Griffin;
"The Perfect Horse: The Daring U.S. Mission to Rescue the Priceless Stallions Kidnapped by the Nazis," by Elizabeth Letts;
and I'm reading my review copy of "Powered By Girl: A Field Guide for Supporting Youth Activists," by Lyn Mikel Brown.
14snash
Finished a LTER. Nonsense: The Power of Not Knowing is an exploration of the human impulse for closure and how it can often work against us, curtailing creativity, empathy, and flexibility. While proposing a few techniques to help deal with ambiguity, it would seem awareness of the forces and stresses that promote closure is a big step forward. The book is well written and uses examples from varied sources such as business, literature, and education as well as social psychology.
16bakechad
Currently reading The Drunkard's Walk and When Breath Becomes Air.
17Bookmarque
Yesterday I started Consider the Fork and so far it's informative and entertaining. Woo hoo!
18LynnB
That looks interesting, Bookmarque.
I'm reading White Walls: A Memoir About Motherhood, Daughterhood, and the Mess in Between by Judy Batalion.
I'm reading White Walls: A Memoir About Motherhood, Daughterhood, and the Mess in Between by Judy Batalion.
19bluepiano
>17 Bookmarque: Now, that sounds interesting. Is it well-written & thoroughly-researched and is it to the point, or is it more like one of those horrid popular books by journalists that are padded & dumbed-down & imbued with a chummy tone? (I was as tickled as I was perplexed to see a reviewer of it mentioning that because Wilson attributes the inventions by women to, er, women the book might be thought left-wing.)
Am reading Ancient Bodies, Ancient Lives. A strongly implied warning to archaeologists that they oughtn't assess other cultures in other times by the attitudes of our own, in this case not to assume that the distinction between m/f has always been a significant one.
Am reading Ancient Bodies, Ancient Lives. A strongly implied warning to archaeologists that they oughtn't assess other cultures in other times by the attitudes of our own, in this case not to assume that the distinction between m/f has always been a significant one.
20LynnB
I'm reading another biography: How to Live: A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at an Answer by Sarah Bakewell.
21Bookmarque
I just finished it and it was interesting, but it's quirky and mostly it's the writer's own experience that makes it so. For example she says that vegetable peelers didn't become common until the 1990s. What? I used one my entire life. I never used anything else to peel veggies and I doubt my mom did either. I was a kid in the 70s. I don't know if it has a "chummy" tone, but it isn't dry. Yes it's a history of cooking implements and innovations and how those things died or caught on, but it's anecdotal, too. I liked how she loves her Aeropress as I do, and I liked reading of her discovery of sous vide.
23bluepiano
>21 Bookmarque: Cheers for your comment. Sounds too lazy a book for my taste.
Reading this year's winner of Wellcome prize, It's All in Your Head: Stories and read tonight Trump and Me. The latter has made me terribly curious about the family Donald Trump grew up in.
Reading this year's winner of Wellcome prize, It's All in Your Head: Stories and read tonight Trump and Me. The latter has made me terribly curious about the family Donald Trump grew up in.
25Bookmarque
My ER book is a NF this time - Hidden Thunder:Rock art of the Upper Midwest. Many of the sites are inaccessible, which helps preserve them, but just knowing they're out there is interesting. There's a big woo-woo element to the presentation though. I guess atheism hasn't really hit the native American population much.
26LynnB
I'm on to another autobiography: Fair Game: How a Top CIA Agent was Betrayed by her own Government by Valerie Plame Wilson.
27LynnB
I'm reading Play Ball and Carry On by Gregory Rom.
28rocketjk
I've got a World War Two history going now: McCampbell's Heroes: The Story of the U.S. Navy's Most Celebrated Carrier Fighters of the Pacific War by Edwin P. Hoyt.
29JulieLill
Finished-
Nobody Said Not to Go: The Life, Loves, and Adventures of Emily Hahn
by Ken Cuthbertson
5/5 stars
As I finished this book, what came to my mind was Dos Equis's Beer ad campaign, “The Most Interesting Man in the World". If they had to pick a female for that role it would have had to have been Emily Hahn as the world's most interesting woman.
Hahn was born in St. Louis, Missouri into a large Jewish family in 1905. The family eventually moved to Chicago, Illinois. She ended up as the only female mining engineering student at college and later she and a girlfriend traveled in a Model T-Ford across the US. She also traveled alone to Africa and lived there for a few years before moving home and writing a book about her experiences. She then traveled to Hong Kong and was stuck there during the Japanese invasion during WWII and where she met her future husband and had a child. She was a writer most of her life and wrote novels and short stories. She also wrote for The New Yorker till a few months before her death at the age of 92. Cuthbertson weaves a wonderful tale of her adventures and her accomplishments. I had a hard time putting this down.
Nobody Said Not to Go: The Life, Loves, and Adventures of Emily Hahn
by Ken Cuthbertson
5/5 stars
As I finished this book, what came to my mind was Dos Equis's Beer ad campaign, “The Most Interesting Man in the World". If they had to pick a female for that role it would have had to have been Emily Hahn as the world's most interesting woman.
Hahn was born in St. Louis, Missouri into a large Jewish family in 1905. The family eventually moved to Chicago, Illinois. She ended up as the only female mining engineering student at college and later she and a girlfriend traveled in a Model T-Ford across the US. She also traveled alone to Africa and lived there for a few years before moving home and writing a book about her experiences. She then traveled to Hong Kong and was stuck there during the Japanese invasion during WWII and where she met her future husband and had a child. She was a writer most of her life and wrote novels and short stories. She also wrote for The New Yorker till a few months before her death at the age of 92. Cuthbertson weaves a wonderful tale of her adventures and her accomplishments. I had a hard time putting this down.
31JulieLill
>30 LynnB: That book sounds interesting.
32LyzzyBee
I'm reading The Novel Cure though it's more of a book to dip into, maybe. It's adding to my wishlist, just by dint of being about books, some of which I've not heard of at all!
33JulieLill
>32 LyzzyBee: I am still reading books I put on my list several years ago but this book looks interesting.
34LynnB
I read The Novel Cure and found it very interesting....and I added several books to my wish list and/or the TBR shelves.
35JulieLill
Anybody Can Do Anything
Betty MacDonald
4/5 stars
I am a big fan of Betty MacDonald and was glad to be able to find a copy of Anybody Can Do Anything which was one of her adult books that I haven't read. Betty relates her experiences trying to get and keep a job during the depression after she left her husband. Her and her two daughters moved into her mother's house already filled with unemployed siblings and her sister Mary did everything she could to help Betty with her unemployment status. Betty's humor shines through these stories even though life was very hard for her and her family.
Betty MacDonald
4/5 stars
I am a big fan of Betty MacDonald and was glad to be able to find a copy of Anybody Can Do Anything which was one of her adult books that I haven't read. Betty relates her experiences trying to get and keep a job during the depression after she left her husband. Her and her two daughters moved into her mother's house already filled with unemployed siblings and her sister Mary did everything she could to help Betty with her unemployment status. Betty's humor shines through these stories even though life was very hard for her and her family.
362wonderY
>35 JulieLill: That sounds like a book right up my line. I was able to find a digital copy at Archive.org. I had to join to borrow it, but it was no big deal. YaY!