Need some new history books to read

I’ve recently read Michael Smith’s “Station X: The Codebreakers of Bletchley Park”, which keeps the technicalities of decryption to a bearable level, and gives due weight to the huge bureaucratic follow-on work to make the decrypts into useable intelligence - and to the day-to-day living and working experience.

Some years ago, I was impressed by Robert Gildea’s “Fighters in the Shadows”, a history of the French Resistance in their political context, with some interesting new (to me) stuff about what happened after Liberation.

Thanks batsto for starting a really nice thread.

I’m about fifty pages in on The secret token and enjoying it very much…exactly what I was looking for.
thanks

Given the current events, The Great Influenza by John M Barry. The story of the 1918 flu. Mostly US focused, but some talk of the rest of the world.

He could be a Doper - the book has cites. About 60 pages worth.

Excellent!

Speaking of books about epidemics I would recommend:

The Coming Plague: New Emerging Diseases in A World Out of Balance–by Laurie Garrett----Published in 1994; it’s about new diseases emerging covering AIDS, Ebola, Legionairres’ Disease among others. It’s not a short book though— 620 pages and another 110 page of footnotes.

She also wrote a followup in 2000–Betrayal of Trust: The Collapse of Global Public Health. It is also a doorstopper—585 pages and 155 pages of footnotes.

I would also recommend:
*
The Making of the Atomic Bomb* by Richard Rhodes–Published in 1986, it is about…the making of the atomic bomb. It is 788 page long.

*The Little Ice Age: How Climate Made History 1300-1850 * by Brian Fagan Published in 2001, it is about a mini ice ages beginning in the 1300s affected European history, dramatically altering fishing and farming practices, and shaping events, from Norse exploration to the settlement of North America, from the French Revolution to the Irish potato famine to the Industrial Revolution. It is 288 pages.

Last Call was a fascinating read!

The best focused history book I’ve read in the past ten years is King Leopold’s Ghost by Adam Hochschild. Story of Belgian colonialism in Congo in the late 19th century, and the sadistic treatment of natives in the quest for profits in ivory and rubber. And the heroic efforts of one British customs agent to bring the crimes to light, leading to an international movement which included Mark Twain and lots of other internationally famous Humanitarians.

Also anything by Barbara Tuchman. Her The Guns of August (about the outset of the Great War) is the most famous, but I love The Proud Tower (European history 1880-1914) the most, because that’s the period I studied as an undergrad.

I second King Leopold’s Ghost. What a bastard he was. I just about every way. As a sidelight, I got to find out how Sanford, Florida got named. A lot of the state and regional offices I deal with are there.

Along this line I really liked The Wordy Shipmates by Sarah Vowell

**Good-Bye to All That **is WWI through the eyes of a young officer, Robert Graves, who went on to write I, Claudius.

The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great American Dust Bowl by Timothy Egan. Focuses on the lives of those suffering through the worst hit sections of the drought.

Island of the Lost: Shipwrecked at the Edge of the World by Joan Druett. Accounts of two separate shipwrecks on the same island, Auckland Island, at the same time.

I’ll second this book, it uses the tales of each shipwreck to illustrate different aspects of the Age of Discovery. Edward Leslie’s other book, The Devil Knows How To Ride: The True Story Of William Clarke Quantril And His Confederate Raiders is also an excellent read. Kinda wish Leslie had been able to write more books.

I’ve read King Leopold’s Ghost and the Guns of August as well and enjoyed both of them a great deal.

That one was okay, but her real delight is Assassination Vacation, where she does a deep dive into the murders of Presidents Garfield and McKinley.

Another excellent suggestion. When Graves was at school one of his teachers was George Mallory, the great climber who died during the 1922 Everest expedition. The anecdote about “Mallory’s Pipe” is unforgettable.