This is a great point! I hadn’t thought of that. I’ll check those titles out.
Speaking of: any good documentary suggestions you can offer? Anything really hook you recently?
This is a great point! I hadn’t thought of that. I’ll check those titles out.
Speaking of: any good documentary suggestions you can offer? Anything really hook you recently?
Wow three times! This has been in my TBR pile for a while. I can’t wait to dig into it.
A few yers ago I started watching Adam Curtis’ documentaries. A very idiosyncratic presentation style, but draws a lot of threads together to explain how things got to how they are. We never give anyone 100% credence, but he won’t bore.
It is a great book. But then I read the first mystery in the series, and it was IMHO very bad. Mostly about boozing . Our Detective spends the first 90% of the book getting his man, only to have someone else fess up in the finial chapter that they did it instead.
I did not read that but I read - Stanley: The Impossible Life of Africa’s Greatest Explorer The Impossible Life of Africa’s Greatest Explorer.
He once killed a Grizzly Bear with only a Swiss Army Knife, Skied the Highest Glacier* on the World, Was involved in not only a HIgh-Speed pursuit, but a Police Stand-off…
He is… The Most Tedious Man in the World!
I don’t read History always, but when I do, It’s David McCullough…
The Man in the Queue
There’s a point to it, but it’s easily lost remote from the time and place of the book’s writing.
Some of her other books, not from the Alan Grant series (he’s the detective in The Daughter of Time), such as Brat Farrar are very good, and have been dramatized. And the other Alan Grant ones are far better than the first one.
But his books are good for the anecdotes. Like mosquitos being thick enough to snuff candles during early Panama Canal attempts. That stayed with me
Richard Frank’s Guadalcanal is one I’ve re-read several times. Dozens of books have been written about the campaign for this tiny Pacific island, but this one really nails it.
Agreed. I have to read this one every few years.
Just picked it up for free on Amazon. Thanks.
Personal favourite - Martin’s Hundred by Ivor Noel Hume.
Beautifully written unfolding of archaeological investigations on an early 17th century settlement near Jamestown, Virginia destroyed in a raid. It reads like a detective story at times, shows great breadth of scholarship and provides genuine insights onto that period.
If you want to learn something of broad scale history as it helped to shape the modern world then Eric Hobsbawm’s three volume survey of the long 19th century - The Age of Revolution, The Age of Capital and The Age of Empire - is a rich and dense intorduction. Focussed mainly on Europe (at least the first two), but pretty much one major analytical fact or interpretation per sentence, so they cover a lot of ground in both detail and scope.
I’ve started this series again in audio-book, and I think this is the better way to ingest these if you are not actually trying to use them as essay references. Generally as well, good history writing has a cadence and a strong internal style, which can make listening to it rather than reading it a great experience, especially for longer works.
Also, any of Tom Holland’s work in academic history is well-written and cast to highlight the most interesting and relevant elements and makes for a cracking yarn. My favourite of his is Millenium: the end of the World … which uses the clock ticking over to 1000 AD to take a snapshot of the Old World and the complex transformations happening in it around that point.
A favorite of mine may sound like pure biography, but is actually social history addressing the question of why some of the people who’ve had the most outsized influence on history outside the realm of politics have in common claims of ill health. It’s the 1974 Creative Malady, by George Pickering.
It’s not only thought-provoking, it’s delightful to read. This guy was a superb prose stylist.
Note the subtitle: Illness in the Lives and Minds of Charles Darwin, Florence Nightingale, Mary Baker Eddy, Sigmund Freud, Marcel Proust, Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
I will accept your knowledge about the subject. I loved The Daughter of Time but I found The Man in the Queue to be a huge disappointment. Obviously she is a popular mystery author.
I love history books that drop me into the mind and era of the characters much like Ken Follet’s The Pillars of the Earth.
I have always adored history and anything that can transport me to the action in the past has my vote.
Well, Daughter of Time is famous, but it lost much of its luster for me when I found the nonfiction book she cribbed all the info from. Without any mention that I can recall, although I’ve never seen the actual first edition. And the answer is outdated and wrong today. It’s 70 years old! I wouldn’t trust any 70-year-old book on history. People think that history happened and so can never change. That’s very wrong. People write history, and what they know and what their attitudes are change every year.
If the OP wants more on Roman history, Tom Holland - mentioned above and who seems to write a fat book every year - has Rubicon, on the period from republic to empire, and Dynasty, on the next hundred years. He has a new one out I haven’t read yet, Pax: War and Peace in Rome’s Golden Age.
Holland’s American equivalent is H. W. Brands, who focuses on American history and writes a book about it every year. I recently finished The General vs. the President: MacArthur and Truman at the Brink of Nuclear War, which took a deep look at the period from WWII to the Korean War, often slighted. But any of his books are good introductions to their subjects
That whole series is incredible. I tore through them.
The Pillars of the Earth is a good read, but I wasn’t convinced that its characters thought the way 12th century people actually thought. (I’m no expert though.)
It’s late but I wanted to add a couple.
The Guns of August by Barbara Tuchman, how Europe stumbled into WWI and how it became the bloody stalemate it ended up.
The Path Between the Seas by David McCullough, maybe a bit long about the French attempt but still fascinating history.
Maybe a bit dated now, but Bruce Catton’s Civil War trilogy The Coming Fury, Terrible Swift Sword, and Never Call Retreat are readable still.
And while not strictly a history book, William Shirer’s Berlin Diary is still compelling, as is The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln, by Doris Kearns Goodwin
American Sirens: The Incredible Story of the Black Men Who Became America’s First Paramedics, by Kevin Hazzard
Operation Sea Lion: The Failed Nazi Invasion that Turned the Tide of War, by Leo McKinstry
Voyage of Mercy: The USS Jamestown, the Irish Famine, and the Remarkable Story of America’s First Humanitarian Mission, by Stephen Puleo
Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era, by James M. McPherson
The Proud Tower, another great book by Barbara Tuchman, containing excellent summaries of the Dreyfus Affair and late-19th to early-20th century Anarchism.
Doomsday Men: The Real Dr. Strangelove and the Dream of the Superweapon, by P. D. Smith. Centering around the career of physicist Leo Szilard, it examines the entire concept of “doomsday” weapons, from turn of the century science fiction to Szilard’s concept of a cobalt-salted omnicide bomb.
For World War 2, Anthony Beevor has several books worth reading: Stalingrad, the Fall of Berlin 1945, D-Day: The Battle for Normandy. His history of the Spanish Civil War is good too.
Another good WW2 historian is Ben McIntyre. He concentrates on espionage and intelligence gathering.
If you are interested in the history of art and architecture, Ross King is your man: I really enjoyed Brunelleschi’s Dome (about the building of Florence’s cathedral), Michelangelo and the Pope’s Ceiling, and Leonardo and the Last Supper.
If you are interested in economic history, I’d recommend A Splendid Exchange: How Trade Shaped the World by WIlliam Bernstein.