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clyrc

(2,299 posts)
Sun Dec 11, 2011, 07:28 AM Dec 2011

Favorite non-fiction you've read this year?

I've read so many great non-fiction books this year, it's really made up for the not so great fiction books. I loved "The Secret History of the Mongol Queens: How the Daughters of Genghis Khan Rescued His Empire" by Jack Weatherford, "Paradise Beneath Her Feet-
How Women Are Transforming the Middle East" by Isobel Coleman, "Small Acts of Resistance: How Courage, Tenacity, and a Bit of Ingenuity Can Change the World" by Steve Crawshaw and John Jackson , "A Winter on the Nile: Florence Nightingale, Gustave Flaubert and the Temptations of Egypt"By Anthony Sattin, and I found "The Geopolitics of Emotion: How Cultures of Fear, Humiliation, and Hope are Reshaping the World" by Dominique Moisi very interesting.

But the book I loved most this year, and tried to get everyone to read, was "People Like Us: Misrepresenting the Middle East" by Joris Luyendijk. It's an amazing book, and my favorite of all the books I've read this year.

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Favorite non-fiction you've read this year? (Original Post) clyrc Dec 2011 OP
clyrc, thanks for the rec of this book: Went & bought it for my kindle. Also, Happy Holidays. EV_Ares Dec 2011 #1
Happy holidays to you, too clyrc Dec 2011 #5
Lost in Shangri-La by Mitchell Zuckoff pokerfan Dec 2011 #2
Looks like something I would love to read clyrc Dec 2011 #6
I'm currently in the middle of the Steve Jobs bio av8rdave Dec 2011 #3
I keep telling myself to stop pushing this book, clyrc Dec 2011 #7
Am in the final third of the Jobs bio and have the opposite opinion! Merlot Dec 2011 #9
Twain's autobiography lazarus Dec 2011 #4
I just started reading Twain's autobiography clyrc Dec 2011 #8
The book I'm reading now, "American Nations". Odin2005 Dec 2011 #10
Probably Mark Twains autobiography JitterbugPerfume Dec 2011 #11
I keep track of the books I read online clyrc Dec 2011 #13
that is a good idea JitterbugPerfume Dec 2011 #16
Good place to do that at: Neoma Dec 2011 #20
Jon Ronson's The Psychopath Test and Nicholas Carr's The Shallows salvorhardin Dec 2011 #12
The occult one sounds particularly interesting clyrc Dec 2011 #14
I really enjoyed Occult America salvorhardin Dec 2011 #15
It's an oldie MountainLaurel Dec 2011 #17
"Life" by Keith Richards Seedersandleechers Dec 2011 #18
'Just Kids' was wonderful. If you're a boomer, or love NYC, it's a winner. LuckyLib Jan 2012 #24
The Atlantic, by Simon Winchester Loge23 Dec 2011 #19
Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell. Manifestor_of_Light Dec 2011 #21
I Is an Other: The Secret Life of Metaphor and How It Shapes the Way We See the World Z_I_Peevey Dec 2011 #22
I just finished Hitchen's last book of essays. bemildred Dec 2011 #23
"The Second Sex" -- Simone De Beauvoir. nt bemildred Jan 2012 #25
 

EV_Ares

(6,587 posts)
1. clyrc, thanks for the rec of this book: Went & bought it for my kindle. Also, Happy Holidays.
Sun Dec 11, 2011, 10:20 AM
Dec 2011

I just bought: 'People Like Us: Misrepresenting the Middle East' by Joris Luyendijk
www.amazon.com

In People Like Us , which became a bestseller in Holland, Joris Luyendijk tells the story of his five years as a correspondent in the Middle East. Extremely young for a correspondent but fluent in Arabic, he spoke with stone throwers and terrorists, taxi drivers and professors, victims and aggressors, and all of their families. He chronicles first-hand experiences of dictatorship, occupation, terror, and war. His...

pokerfan

(27,677 posts)
2. Lost in Shangri-La by Mitchell Zuckoff
Sun Dec 11, 2011, 10:46 AM
Dec 2011


Mitchell Zuckoff’s “Lost in Shangri-La” delivers a feast of failures — of planning, of technology, of communication — that are resolved in a truly incredible adventure. Truly incredible? A cliché, yes, but Zuckoff’s tale is something a drunk stitches together from forgotten B movies and daydreams while clutching the bar. Zuckoff is no fabulist, though, and in this brisk book he narrates the tense yet peaceful five weeks during 1945 that three plane crash survivors spent immersed “in a world that time didn’t forget. Time never knew it existed.” Even at the level of exposition, the book is breathless.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/05/books/review/book-review-lost-in-shangri-la-by-mitchell-zuckoff.html

av8rdave

(10,573 posts)
3. I'm currently in the middle of the Steve Jobs bio
Sun Dec 11, 2011, 03:21 PM
Dec 2011

Interesting read (Isaacson writes great bios), but ol' Steve doesn't come across as the most likable character., IMO.

Thanks for the rec in the OP. Will download People Like Us... today.



Merlot

(9,696 posts)
9. Am in the final third of the Jobs bio and have the opposite opinion!
Mon Dec 12, 2011, 07:13 PM
Dec 2011

Not to fond of Isaacsons style of writing, but am liking and admiring Steve more with each chapter.

It's been a real page-turner for me.

lazarus

(27,383 posts)
4. Twain's autobiography
Sun Dec 11, 2011, 05:44 PM
Dec 2011

and volume one of a bio of Robert A Heinlein.

Also "Bonk", a book about the intersection of sex and science. Very interesting.

Odin2005

(53,521 posts)
10. The book I'm reading now, "American Nations".
Tue Dec 13, 2011, 12:12 AM
Dec 2011
http://www.colinwoodard.com/americannations

It says that the US is not a single nation, but a collection of 10 distinct nations, several of which also are part of Canada or Mexico.

Yankeedom: New England, upstate NY, The Canadian Maritimes and the Upper Midwest

New Netherlands: The NYC area.

Midlands: Phillie, Pittsburgh, Northern Ohio-Indiana-Illinois-Missouri, Iowa, Eastern Nebraska-Kansas, Ontario, Manitoba.

Tidewater: Coastal Virginia and North Carolina.

Greater Appalachia: Appalachia, the Lower Midwest, the Inland South, and North Texas.

Deep South: The coastal plain from South Carolina to SE Texas.

El Norte: Region straddling both sides of the US-Mexico Border.

Left Coast: Coastal California-Oregon-Washington, SW British Columbia.

The Far West: The High Plains and the Inter-Mountain West.

New France: Southern Louisiana and Quebec.

JitterbugPerfume

(18,183 posts)
11. Probably Mark Twains autobiography
Tue Dec 13, 2011, 01:03 AM
Dec 2011

or maybe The Immortal Life of Hentietta Lacks. It's reall hard to remember everything I have read this year and even harder to pick a favorite.

clyrc

(2,299 posts)
13. I keep track of the books I read online
Tue Dec 13, 2011, 03:38 AM
Dec 2011

This year the website I use wasn't working for a few months, so I don't have all of them recorded. I have probably missed a few good ones, too.

salvorhardin

(9,995 posts)
12. Jon Ronson's The Psychopath Test and Nicholas Carr's The Shallows
Tue Dec 13, 2011, 01:07 AM
Dec 2011

Also, the first volume of William Patterson's biography of Robert A. Heinlein and Mitch Horowitz's Occult America: The Secret History of How Mysticism Shaped Our Nation.

All highly recommended.

salvorhardin

(9,995 posts)
15. I really enjoyed Occult America
Tue Dec 13, 2011, 08:44 AM
Dec 2011

It really drove home the point that we on the political left here in the US really owe a great intellectual debt to some people with some decidedly unusual beliefs.

Anyway, here's what I had to say about Horowitz's book at the time:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=439x1377139

MountainLaurel

(10,271 posts)
17. It's an oldie
Tue Dec 13, 2011, 10:38 PM
Dec 2011

But The 900 Days by Harrison Salisbury, about the siege of Leningrad. He has a style of writing that addresses military and political strategy as well as the effects on the "little people."

LuckyLib

(6,819 posts)
24. 'Just Kids' was wonderful. If you're a boomer, or love NYC, it's a winner.
Wed Jan 11, 2012, 06:41 PM
Jan 2012

She's a good writer with wonderful stories of youth life in the city in the 60's.

Loge23

(3,922 posts)
19. The Atlantic, by Simon Winchester
Fri Dec 16, 2011, 12:05 PM
Dec 2011

Really loved this book, most of which I listened to the author read on an audio. It was so good that I brought a hardcover version to return to at will.
Others: Patty Smith's aforementioned "Just Kids" was the best of the three autobiographicals I read, the others being Roseanne Cash's "Composed" and Mr. Richard's first half -good "Life".
Just finishing up Erik Larson's "In the Garden of Beasts", which is the quite interesting recounting of William Dodd's tenure as Ambassador to Germany in the early 1930's during the rise of Hitler's horrors.
Btw, if you like autobiographies, try Quincy Jones's. Regardless if you are familiar with Mr. Jones's work or not, this book is a fascinating reveal of American musical history.

 

Manifestor_of_Light

(21,046 posts)
21. Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell.
Wed Dec 28, 2011, 08:58 PM
Dec 2011

It's about why people succeed, whether it's access to resources, amount of practicing done to get competent (minimum of 10,000 hours), or what factors. It is not just luck. It's various easy to specify factors.

The Female Brain. Very interesting.

At Home by Bill Bryson.

John Kennedy, Elusive Hero by Chris Matthews.

Z_I_Peevey

(2,783 posts)
22. I Is an Other: The Secret Life of Metaphor and How It Shapes the Way We See the World
Fri Dec 30, 2011, 07:10 PM
Dec 2011

by James Geary.

Despite the clunky title, it was a real treat: packed with information, engaging, well-written and clever.

Here's a bit from the product description: "In I Is an Other, James Geary takes readers from Aristotle's investigation of metaphor right up to the latest neuroscientific insights into how metaphor works in the brain. Along the way, he demonstrates how metaphor affects financial decision making, how metaphor lurks behind effective advertisements, how metaphor inspires learning and discovery, and how metaphor can be used as a tool to achieve emotional insight and psychological change. Geary also explores how a life without metaphor, as experienced by some people with autism spectrum disorders, significantly changes the way a person interacts with the world. As Geary demonstrates, metaphor has leaped off the page and landed with a mighty splash right in the middle of our stream of consciousness."

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