Me I'm reading The Life and Times of Andrew Pickens.
RPag said:
Just finished: The Model Occupation by Madeleine Bunting; covers the Nazi occupation of British Channel Islands. Fascinating study of how collaborators were willingly found wherever the Nazis had influence.
Currently reading: Gulag, a History by Anne Applebaum; an in-depth history of the gulag system.
On deck: The Years of Extermination by Saul Friedlander; one of the greatest histories of the Holocaust ever compiled.
Cen-Tex said:
Pegasus Bridge. Stephen Ambrose 2nd book on the topic. So far, so good. The book has been out for a decade or more, but finally had time to start reading it.
Applebaum is fantastic.RPag said:
Just finished: The Model Occupation by Madeleine Bunting; covers the Nazi occupation of British Channel Islands. Fascinating study of how collaborators were willingly found wherever the Nazis had influence.
Currently reading: Gulag, a History by Anne Applebaum; an in-depth history of the gulag system.
On deck: The Years of Extermination by Saul Friedlander; one of the greatest histories of the Holocaust ever compiled.
Would love to know which ones?BQ78 said:
Various history magazines and journals, the stack is too high.
That first one sounds heady!aalan94 said:
Since I got to Afghanistan, my reading has plummeted. I did 52 books before October and have only finished one since. It was a good one:
Occidentalism: The West in the Eyes of its Enemies by Ian Baruma and Avi Margalit. A great study that really was an awakening in my mind about what unites the anti-Western movements from the Nazis to Soviets and Japanese to modern Islamic extremists. When you understand their points, you realize that the anti-Western movement within the West is a powerful constant, from J.J. Rousseau down through (dare I say it) Thomas Jefferson and the 1960s hippies. Not that Jefferson would have agreed with them, but the anti-progress, pro-pastoralism attitude is at its core a rejection of capitalism. Don't argue with me on this, read the book or a good review first. You'll realize that even a profoundly Western person (such as myself) has anti-Western (or anti-modern) tendencies and feelings.
Ultimately, I think they've defined the West and Modern as the same thing, which is a convergence, but not correspondence of values, which is why you get such conflicting notions as Jefferson, the author of much of American liberty being portrayed as the enemy of the result of that liberty. Nonetheless, it's a great book to test your mind.
Here's one summary I've found.
I'm about to finish "I Flew for the Fuhrer" by Heinrich Knokke, a WWII Luftwaffe memoir. I usually spice up my deeper readings with just interesting short WWII books.
Other than that, I'm doing a lot of reading relative to my research on the Gutierrez-Magee Expedition. I'm working my way simultaneously through a few books on West Florida, Aaron Burr and other background issues to the expedition.
Wowp_bubel said:
BQ78 said:
Civil War Times (6 issues per year)
Gettysburg (2 issues per year)
American History (6 issues per year)
Civil War Monitor (2 issues per year)
Blue and Gray (6 issues per year but just went defunct ;-()
Southwest Historical Quarterly Journal (4 issues per year)
Civil War News (monthly)
Gettysburg Foundation (4 issues per year)
Hallowed Ground (4 or 6 issues per year not sure which)
I am currently one year behind, so multiple issues of each.
This looks sweet.SRBS said:
Target Rabaul. 3rd in the trilogy by Bruce Gamble.
Halfway through. Tremendous. Better than the first two which were pretty much great.
Strongly recommend all 3
great book. read "hell in a very small place" as wellDeckMe80 said:
Street Without Joy by Bernard Fall, about the French military collapse in Vietnam in the 1950's. It is hard to read too much at a time, as it is basically the same scenario playing out again and again.
An acquaintance of mine, who was a dedicated and patriotic transport plane pilot who flew in and out of Vietnam starting well before we acknowledged our involvement, recommended it to me. He told me, "I read it in 1964, and I knew we were going to lose."
SRBS said:
Just finished Washington's Immortals. Good, not great.
Now on "In the Highest Degree Tragic" About the U.S.Asiatc fleet. Tremendous. Just needs maps.