| A sort history of nearly everything by bill bryson is lots of fun and if you bring it up you will find a lot of people will speak up and say "wow i loved that book!" it's a great conversation starter. |
|
Agree with Carlo Rovelli! So glad to see his name.
The noonday daemon or far from the tree, Andrew Solomon How to cook a wolf, mfk fisher Being mortal, atul gawande The Second Coming by Yeats (it’s only two stanzas) |
These are very good. |
Far From the Tree, by Andrew Solomon is one of the most extraordinary books I’ve ever read. Deepened my empathy in ways I did not expect. I still think about that book 10+ years later. |
Me too! Do you have any other recommendations like that? |
No it isn't. |
| “Evicted” by Matthew Desmond. |
| The Power of your subconscious mind by Dr. Joseph Murphy - alter your reality and break the matrix |
|
Ishmael by Daniel Quinn. It’s a philosophical discussion about humanity’s place in the world.
|
| My fight, is in german |
| A People's History of the United States by Howard Zinn |
Absolutely this! |
| Natalie Angier’s The Canon is like a miniature survey course in basic scientific concepts. Very readable. |
|
Historical Fiction - The American Queen by Vanessa Miller
I had never heard of Louella Montgomery, an African American woman born into slavery in Mississippi, in the 1850s, and freed once slavery was abolished in 1865. The American Queen is a fictionalized story, based on what is known of Louella. Louella and her husband, Reverend William Montgomery have to leave Mississippi, as tensions grow following the recession and recovery of the Southern states after the Civil War. Together, they travel with other freed people through Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, and finally to the South Carolina/North Carolina border, where they find a place to settle. During their journey their group grows from almost 40 to over 200 people. They name their settlement, The Happy Land. Louella is a force to be reckoned with. She faces hardship from the time she is born, to the time she passes, but with each tragedy, she continues to fight for human rights and women's rights. I really hope this will be made into a mini series. |
|
Great thread. Thank you for starting.
I love Catherine Newman's books. Her autofiction book about her best friend dying in hospice will make you weep. "We all want Impossible Things" "When Breath Becomes Air" has stayed with me a decade after I read it. It made me really grapple with the fragility of life and seeming randomness of bad luck. |