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That place is a bit of a hang-out for me and I have seen it evolve to a beaut. Nice people to talk to there. |
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Can you remember when it was written? Good book you say. I am very interested-Thanks. |
^^^ If you like that type of read, Aces High is excellent. Top fighter pilots of WW2 - Dick Bong and Tommy McGuire. No, make that way beyond excellence. 4 stars
Not in Oprahs book club. |
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It's a fascinating story about how a single person was able to change the entire direction of the US Air Force, and arguably, the entire US Armed Forces, from below (or at least from the middle). Boyd: The Fighter Pilot Who Changed the Art of War: Robert Coram: 9780316796880: Amazon.com: Books |
Antony Beevor "The Second World War"
A good read, less eurocentric than most such books. |
Three of my favorite reads are:
The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the fall of New York, by Robert Caro. A great (long) book about how much of NY and Long Island evolved from the i930's forward, and how power concentrated in one man can really change the landscape, and how the system corrected itself (Nelson Rockefeller crushed the guy in a classic boss-subordinate transaction). I am currently re-reading this one. Undaunted Courage by Stephen Ambrose. The story of the Lewis and Clark expedition, how Thomas Jefferson directed it and the opening of the west. One of my all-time favorites. Nothing Like it in the World The men who build the transcontinental railroad 1863 - 1867 by Stephen Ambrose. One of those can't put it down books. It is has some details reviewers have stated that are just plain in error, but a great read anyway. |
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OODA loop - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia I have been on a WW2 history kick lately. Anything by Cornelius Ryan Anything by Stephen E. Ambrose Beyond Band of Brothers: The War Memoirs of Major Dick Winters Anything by James Hornfischer The Rommel Papers Panzer Commander: The Memoirs of Colonel Hans von Luck Stalingrad: The Fateful Siege: 1942-1943 by Anthony Beever (He wrote a lot of books, going to see what else I can find from him) A Writer at War: A Soviet Journalist with the Red Army, 1941-1945 Vasily Grossman |
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New release titled BOMB by Steve Sheinkin. Couldn't put it down and last night read cover to cover. Nicely done as the author tied in three story's of the a-bomb. The development, the race to build it and the stealing of it. Documentary that used FBI archival and terrific sources to piece the story together. Excellent read if you like WW2 and spy stories. 4 stars
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"Eating Animals" Johnathan Safran Foer
read it fwiw. |
The Long Road To Antietam: How the Civil War Became a Revolution by Richard Slotkin
In preparation for the upcoming Lincoln movie. |
Just finished Paper Tiger: An Obsessed Golfer's Quest to Play with the Pros by Tom Coyne. Good book about just how hard it is to become a pro golfer.
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Recently finished American Sniper and now I'm going to read Lone Survivor.
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In The Blink Of An Eye by Walter Murch. It's an interesting read. Dude was a genius
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I read, "Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China" - Jung Chang, based on this thread.
Highly recommend. I have recommended this book, "Empire of the Summer Moon" by S. C. Gwynne’s a few times here. I'll do it again. So many more. |
I'm currently reading The Tale Of Scrotie McBoogerballs. It's an enthralling story, but I wouldn't read it if you have a weak stomach.
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This week I am reading "The Gestapo; A History of Horror" by Jacqques Delarue. I typically read about four books a month, mostly non-fiction.
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ASM Handbook of Composites
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IPhone 5 for Dummies and Seniors
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"The Emerald Mile"- an adventure epic of running the Colorado at record high water in the '80's, with a history of the canyon and its dams thrown in. Extremely well done.
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