So what are you reading?

Interesting list. I tried Eco but couldn't get through Foucault's Pendulum. Rand is tough sledding but sometimes worth the effort. I've read practically all of Follett's books, starting with The Eye of the Needle. His best was The Pillars of the Earth. I thought O'Reilly's Lincoln was terribly flawed and not scholarly at all. Check out Tom Di Lorenzo's books on Lincoln for a much more persuasive look at the 16th President and why he deserves to be ranked at the bottom the list of the greatest presidents.
Thanks, Joe.

Ayn Rand's books are tough sleds, indeed.

I read both "Killing Lincoln" and "Killing Kennedy". Like you I thought they were flawed, and not that good. I really liked "World Without End". A bit long but really well written.

Eco, I think, is an acquired taste.

I'll give Di Lorenzo's books a go. I've never been a huge fan of Lincoln, even though we're both native Kentuckians.
 
"The Last Stand" about Little Big Horn, "Empire of the Summer Moon a history of the Comanche Nation". I'm going on to two about Jefferson, "American Sphinx" and "Jefferson's Greatest Gamble". I like Empire of the Summer Moon as it was the first I have read about the Comanche's history.
 
Currently reading I SS Panzer Corps at Villers-Bocage. Should be through with it soon. Very well documented.

Recent reads, well maybe some not so recent:
The Course of Empire, Bernard DeVoto.
Guns, Germs and Steel, by Jared Diamond. A lot better than its title indicates.
Horse and Buggy West, by Jack O'Connor. Yes, THE Jack O'Connor. Sort of an autobiograhy of his boyhood growing up in Tempe, AZ before WW I.
Edwardian Hey-Days, by G. Cornwallis West. Wonderful period piece about life in Britain pre WW I. He shot a Broomhandle on a rifle range!! He also married Winston Churchill's mother although he was only a few years older than Winston himself.

Two memoirs from Russians who saw combat in WW II:

Tank Rider by Evgen Bessonov. He was an infantry officer, graduated in 1941 from something like our OCS and was in combat the whole war. Of the 300 men in his class, only six survived the war and he was wounded numerous times.

Over Fields of Fire by Anna Timofeeva-Egorova. She flew a Stormovik and was finally shot down and captured by the Germans. Both of these books show how hopelessly screwed up was the Soviet Union both in its military and civil affairs. It only won through the expenditure of huge numbers of human lives.
 
Just finished No Easy Day and now I'm into this:
E33AAC82-44D9-419B-919D-70A2A61E3ECA-4573-000005E8129EF5F1.jpg

Just completed the week long class. Fantastic stuff!
 
I am rereading "Love In The Ruins" by Walker Percy.

On a bit of an apocalyptic kick at the moment. Before that it was
"On The Beach" by Nevil Shute and "Alas Babylon" by Pat Frank.
 
The forum...........you asked.....:)

What he said....:cool:
That's about all the readin I do anymore.

I pick up a book and go to sleep. Same with that swill on TV. I go to sleep out of self respect and self defense.:rolleyes:
 
Complete Guide To Handloading by Philip B. Sharpe. 2nd Ed. 1941. After reading several comments in the reloading forum about the man's influence on the hobby, I Googled his name. I found a copy for the cost of a modern manual in supposedly "collectable" condition. Imagine my delight when an autographed copy (Keep Shooting - Phil Sharpe) showed up on my doorstep. The style of writing (... if the area the gun bug has chosen as his work space is fortunate enough to have electricity, a lamp of the so-called gooseneck type is recommended...) to his fastidious scientific method during experiments, this book is a must-have, in my opinion.

AND since it has been over 50 years past his death, the copyright has expired. If you Google the title, there are several places where it can be downloaded for free.

Touchdown! What a great score.
 
Anything by Stephen Hunter usally has good gun stuff.
Bob Lee Swagger is a great character.

I got Barry Eisler's newest "Rain" novel last night. (The Detachment) Been good so far. One click and free.
I bought a Kindle Fire ,and Amazon Prime membership back in Sept. Best buy I have made in years.
I get one free book a month, my choice. I just re-read the Swiss Family Robertson for free. Many older books are free.
The one click buying is almost too easy.
Also my local library has a huge collection of E-books. Punch in my library card # and have the book in under a minute, or have it sent to you next in their reversation system. When you finish the book just hit return.

I can read years without leaving the house, or buying another book. The Kindle was $159.00 free shipping.

It is a good web browser, and TV/Movies plays on it also.
A lot of free movies out their.
My daughter has the Apple Ipad and it will do all this, and more. But for my simple needs and at $159.00 bucks the Kindle has been great for me.

Guy22
 
"The Bloody White Baron: The Extraordinary Story of the Russian Nobleman Who Became the Last Khan of Mongolia" by James Palmer.

It's the story of the life and "career" of Baron Roman Nicholas von Ungern-Sternberg. He was a Baltic German officer in the Tsar's army before, during and after the First World War. He was a man of such extremes of cruelty that he seems like a fictional character from a Sax Rohmer novel, practically a White Fu Manchu... minus the super-intelligence.

Fearless cavalry officer, white knuckle drunk, opium addict, violent psychopath, endlessly inventive sadist, crazed mystic, raving anti-Semite: He was the personification of all of the psycho-pathologies that afflicted the tsarist regime and its remnants at and after the time of its collapse. Post WWI Mongolia was absolutely the PERFECT environment for Ungern-Sternberg.
 
Robin Fox's ''Alexander the Great,'' this after a number of books that focused on the Great Game.
 
Patrick O'Brian's Master and Commander series, just finished "The Fortune of War". He has practically a shot-by-shot description of a couple of sea battles in the war of 1812 including the 1 June 1812 battle between HMS Shannon and the USS Chesapeake.. the Chesapeake lost, mainly due to more accurate and faster gunnery by the British. This 20 book series is amazing for the details of daily life at sea and his knowledge of sailing ships and the art of sailing is amazing.
 
I tend to gravitate towards historical fiction. I am currently reading "The March" by E.L. Doctorow. It is a Civil War story about several characters and their ordeal dealing with General Sherman's march of chaos and destruction through Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina. Good book and a fast read.
 
Pat McManus is a riot. I can relate to those stories of haunting army surplus stores as a kid, and so many others.

Use to have all of his books, donated them to some book drive years ago.

A worthy read for sure.
 
Patrick O'Brian's Master and Commander series, just finished "The Fortune of War". He has practically a shot-by-shot description of a couple of sea battles in the war of 1812 including the 1 June 1812 battle between HMS Shannon and the USS Chesapeake.. the Chesapeake lost, mainly due to more accurate and faster gunnery by the British. This 20 book series is amazing for the details of daily life at sea and his knowledge of sailing ships and the art of sailing is amazing.

Great Reading Trooperdan! I read the first one and couldn't put down the series until I read all 20+. In one of them there's the recounting of the ship chase in the harsh weather off of the coast of South America and the one shot taking out the mainmast of the following boat... and it losing ground and toppling in the waves with over 200 sailors doomed in minutes.... haunting.

I am reading The Need to Kill by Egger, a serial killer expert. I read Scream At the Sky about a Texas serial killer and I read Anne Rule's Green River Runs Read about the Green River Killer - Gary Ridgeway and then her book about knowing Ted Bundy The Stranger Beside me, so I guess you could say I'm still unraveling a gruesome thread. It is absolutely eerie to read about true crime in an area I know well and grew up in during that time. C.B.
 
I couldn't help but notice a couple of posters mentioned, Lewis & Clark.
For those interested in such deeds I recommend the following.

Epic Wanderer, David Thompson & The Mapping of The Canadian West, by D'Arcy Jenish

Fatal Passage, The Story of John Rae, The Arctic Hero Time Forgot, by Ken McKoogan

Thompson & Rae made, at times, Lewis & Clark look like Tourists. ;)

Another that always fascinated me, who's time was after the
above two men, was the Artic Explorer, Vilhjalmur Stefansson.

Vilhjalmur took a different approach to arctic exploration, than that of his peers.
He figured that if the Eskimoes could live off the "land" then so could others,
which gave him an edge when it came to dealing with supplies.

Off hand I can't remember the names of Stefansson's books. I think they went
out with the "book purge" back in the 90's when I offed a few thousand titles.
One, I'm sure, was titled, "My Life With The Eskimoes."
 
Just discovering HP Lovecraft's weird tales. If you liked E.A. Poe, you'll love those.
If you like Paul Auster (as I do) give that Turkish Nobel prize winner Orhan Pamuk a tryl.

As for re-reads: Jim Thompson, David Goodis (masters of "noir") followed by Donald E. Westlake (to cheer up again)
 
My pain has been getting worse and I've been spending a lot more time in my recliner with the wifes Kindle Fire.

Go to " archive.org " and use the search feature. Specify "texts" if you just want books. Everything can be downloaded for free as there are no existing copyrights, and are available in several formats.
 
i've been waiting to find the latest gunslinger/darktower novel by stephen king in paperback locally. i have tried reading on an e-reader and it goes over with me about as well as a hardback...i'd rather twiddle my thumbs.

my best choices for books locally are walmart and k-mart. i don't want to pay an outrageous amount for shipping when it will be available locally...eventually for much less. i'm cheap when it comes to books and i admit it. i tend not to spend over $10-$15 for a book. after i read it, it's just going to sit somewhere and collect dust.

while waiting i read one of my wife's kathy reichs books. she is the lady behind the tv show "Bones". we watch the show and it's not bad, nor was the book, but i am not sure i could read her regularly.
 
One thing that stands out here is that many of you are reading really old books! :eek:

If you like that, find Robert C. Ruark's novels set in Kenya, like, "Something of Value" and,"Uhuru". Good gun stuff and wonderful character studies and the best honest account of African politics and the Mau-Mau terrorism that you'll find anywhere. Some of what you'll learn about Kikuyu tribal beliefs and traditional acitons will appall you. Can you imagine midwives strangling a newborn child just because the shadow of a vulture passed over the birth hut? Or because a child was born feet-first, thus causing a "thahu"(curse) to occur on that family?

The British colonial authorities tried hard to bring these people into the 20th Century, and treated such actions as murder, baffling the Kikuyu, who simply did not think like Europeans. This was among the causes of the Mau-Mau Emergency, as Kenyatta and others used that and other actions by the colonials to bring a terrible insurgency into being , the motive of which was to get the British out of Kenya and Joseph Kenyatta into power.

The humor is sometimes a bit grim. One cop torturing a terrorist by caning his feet quipped, "Confession is good for the soles." :rolleyes: :D

Ruark's background data was authentic, coming from various acquaintances in the police, the Kenya Regiment, the King's African Rifles, and a number of private citizens involved in fighting Mau-Mau. Some knew the Kikuyu very well, a few even speaking their language and being familiar with their tribal beliefs. (Mau-Mau was largely limited to this tribe and a few similar ones, the more warlike Masai and Nandi resisting efforts by Mau-Mau recruiters.)

Although Ruark was understandably on the side of the white settlers, he was fair in stating the viewpoints of both sides and examining their reasons for being as they were.

Many libraries may still have these books, and some used book stores might. They were published in the 1950's and about 1960. Robt. Ruark made African safaris come alive as few have done. He made several such trips, and also had a big tiger rug on his wall in one photo. Don't know if he ever hunted tigers when that was legal.

Ruark also wrote a national newspaper column that helped to make him famous, and was Travel Editor at, "Playboy" on his death in 1965. That magazine published a wonderful article on safari hunting just a few months before he left us. It had some really great equipment photos, too.

But while I was initially attracted to Russell's Birdshooter boots on Ruark's recommenation, I later formed reservations about them for some uses. Most of his other recommendations remain valid, although he learned not to use the .220 Swift on animals of any real size. Even a hyena deserves better than a bullet that blows up without adequate penetration.

On the other hand, his fictional white hunter, Peter McKenzie, probably based on the real life Harry Selby, once shot a terrorist with a .416 Rigby. Curious about the effect of a .416 on a human, Peter walked over and looked at the body. "I think I'm using too much gun," he concluded, as the effect of a .416 on a human was "considerable". I think he switched to a .35 Marlin for a rifle when hunting terrorists. But he and others noted the effect that military and Mau-Mau operations had on the forest animals in the Aberdare Mountains.This was especally bad after the RAF BOMBED the jungle! Probably didn't kill many Mau-Mau, but certainly upset the animals. And a .416 was more appropriate for some of them than was a .35 Remington in a Marlin carbine!

Also especially recommended, if you can find it: "Man Hunt in Kenya", by Inspector Ian Henderson, GM. This is the story of how Henderson and others turned terrorists against their former leaders and stalked the particularly bloody terrorist Dedan Kimathi. He was eventually captured and hanged, too merciful a death for someone who had done the dreadful things that Kimathi had.

I caution that some of the detail from Mau-Mau oathing ceremonies may cause you to vomit. But it will leave you with a fuller appreciation of what was happening then, and why. Every liberal American journalist then should have been forced to read these books, to understand what was really behind Mau-Mau and for which reasons. I think it might have changed the nature of their propaganda designed to advance, "Uhuru" for a people not ready to self govern.
 
Last edited:
Just finished: South (Ernest Shackleton logs on his expedition on the "Endurance"... 3rd reading)
Just finished: In a far Country (the introduction of reindeer heards to Alaska in the 1890's)
Reading...Common Sense: by Glenn Beck

I don't do fiction.. you can't make up better than what real people have done/endured.....
 

Latest posts

Back
Top