The History Book Club discussion
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All the Light We Cannot See
THE SECOND WORLD WAR
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WE ARE OPEN - OCTOBER - ALL THE LIGHT WE CANNOT SEE - (October 5th - start date)
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Kressel wrote: "Response to Betty[spoilers removed]"
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I have to say, as a general comment to everyone here, I have thoroughly enjoyed the exchanges and the places they took me to. I am totally charmed by this type of interaction. Not the least because the commitment to reading together requires me to block time for reading in my very busy life - moments of respite... Thanks to everyone!
In light of this discussion of how everyone in war is ultimately a victim and our discussion of Vietnam and Nixon elsewhere, I'm coming around to agreement. I guess it took another war involving someone else's ethnic group for me to see it.A big part of the reason for my insight is that I belong to a Toastmasters club in which a Vietnam vet and a man from Cambodia are members. Each one has a complex story to tell. The man from Cambodia was clearly a victim - he had to flee his home - but can I blame the Vietnam vet for that? He didn't create the policy that put him there, and unlike Werner, he probably didn't see through the cruelty of that policy. He was "fighting Communism."
Of course, Nixon, Johnson, and their advisors were the guilty parties, but it seems they were victims of their own policy, too. The war seems to have driven both presidents to near or actual insanity. But still, I can never see Hitler or the Nazis as victims of their own war the way that I do LBJ.
Another book you might consider, Kressel and others, is Hiroshima Notes by Kenzaburō Ōe. We did this as a buddy read (see the link below) and it was a powerful and enlightening book. It made you see WWII from the eyes of the victims of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I won't spoil the book, but I do want to mention that you see these people as not only victims of the bombings, but victims of their government's decision to be aggressors in WWII. Would love for any of you to read and join in the Hiroshima Notes discussion, even though it is formally ended. I still monitor that discussion and will chime in to updates.
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Kenzaburō ŌeBuddy Read thread:
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Reply to TeriI have bought the Oe book Hiroshima Notes (in French translation, as it turns out, which is available on Kindle - the English translation doesn't appear to be on Kindle...) and will give feedback on the other thread once I've had a chance to read it. Hiroshima is also one of my interests, has been for decades.
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Kenzaburō Ōe
Excellent, Geoffrey. I did buy the paperback since it wasn't on Kindle and find it interesting that the French version is available on Kindle.Don't forget your citation format. ;-)
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Kenzaburō Ōe
Teri wrote: "Another book you might consider, Kressel and others, is Hiroshima Notes by Kenzaburō Ōe. We did this as a buddy read (see the link below) and it was a powerful and enlightening book. It made you se..."It looks interesting, but if there's one buddy read I really want to go back to it's The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements.
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Sam Kean
Kressel - I didn't see any discussion threads for The Disappearing Spoon in any HBC folders. Perhaps it is from a different group?
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Sam Kean
I have had The Disappearing Spoon book you mention in the queue to read for a few years now. Maybe we could read it with HBC sometime?
Teri wrote: "Kressel - I didn't see any discussion threads for The Disappearing Spoon in any HBC folders. Perhaps it is from a different group?[bookcover:The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madnes..."
I don't know where I got the idea that you had, but I second the notion of reading it as a group now.
Geoffrey wrote: "Response to VincentDoerr's book provides he first "insider" view of the Hitler Youth movement I have read, and it was interesting for that. Outsider views are aplenty - I think of scenes from th..."
Hi Geoffrey - thanks
I have downloaded a sample of the Trapp book on my Kindle and will try to look at it.
My list of book reading and to read so far is so long..................
I really want to read a good Hitler biography and a good George Washington biography soon and would like to see the HBC do that - in a regular format - not the one month like this one as I would want more time to ponder and think and share views.
Response to BettyI will go through my books about Hitler and see if I can recommend one or two biographies - I have read several. There is one that comes to mind, but it is not biography in any straightforward way, although it is fascinating.
by Brigitte Hamann(no photo) is really a work of scholarship that tries to paint a portrait of Hitler during his four years spent in Vienna (1908 to 1912 I think). For at least two years of that time, there is very little documented evidence of what he did - he kind of disappeared off the radar. So Hamman focusses on trying to understand the Vienna of that era as a way to situate how he developed and who he became. It makes for fascinating reading. Another comment about Hitler - although there are some good biographies and scholarly studies of his life, there aren't a ton of them - fewer than you would expect, given his importance as a historic figure. I have long reflected about this, there is kind of an "allergic reaction" to grappling with the paradoxes of his life. Good luck with your reading list. I set a target of 100 books for this year, and I'm way behind, I'll be lucky to read 50...
Response to Betty (continued)The most complete and informative biography of Hitler I read was
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Ian Kershaw, which is actually an abridged version of his earlier biography in two volumes,
and
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Ian Kershaw. Although a scholarly work, I found it quite approachable, focusing on not just facts and events but also insight into the person. There may be others that are written for a more general audience, but Kershaw's book is probably one of the cornerstones. Several other biographies written earlier than Kershaw's book appear to draw on source material that is flawed or inaccurate, so one needs to be careful. Kershaw has written several other books on other aspects of his life and the Third Reich, not all of which I've read. I tend to limit my reading about Hitler to small doses at a time, otherwise I get very depressed.
Kressel wrote: "Now that it's October 30, I hope we can talk about the ending.[spoilers removed]"
Absolutely!
The spoiler below contains spoilers to the end of the book/story. Proceed if you have read the ending of the book or want to know the ending of the book.
(view spoiler)
Kressel and Geoffery ~Great ideas for buddy reads. I would suggest you post them at the following link for consideration on upcoming reads. Bentley is the ultimate decision maker, but is always happy to take suggestions.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Geoffrey wrote: "Response to Betty (continued)The most complete and informative biography of Hitler I read was
by
Ian Kershaw, which is act..."Yes - I was thinking of the Kershaw books.
Samanta wrote: "I have finally finished reading the book. [spoilers removed]"
Response to Samanta/book ending
(view spoiler)
Geoffrey wrote: "Response to Betty (continued)The most complete and informative biography of Hitler I read was
by
Ian Kershaw, which is act..."Hello, Geoffrey! When mentioning books other than that we are discussing, put the citations at the end of your post (and not inside your text) because it's better visible to other members. Inside the text just write the name of the book(s) like normal text. Like this:
The most complete and informative biography of Hitler I read was by Ian Kershaw, which is actually an abridged version of his earlier biography in two volumes.
all by
Ian KershawThe same goes for message 176:
by Brigitte Hamann (no photo)
This was a great book! It's been a couple of months since I read it, so forgive me for going off of memory. (view spoiler)
Teri wrote: "Thanks for joining us, Katie. It's never too late to discuss.[spoilers removed]"
I agree, I would love to hear what others took away from this part, too! I feel like maybe I missed something? =)
(view spoiler)
Katie wrote: "Teri wrote: "Thanks for joining us, Katie. It's never too late to discuss.[spoilers removed]"
.."
(view spoiler)
This YouTube video - 9 minutes - might be of interest - it is Catholic oriented and doesn't even mention Frederick but worth the time and http://youtu.be/2mDhWYIq8f4
Thanks for the link! Please add it to the glossary thread when you have a chance:https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Books mentioned in this topic
Hitler (other topics)Hitler: 1889-1936 Hubris (other topics)
Hitler: 1936-1945 Nemesis (other topics)
Hitler's Vienna: A Dictator's Apprenticeship (other topics)
Hitler (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Ian Kershaw (other topics)Brigitte Hamann (other topics)
Ian Kershaw (other topics)
Ian Kershaw (other topics)
Brigitte Hamann (other topics)
More...







I was very hesitant to pick this book up, since I have read so many ..."
Hi Betty - just a note that I never thought of this book as concerning the holocaust –
The non-persecuted people in this war suffered too. - although that has been addressed by others.