History is Not Boring discussion
What are you reading in July/August 2008?
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Endless Universe by Paul Steinhardt, a book on cosmology.
The Horse, The Wheel, and Language by David Anthony, about the Indo-Europeans.
The Myth of Matriarchal Prehistory by Cynthia Eller, a corrective (purportedly) to the idea that there was a matriarchal "golden age."
I'm nearly finished with Arthur Cotterell's Imperial Capitals of China, an otherwise interesting look not only at China's capitals but also many other aspects of the empire marred by terrible editing (a sore point with me as I'm a copy editor by trade).
If I can, I'd like to squeeze in Simon Montefiore's Young Stalin, which has been sitting on the shelf lo these many months.

However, I'm only about 1/2 way through and others have said that it gets less military and more civilian as it goes along.
I read The Horse, The Wheel, and Language a few months ago.
I found it interesting, but somewhat boggy in the middle.
The Myth of Matriarchal Prehistory sounds interesting.
My current history is David McCullough's The Great Bridge, which is about the building of the Brooklyn Bridge.
I found it interesting, but somewhat boggy in the middle.
The Myth of Matriarchal Prehistory sounds interesting.
My current history is David McCullough's The Great Bridge, which is about the building of the Brooklyn Bridge.


Stalingrad by Antony Beevor
Team of Rivals by Doris Kearns Goodwin
Plans for August:
Isaac Newton by James Gleick
Legacy of Ashes by Tim Weiner
Body of Lies by Iris Johansen

FINDING NOUF
FINALLY FINISHED A PORTRAIT OF A YOUNG LADY by HENRY JAMES
LIKED IT BUT LONG
I just started a historical mystery - Steven Saylor's A Mist of Prophecies.
I read His Majesty's Dragon (the first volume in that Temeraire series) about a month ago, Kelley, and really enjoyed it.
I read His Majesty's Dragon (the first volume in that Temeraire series) about a month ago, Kelley, and really enjoyed it.

Currently reading a biography about Gandhi, and next in line in the pile o' library books is a biography about Sojourner Truth, and an autobiography by Frederick Douglas. (I put the last two onto the group "to read" shelf).

Both very good so far.
Having said that, "God's War" is about the size of my head and may take a while.
Then I think some light fiction to allow a re-boot of my brain.
Possibly something with monkeys.
Dianne Ascroft,
'Hitler and Mars Bars'