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On Writing History…. that people want to read

Posted by on May 6, 2014 in The Books That, Writing History | Comments Off on On Writing History…. that people want to read

“Sadly, historical writing has quite a bad reputation. Newspaper reviewers will often praise a history book because it’s not like a history book. They will say it’s ‘as good as fiction’ and thus ‘a pleasure to read.’….”  Ann Curthoys and Ann McGrath, How to Write History That People Want to Read (Palgrave MacMillan, NY, 2011 edition), p.2. The number of “how to” books directed at the Ph.D. who desires to turn a doctoral thesis into a book suggests that many have gotten all the way through graduate school by writing only for their academic mentors.  While university English departments offer courses in creative or literary nonfiction, some history students seem to have passed by these. The ability to structure and tell a true story well enough to hold a general audience’s attention to the book’s end too often takes second...

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I can’t stop buying books

Posted by on May 4, 2014 in The Books That, Writing History | Comments Off on I can’t stop buying books

Seven months ago, I got back into reading in a big way. The bad news is that I’ve already boxed almost all my books in preparation for a planned move. I suppose I could unpack the boxes and find something to read, but it’s easier to just buy another book. And that’s what I’ve been doing. I’ve purchased 49 books in the last 30 weeks, including 31 paper (physical) books and 18 e-books. I still prefer the physical book, but the e-books come in handy when traveling or after lights out.  I’ve read to completion 25 of the 49, and have started four others. Another five titles are lined up on the TBR (“to be read”) shelf, and I am eager to dive into them. I’ve already consigned to the DNF (“did not finish”) shelf three books that did...

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The books that introduced me to and hooked me on the Old West

Posted by on Jan 25, 2014 in Articles, News, The Books That | Comments Off on The books that introduced me to and hooked me on the Old West

Several blog entries ago, I credited Hollywood films and TV shows with spurring my interest in history. Oddly enough, although I probably watched more Western movies and TV shows than anything else in my youth, they did not kick start any particular desire to read about the Old West. Most, if not all the books I bought in my teens and twenties were by subscription or book club choices. It was not until my late 30s that I began in earnest to purchase books on the Old West. But now they own and overflow that 11-foot long book shelf, the biggest one in the house. I’ll post later about the importance of the American Heritage Publishing Company to the early building of my library, but my first book on the West, at least that I still own, was a...

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The book that… first shaped my understanding of the American story …

Posted by on Jan 7, 2014 in The Books That | Comments Off on The book that… first shaped my understanding of the American story …

Nathanael Greene, the general who George Washington increasingly relied upon as the Revolutionary War dragged on, described in correspondence his experience in the near-run campaign that turned the war’s tide: “We fight, get beat, rise, and fight again.” The American Revolution is an incredible story, a historical thriller, if you will.

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The Books That… Introduced me to literature (Part 5)

Posted by on Nov 30, 2013 in Articles, The Books That, Writing History | Comments Off on The Books That… Introduced me to literature (Part 5)

One book not in my library is J.D. Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye. Never read the thing. It was never assigned in high school or college literature classes. My education was, as a result, entirely incomplete. I see now (from Wikipedia) that there is so much I never learned about literate whining. Catcher in the Rye was widely censored when I was in high school. Father Earl La Riviére, our 9th grade English instructor did push the envelope, as far as many parents were concerned, by assigning Taylor Caldwell’s Dear and Glorious Physician. Sure, it was, appropriately for a Catholic school, a novel about St. Luke’s coming to Christianity in time to write the third Gospel, but it had the distressing feature of describing the pre-Christian Luke as somewhat less than chaste. In the words of Father Earl, parents...

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The Books That…(Part 4)

Posted by on Nov 23, 2013 in News, The Books That, Writing History | Comments Off on The Books That…(Part 4)

My first adult level history book, the one that led me to buy a thousand more, and to start writing.

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