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The Books That…. Fill My Winston Churchill Shelf: PART 2: Why Read Churchill Anymore? The Second World War (abridged)

Posted by on Jul 3, 2014 in The Books That | Comments Off on The Books That…. Fill My Winston Churchill Shelf: PART 2: Why Read Churchill Anymore? The Second World War (abridged)

I’m not a book collector. I own very few first or special editions purchased to create or build a valuable collection. Mostly, I just buy, a book aggregator forced to periodically cull my library in order to continue aggregating. I’ve owned very few books written by Winston S. Churchill, but have never culled any of them. Each I’ve always considered special enough to keep, to read over and over when, in childhood, I owned few books; later to prominently...

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The Books That… Fill my Winston Churchill shelf – Part 1

Posted by on Jun 27, 2014 in The Books That, Writing History | Comments Off on The Books That… Fill my Winston Churchill shelf – Part 1

Books written by Churchill TIME-LIFE Special Edition of The Second World War (Golden Press, 1960) History of the English-Speaking Peoples (HESP)( unless otherwise noted, Dodd, Mead & Co., 1962 reprint; first published 1956-1958), Volume I: The Birth of Britain: (do not have this yet: on the list to purchase); II: The New World, 1485-1688 (used, excellent condition, no dust jacket) III: The Age of Revolution 1689-1815 (fair condition, no dj) IV: The Great Democracies, 1815-1900) (paperback ed.) Marlborough: His...

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Gilded Age greed goes Wild West

Posted by on May 22, 2014 in News, The Books That | Comments Off on Gilded Age greed goes Wild West

Been reading up on the Johnson County Invasion of 1892. In “Freedom Around the Corner,” a survey history of America from 1585-1828, historian Walter McDougall addresses the American gift for hustling, a trait shared by those who hustle in the sense of working hard, for themselves, their families, and in shared community endeavors, and those who hustle others, deceitfully, fraudulently, and aggressively for their own gain. The latter, in unsavory, illegal, even unconstitutional form, was practiced by 1880s-1890s Wyoming...

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History: A science of thought experiments

Posted by on May 15, 2014 in News, Writing History | Comments Off on History: A science of thought experiments

“How do historians know when they’ve established, once and for all, the causes of any past event? The answer is, of course, that they don’t.”  John Lewis Gaddis   I regularly read Old West discussion forums. The most active such website may be the “Tombstone History Discussion Forum,” filled with lively arguments over the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, the iconic Wyatt Earp, Tombstone (“the town too tough to die”), and all things related. The opinions of forum posters...

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The Essential Books on Wyatt Earp and Tombstone

Posted by on May 8, 2014 in The Books That | Comments Off on The Essential Books on Wyatt Earp and Tombstone

REVISED FRIDAY MAY 9, 2014:  A poster on BJ’s Tombstone History Discussion Website (http://disc.yourwebapps.com/Indices/39627.html ) asked for recommendations of the ten best books on Tombstone and Wyatt Earp and Tombstone and also a list of books to avoid.  My list of essential books is up to 24, including 4 illustrated books to introduce the unsuspecting to this field. I’d avoid only one book, the late Glenn Boyer’s The Earp Curse. One feels the need for a shower after reading...

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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...

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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,...

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