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I've got three bookshelves of varying size - and I have a goddamn pylon of books stacked in my closet. Mostly softcover novels. I'll take a picture here soon and post it. But my main, large bookshelf has lights in it with a remote control so that I can adjust the hue, tone and strength. It's pretty nice.
I own quite a few of the Easton Press biographies on US presidents, which I'm rather proud to own. They look great on the shelf. And I've never met anyone in real life who knows more about Chester Arthur than I do, which is always a plus. |
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Looking at your older post, we also share Orwell essays, writings on Gandhi, and an appreciation for science based books. I have some Newton, Einstein, Hawking, Feynman, Sagan, Hofstadter, Darwin, Shannon, Gleick, and others. I see a lot of soldier stuff in your collection, so you'd probably get a kick out of my WWII books too. |
What's your favorite WWII book that you've read, Frown?
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The Origins of Totalitarianism by CIA Agent Arendt led me to the Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression files, which includes Bettelheim's Individual and Mass Behavior in Extreme Situations. That's the most interesting writing on the subject I've encountered.
As far as full books go, Anatomy of Fascism stands out as the best-written and among the most intriguing. Ordinary Men is great too. I eventually want to tackle The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich but I've got a few doorstops I need to chew through first. |
Wait a minute, Hannah Arendt was a CIA agent (or am I missing a joke here)? Never read Anatomy of Fascism, will have to put that on my list. You ever read Stalingrad by Antony Beevor?
Here I was thinking your favorite would be something by David Irving. |
She received funding from the CIA to promote anti-communist sentiments in the intellectual community, yes. Haven't read Stalingrad but know about it from Peep Show lol.
I prefer your Parentis when it comes to historical revisionism. |
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Why would you want to learn Dutch though? Apart from Denken is Verukkelijk, which is a biography of Paul Ehrenfest and Tatyana Afanasyeva, my science books are all in Holland. I have some by Hardy, Weyl and Feynman apart from study books |
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In my era, English schoolboys grew up with stories of WWII heroism, so it stays a topic of interest for many. Of course, as an adult you start to see how ghastly war is. WWI perhaps more so with the grinding misery of the trenches. |
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who used to have Het Apollohuis who recommended Marten Toonder books as a guide to learning Dutch, but it was easier for me to use Donald Duck (for German too!), because I could better relate to him than Tom Poes. :laughing: |
Yeah I never really got the Marten Toonder hype, to be honest, but comics must be a really nice way to learn a language. Or simple illustrated children's books, I used to read some Le Petit Nicholas in French
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