What Are You Reading? Sept 7, 2011

Another Wednesday, Another WAYR

Peter Flom
Just finished

Fall of Giants by Ken Follett. Historical fiction and the start of a trilogy about the 20th century. This one centers on WWI and the Russian Revolution, and mostly takes place in Wales, Buffalo, NY, Petrograd, and the trenches. Follett does this sort of thing very well, using scenes to give the reader a good sense of time and place. Plus there's romance, sex, betrayal, crime ..... Good stuff. Full review

Now reading

Charming Proofs. A book of beautiful (or charming) proofs in mathematics, nearly all of which require no advanced math.

God's Arbiters:Americans and the Phillippines: 1898-1902 by Susan K. Harris. I am only a few pages into this book, but it looks good. It is an advance copy sent to me by the publisher, with rather fortuitous timing since Cryptonomicon deals a lot with the Phillippines, and Mr. Speaker deals with the same time period, and I just finished The War Lovers, which is about the other part of the Spanish American war - the part that was fought in Cuba.

Absolute Monarchs: A History of the Papacy by John Julius Norwich. It's what the subtitle says. The good, ,the bad, and the ugly of the papacy. Norwich writes very well, and strikes a b nice balance. However, the book is marred because there is too much to cover in the space allotted, and it's impossible to write a history of the papacy that doesn't include a lot of European history. I'm not that familiar with European history between (say) 500 and 1500, and I daresay I am not alone. This makes portions of the book hard to follow, but the more recent the history, the better I like the book and the more I can follow it.

Clarence Darrow: Attorney for the Damned by John A. Farrell. Darrow was a great man, but he was not without flaws. This book covers the heroism and the flaws, and also captures the times in which Darrow lived (with not inconsequential parallels to the present)

Just started

The Invention of Air: A Story of Science, Faith, Revolution, and the Birth of America by Steven Johnson. A biography of Joseph Priestly and his times. Really just started, but Johnson writes very well and it's a fascinating period

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The Contributor has no connection to nor was paid by the brand or product described in this content.

Published by Peter Flom

I am a statistician, working with a wide variety of clients, mostly researchers in psychology, education, medicine, social sciences and other fields. I also have given talks and written articles on learning...  View profile

8 Comments

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  • Bridgitte Williams9/18/2011

    Wow, fascinating. :-) I just finished Sylvia Plath's Bell Jar, an eye opening look into writing...and am now reading James Patterson's Thriller...a collection of short scary stories.

  • Steven West9/11/2011

    Sounds like some great books to read.

  • Michael Segers9/8/2011

    Keep up the reading - and reporting on it.

  • Harriet Steinberg9/7/2011

    I admire your cabability of reading so much.

  • Don Rothra9/7/2011

    Nice review.

  • Memmay Moore9/7/2011

    Strange first page...I am reading and savoring "The Help" and I won't see the movie until it's on TV.

  • Michele Starkey9/7/2011

    I really missed catching up on all of my summer ready. I'm guilty of not reading too much these days. Sadly. cheers

  • Rebecca Bardelli9/7/2011

    You sure are reading a lot at one time, good for you! Great article!

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