deadeyedick
5 years ago
A Most Interesting Problem (what Darwin's Descent Of Man got right and wrong about human evolution)
What scientists have learned in the last 150 years since it was published.

~ Jeremy Desilva
deadeyedick
5 years ago
How To Avoid A Climate Disaster : the solutions we have and the breakthroughs we need

Author: Gates, Bill,
Palama
5 years ago
Ball Four by Jim Bouton

Third or 4th time around but it’s been decades since the last time.
CelticBomber
5 years ago
Currently rereading David Copperfield - Charles Dickens

Just finished

Caesar's Legion - Stephen Dando-Collins
The Bomber Mafia - Malcolm Gladwell
On Color - David Scott Kastan
The Anatomy of Fascism - Robert O. Paxton
Compassion vs Guilt - Thomas Sowell
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight - Simon Armitage
At the Edge of Uncertainty - Michael Brooks

Up next Ivanhoe - Walter Scott
teedubbya
5 years ago
Ivan Hoe was a great movie
Abrignac
5 years ago
The Neon Rain - James Lee Burke
deadeyedick
5 years ago
Perilous Bounty - The looming collapse of American farming

~Tom Philpott
8trackdisco
5 years ago
The Club: How the English Premier League Became the Wildest, Richest, Most Disruptive Force in Sports

Joshua Robinson, Jonathan Clegg
Speyside
5 years ago
Parenting for Dummies
Gene363
5 years ago
Haven't posted in a while.

The Bravest Man: Richard O'Kane and the Amazing Submarine Adventures of the USS Tang
By: William Tucohy

Hailed as the ace of aces, captain Richard O’Kane, winner of the Congressional Medal of Honor for his consummate skill and heroism as a submarine skipper, sank more enemy ships and saved more downed fliers than anyone else.

Now Pulitzer Prize—winning author William Tuohy captures all the danger, the terror, and the pulse-pounding action of undersea combat as he chronicles O’Kane’s wartime career–from his valiant service as executive officer under Wahoo skipper Dudley “Mush” Morton to his electrifying patrols as commander of the USS Tang and his incredible escape, with eight other survivors, after Tang was sunk by its own defective torpedo.

Above all, The Bravest Man is the dramatic story of mavericks who broke the rules and set the pace to become a new breed of hunter/killer submariners who waged a unique brand of warfare. These undersea warriors would blaze their own path to victory–and transform the “Silent Service” into the deadliest fighting force in the Pacific.



40 Thieves on Saipan: The Elite Marine Scout-Snipers in one of WWII's Bloodiest Battles
By: Joseph Tachovsky

Delivered from Evil: The Saga of World War II
By: Robert Leckie

This one is the epic story of WWII battles and politics. EXCELLENT!

The Fighting Bunch: The battle of Athens and How World War II Veterans Won the Only Successful Armed Rebellion Since the Revolution
By: Chris DeRose

The incredible, untold story of the WWII veterans who destroyed a corrupt political machine―the only successful armed rebellion on US soil since the War of Independence.

They fought for freedom abroad and returned to find that they had lost it at home. A corrupt political machine was in charge, kept in power by violence and stolen elections - the worst allegations of vote fraud ever brought to the attention of the Department of Justice, according to the Attorney General.

The GIs formed a nonpartisan, all-veteran ticket. On Election Day, the GIs and their supporters found themselves assaulted, intimidated, arrested, and even shot. A small band of veterans - the Fighting Bunch - armed themselves and marched on the jail to demand an honest count. The sheriff and his men refused. These men who thought they had seen the last of war returned to the battlefield, one last time.

This episode in U.S. history has never been more relevant, but has never been fully told. At the time of the rebellion, national news outlets jammed the phone lines into town, asking questions before the shooting had stopped. Journalists beat a path to Athens from across the country. Hollywood came calling, but the people of McMinn County had moved on.

After years of research, including exclusive interviews with the remaining witnesses, archival radio broadcast and interview tapes, scrapbooks, letters, and diaries, author Chris DeRose has reconstructed one of the seminal―yet untold―events in American election history.



Lucky 666: The Impossible Mission
By: Bob Druy and Tom Clavin

It is 1942, the Japanese war machine has rolled up nearly all of the Pacific Theater, and American forces are clinging to what little unconquered territory remains. While US Marines claw their way across Guadalcanal, small contingents of US Army Airmen make their way to the lonely, embattled Allied airbase on Papua New Guinea. Their mission: to defend Australia from invasion, harass Japanese supply lines, fly perilous bombing missions over enemy-held strongholds, and make reconnaissance runs to provide intelligence for America’s nascent island-hopping campaign.



Warfare: A Concise Provocative Survey of Armed Conflict
By Robert Leckei

A short but deep dive into the definition of war.
deadeyedick
4 years ago
The Bomber Mafia by Malcolm Gladwell
Gene363
4 years ago
Two more books about the WWII European theatre, the writing of Stephen Ambrose book was better.

D-Day Girls: The Spies Who Armed the Resistance, Sabotaged the Nazis, and Helped Win World War II

By Sarah Rose

In 1942, the Allies were losing, Germany seemed unstoppable, and every able man in England was fighting. Churchill believed Britain was locked in an existential battle and created a secret agency, the Special Operations Executive (SOE), whose spies were trained in everything from demolition to sharp-shooting. Their job, he declared, was "to set Europe ablaze!" But with most men on the frontlines, the SOE did something unprecedented: it recruited women. Thirty-nine women answered the call, leaving their lives and families to become saboteurs in France. Half were caught, and a third did not make it home alive.

In D-Day Girls, Sarah Rose draws on recently declassified files, diaries, and oral histories to tell the story of three of these women. There's Odette Sansom, a young mother who feels suffocated by domestic life and sees the war as her ticket out; Lise de Baissac, an unflappable aristocrat with the mind of a natural leader; and Andrée Borrel, the streetwise organizer of the Paris Resistance. Together, they derailed trains, blew up weapons caches, destroyed power and phone lines, and gathered crucial intelligence—laying the groundwork for the D-Day invasion that proved to be the turning point in the war. Stylishly written and rigorously researched, this is an inspiring story for our own moment of resistance, in which women continue to play a vital role.



Citizen Soldiers: The US Army from the Normandy Beaches to the Bulge to the Surrender of Germany

By Stephen E. Ambrose

From Stephen E. Ambrose, bestselling author of Band of Brothers and D-Day, the inspiring story of the ordinary men of the U.S. army in northwest Europe from the day after D-Day until the end of the bitterest days of World War II.

In this riveting account, historian Stephen E. Ambrose continues where he left off in his #1 bestseller D-Day. Citizen Soldiers opens at 0001 hours, June 7, 1944, on the Normandy beaches, and ends at 0245 hours, May 7, 1945, with the allied victory. It is biography of the US Army in the European Theater of Operations, and Ambrose again follows the individual characters of this noble, brutal, and tragic war. From the high command down to the ordinary soldier, Ambrose draws on hundreds of interviews to re-create the war experience with startling clarity and immediacy. From the hedgerows of Normandy to the overrunning of Germany, Ambrose tells the real story of World War II from the perspective of the men and women who fought it.


deadeyedick
4 years ago
Greenlights by Matthew McConaughey
bgz
  • bgz
  • Herf-A-Holic
4 years ago
Introduction to Topology, third edition.

By Bert Mendelson
Gene363
4 years ago
^ Is it printed on a Mobius strip so you don't need to turn pages?
bgz
  • bgz
  • Herf-A-Holic
4 years ago
Yeah... you have to rotate the whole book to see the next two... it's a pain in the azz.
8trackdisco
4 years ago
The Age of Football: Soccer and the 21st Century.

8trackdisco
4 years ago
Any of you read John D. MacDonald’s Travis McGee books?

Started with The Deep Blue Good-Bye.
Speyside
4 years ago
Umberto Echo

Island of the day before.
4 years ago
Dating Secrets To Catch Your Love by Gregg Blakely

I'm going to catch you my little Oppie-woppie!
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