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That one sounds like something I'd read!I'm reading Taoism For Dummies!
That one does, too!I am about to start on The Aeneid. I admit that I am a little intimidated!
IMO it is very good!That one sounds like something I'd read!
I always enjoy the 'for dummies' books.IMO it is very good!
I became a Christian thanks to Christianity For DummiesI always enjoy the 'for dummies' books.
Must mean I'm a big dummy!
I was already Hindu by the time I read Hinduism for Dummies, but it sure helped me along my new path.I became a Christian thanks to Christianity For Dummies
I've got Hinduism For Dummies!I was already Hindu by the time I read Hinduism for Dummies, but it sure helped me along my new path.
There's a little cartoon in there about a redneck becoming a Hindu.I've got Hinduism For Dummies!
I never read it all the way through but I found it hugely informative and helpful
I think I remember thatThere's a little cartoon in there about a redneck becoming a Hindu.
It reminds me of my husband.
I enjoy narrative non-fictions very much for learning the facts and feeling the characters as they were real people. Nathaniel Philbrick and L.M. West are two terrific authors of the genre.I just finished reading Vengeance: The True Story of an Israeli Counter-Terrorist Team by George Jonas. As usual I have my quibbles, these somewhat more profound than usual. The book, about the Israeli government and intelligence efforts to kill those responsible for the 1972 Olympic massacre, is in the "non-fiction" category but just barely. A lot of the dialogue is necessarily invented. The protagonist of Vengeance, one ex-Mossad agent "Avner" is admittedly an invented person. Obviously, a Mossad agent with a price on his head, both my Arab terrorists and by some elements of the Mossad and his loose supervisors, was not going to be named in a book about him. More to the point though, much of the dialogue had to have been imagined or filled in, unless "Avner" had a superhuman memory. This invention of dialogue is necessary feature of many books about war, espionage or disaster. Can one, for example, reproduce the discussions on board The Titanic or the boat that sank in The Perfect Storm? Could Gordon Lightfoot known that the captain said "fellows it's been good to know you."
That being said, however, it is a historical fact that most or all of the 1972 Olympics butchers met violent ends. It is known, from a study of current events, that strange things happen to terrorists who cross Israel. With those caveats in mind, I recommend reading Vengeance.
I'm having to go buy another bookshelf for our library...I recently read The Five: The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack The Ripper. by Hallie Rubenhold. I absolutely LOVED it, mainly because she did not focus on their deaths but on their lives before they met up with Jack or whoever. I hope she writes more non fiction.
Oh I just ordered her book about the ladies of Covent Garden. Yep, that's what I need, another book.
Yes.Do picture books qualify?
I certainly enjoy the books by Brom who is more widely known for his artwork. Slewfoot is a planned read for this month. His latest work just came out in September:Do picture books qualify?