Nonfiction help
Dec. 20th, 2011 06:23 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I need nonfiction recommendations. I'm not normally a reader of nonfiction - fantasy and horror, with the occasional foray into mystery and, every once in a while, romance (I generally prefer my fiction to have romance in them but I'm not generally a fan of the romance novel, per say) - but I've read a few this year that I really liked.
Namely, Deborah Blum's The Poisoner's Handbook earlier this year (which I'd recommend reading, btw, it's really, really good and very well written) and currently The Billionaire's Vinegar by Benjamin Wallace, which is about a bottle of wine that sold for $156,000 - it's pretty good, if a bit dry at times.
I'd like to read more, especially since I'm getting a Kindle and won't necessarily have to have these in physical form, but I don't know what to get. So I turn to you guys, with these things to be kept in mind:
* I really do like history and am not much of a science person. However, that being said, as long as something is interesting and doesn't either make me feel stupid and / or make me feel like it's talking down to me, I can read. Also, food related books (I have a book I'll be reading called The Foie Gras War) are a win.
* They have to be interesting. The reason I generally prefer fiction to nonfiction is that the first is able to keep my attention and I have trouble doing so with nonfiction. So, nonfiction that ... I don't know, feels like a good enough story to be fiction?
Areas of interest: food, history, science and any others that folks think I might be interested in.
Namely, Deborah Blum's The Poisoner's Handbook earlier this year (which I'd recommend reading, btw, it's really, really good and very well written) and currently The Billionaire's Vinegar by Benjamin Wallace, which is about a bottle of wine that sold for $156,000 - it's pretty good, if a bit dry at times.
I'd like to read more, especially since I'm getting a Kindle and won't necessarily have to have these in physical form, but I don't know what to get. So I turn to you guys, with these things to be kept in mind:
* I really do like history and am not much of a science person. However, that being said, as long as something is interesting and doesn't either make me feel stupid and / or make me feel like it's talking down to me, I can read. Also, food related books (I have a book I'll be reading called The Foie Gras War) are a win.
* They have to be interesting. The reason I generally prefer fiction to nonfiction is that the first is able to keep my attention and I have trouble doing so with nonfiction. So, nonfiction that ... I don't know, feels like a good enough story to be fiction?
Areas of interest: food, history, science and any others that folks think I might be interested in.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-20 11:43 pm (UTC)if you want to know more about what happens after you die and whatnot...of course, that could just be me.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-21 12:41 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-21 12:42 am (UTC)She also writes one called Bonk, which is all about sex!
(and Spook about ghosts, but I've not cared enough to get that one yet)
(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-21 12:44 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-22 08:51 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-21 04:35 am (UTC)There's also a book called Salt that's not by Mary Roach, but it looks like a food/history thing, which would be right up your alley. (;
Ben stole all the rest of my suggestions, darn it!
(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-21 04:38 am (UTC)I might need to check Salt out though, yes!
(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-20 11:44 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-21 12:43 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-20 11:59 pm (UTC)If you're interested about evolution, Why Evolution is True by Jerry Coyne and Evolution: the Triumph of an Idea are two of the best introductions to the theory, the evidence, and in the case of the latter, the history of the science from Darwin to today.
And I can't recommend enough anything by Carl Sagan. The man was a genius. Billions and Billions and Demon-Haunted World are two of my favorites.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-21 12:46 am (UTC)And I'm so weird, I love to read about the plague so the Barry book looks great, as does the other suggestions.
I knew I could count on you for good science reads! <3
(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-22 07:15 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-21 12:10 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-21 12:48 am (UTC)Well, awesome read, not so much awesome that he did this.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-21 01:21 am (UTC)The Bullpen Gospels by Dirk Hayhurst - yes, it's baseball, but you'd hardly notice it. ;) Lots of fun and a really great writing style. He's got Out of My League about playing for the Jays coming out in February.
And John Birmingham also writes amazing non-fiction. Leviathan is a brilliant history of Sydney, and Dopeland is about marijuana culture across Australia, both excellent reads.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-21 02:45 am (UTC)*grins* I'm now living with a baseball fan, so you know, those sound great. As long as it can keep my interest with good writing, I'll give it a shot.
Birmingham sounds awesome, too, thank you!
(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-21 11:56 am (UTC)Also try Bill Bryden's A history of everything & Guns, germs & steel (forgotten the author!)
(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-22 12:21 pm (UTC)Guns, Germs & Steel was a favorite - I haven't read it in ages, maybe I should read it again.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-21 01:14 pm (UTC)The reaction was something I learned in college chemistry, and I just appreciated it for its simplicity (3H2 + N2 at 500atm --> 2NH3) but Hager explains just how important it was in changing the course of world history. Fixed nitrogen (i.e. ammonium and nitrate salts) are essential for agriculture, and before the Haber-Bosch process, humanity could only get them from natural sources. By the end of the 19th Century the population was quickly getting so large that eventually all of the arable land on earth would be unable to sustain it. Fritz Haber discovered that hydrogen and nitrogen could be reacted at high pressure and temperature to get ammonia, and Carl Bosch was the guy who figured out how to scale up that reaction to an industrial scale. Without them, a third of the people living today would starve to death. But there's a dark side, because those same nitrates are also used to make explosives. Their invention saved billions of lives, but it also provided their native Germany with means to wage two world wars.
It's a really interesting exploration of how technology is good or evil depending on how it's used. It doesn't go into great detail about the chemistry involved, but instead focuses on how big a problem the nitrate shortage was in the 19th Century, and how revolutionary the solution was in the 20th. It also has a fascinating human element. Haber, like many German Jews in the 1910's, hoped to use his scientific career to gain acceptance as a patriotic German. His breakthrough seemed to be a dream come true, but then the Nazis took over, and he soon realized that he would be rejected no matter what he accomplished or how hard he tried to assimilate.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-22 12:35 pm (UTC)I like books like that - where the key element is science but it's the story of it or its impact. Where I can feel that I came away learning something without feeling like I was stupid / talked down to during it.
Essentially, over the last year, especially after reading Blum, I realized that history in general terms isn't the only type of history that's interesting and that I can read a history science book and enjoy it.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-12-24 04:17 am (UTC)