- Follow Reading Freely on WordPress.com
Reading Now
-
Recent Posts
Categories
Blogroll
- Seeking a Little Truth
- The Social Porcupine
- Inspire Virtue
- Classics Considered
- With Freedom, Books, Flowers, and the Moon
- The Inquisitive Biologist
- Relevant Obscurity
- Trek Lit Reviews
- Stoic Meditations
- A Pilgrim in Narnia
- Gently Mad
- The Frugal Chariot
- The Historians' Manifesto
- Classical Carousel
- Lydia Schoch
- The Classics Club
- Fanda Classiclit
- Reading In Between the Life
- The Bilbiphibian
Archives
Meta
Category Archives: history
Spinning Atoms in the Desert
Bombast: Spinning Atoms in the Desert© 2010 Michon Mackedon236 pages Which is more breathtaking, the power of the atom bomb or the hubris of governments that use it? Michon Mackedon’s Bombast will leave readers wondering. It reviews the approach of … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged 1940s, 1950s, American Southwest, history, military, Nuclear
2 Comments
America Walks into a Bar
America Walks into a Bar: A Spirited History of Taverns and Saloons, Speakeasies and Grog Shops© 2014 Christine Sismondo336 pages Welcome, friend. Pull up a stool. You’ve come in at the tail end of a story, but it’s one … Continue reading
Life and Death in the Third Reich
Life and Death in the Third Reich© 2009 Peter Fritzsche384 pages A few years ago I read Peter Fritzsche’s An Iron Wind: Europe Under Hitler, which examined how the Nazi conquest of most of Europe permeated into its culture in … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged 1930s, 1940s, collective tyranny, Germany, history, Nazi, social history, WW2
2 Comments
Overlord | Victory in the Pacific
Many years ago when the world was new, the Twin Towers stood over Manhattan, and Europe was just starting to adopt the euro, I discovered a trilogy of books in my high school library about World War 2. They formed … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged 1940s, Albert Marrin, D-Day, Japan, US Marine Corps, WW2
6 Comments
The Politically Incorrect Guide to American History
The Politically Incorrect Guide to American History© 2004 Thomas E. Woods290 pages I don’t remember when I first began to break from believing the Standard View of American history, the view promoted in the textbooks paid for by the State … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged American Civil War, Colonial America, Early American Republic, history, Politics-CivicInterest, Tom Woods
3 Comments
Marine Combat Correspondent
Marine Combat Correspondent: World War 2 in the Pacific© 1999 Sam Stavisky344 pages Sam Stavisky was a reporter for the Washington Post on December 7th, 1941, when he and the world bore witness to Japan’s bloody ambition to rule the … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged 1940s, history, memoir, Pacific War, US Marine Corps, WW2
3 Comments
Of Babylonians, demons, and bankers
Continuing in the Big Book Catchup… Paul Kriwaczek’s Babylon: Mesopotamia and the Birth of Civilization covers Mesopotamian history from the establishment of Eridu to the rise of the first Persian empire. This is a survey of thousands of years of … Continue reading
Posted in history, Politics and Civic Interest, Reviews
Tagged ancient world, doomsday, essays, fantasy, goods/services, Gore Vidal, health/wellness, history, Middle East
4 Comments
Fighting for Space
Fighting for Space: Two Pilots and their Historic Battle for Female Spaceflight© 2020 Amy Shira Teitel448 pages When the age of flight arrived, women were as eager to take to the skies as men. Fighting for Space is a … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged 1930s, 1940s, 1950s, 1960s, aviation, human space flight, women
8 Comments
Handprints on Hubble
Handprints on Hubble(c) 2019 Kathryn D. Sullivan304 pages Handprints on Hubble is a unique astronaut memoir, in part because Dr. Sullivan is a scientist first and an astronaut second. Longing to explore, she began her academic life in oceanography before realizing … Continue reading
The Burning Blue
The Burning Blue: The Untold Story of Christa McAuliffe and NASA’s Challenger Disaster(c) 2021 Kevin Cook288 pages So fickle is the human mind that even Apollo could not keep the public terribly excited for very long after the first moon … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged 1980s, disaster, history, human space flight, space shuttle, women
3 Comments