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Tag Archives: Nonfiction 2025
Short rounds: politics!
As mentioned yesterday I’m feeling burnt out between all the serious stuff I’ve been binging, global affairs, and ongoing drama with my computer (it was finally repaired and sent back from the manufacturer, but arrived in such a state that … Continue reading
The Mature Flâneur
While rooting around for books for The Grand Tour, I spotted ‘flâneur’ and immediately went for the bait. I know this word from back in 2012 when I was an ardent Francophile and was reading books like French Women Don’t … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews
Tagged Italy, Nonfiction 2025, Portugal, Scandinavia, The Grand Tour, Tim Ward, travel
4 Comments
Lisbon: War in the Shadows of the City of Light
Lisbon is a history of how Portugal’s president-dictator Antonio de Oliveira Salazar carefully navigated between his own Scylla and Charybdis, attempting to keep Portugal out of the Second World War despite its longstanding alliance with England, and the fact that … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews, World Affairs
Tagged espionage and commandos, history, Nonfiction 2025, Portugal, The Grand Tour, WW2
3 Comments
Red Dead’s History
As a student of history who also plays a lot of video games which touch on history, I wonder sometimes what skewed version of history unread players take from it. Tore Olsson takes that same question and applies it to … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged American Civil War, American South, American West, arts-entertainment, audiobook, Gilded Age, history, Nonfiction 2025, Roger Clark
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Savage Gods
Savage Gods is a challenging book to review because of its nature: it is a meditation, or perhaps a rumination, by the author on his continuing search for meaning and the role of writing and the word in that search. … Continue reading
Posted in Religion and Philosophy, Reviews
Tagged Buddhism, dissent, mindfulness, Nonfiction 2025, Paul Kingsnorth, quotations, writing
2 Comments
Ends of the Earth
When Neil Shubin was a young biologist, he got his start looking for fossils in the poles, where now frozen wastelands were once jungles teeming with life. Doing science at the poles is uniquely challenging and physically demanding, sometimes to … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, science
Tagged climate change, geology, Neil Shubin, Nonfiction 2025, science
6 Comments
Bloodlands
On a scale of 1 to 10, how demoralized, depressed, and soul-dead do you want to be? Ten? Well, have I got a book for you! Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin examines the grim fate of Eastern Europe from … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged Eastern Europe, Germany, history, Nazi, Nonfiction 2025, Russia, WW2
8 Comments
Conversations with Carl Sagan
When I began trying to build my own worldview back in 2006, Carl Sagan’s books were instrumental in giving me a scientific orientation — and a scientific education. By the time he first appeared on the blog (November 2007), I … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, science
Tagged 1970s, Astronomy, Carl Sagan, Nonfiction 2025, science, Science Survey 2025
5 Comments
The Light Eaters
Since at least the time of Aristotle, the western mind has regarded plants as passive background scenery; useful to eat, nice for decor, but not all that interesting. Think of how we use the word ‘vegetable’ to refer to someone … Continue reading
Nerve
Nerve is an odd little title, a memoir of a woman trying to overcome some specific fears — falling from heights, and driving — occasionally interspersed dips into psychology and neurology. Eva Holland’s fear of heights is enough that she … Continue reading