Page: Unlock Forum posting with Annual Membership. |
|
|||
Last Edited on: 11/30/12 10:03 PM ET - Total times edited: 1 |
|||
|
|||
Hooray! I came close to completing the challenge in 2012; in 2013 I will be serious about it. |
|||
|
|||
Hi Elizabeth! I see from your signature line that you read 13 NF, which is 1 more than the 12 needed for the highest category, so it looks like you more than finished! I had meant to give out credits before now, but for the last two weeks I've been fighting a vicious computer virus--after many, many excruciating phone calls to Dell tech support the best we could do is isolate it--my virus software still sees it but it seems to have stopped doing any harm. I'm not totally convinced, but I've been able to use my computer for a couple of days now with no problems, so I'm trying to be hopeful. Anyway, it's supposed to be safe to send emails, etc., so I'm back online for a good part of every day, as usual. I'll give out the credits earned tomorrow, so if your list isn't finished or clear, please update it or send me a PM. Many of your lists don't say "completed", they just have books listed, so I don't know if those were planned or completed reads. I've been going through the posts with the book comments on an ongoing basis, but I don't want to miss anyone, and I'll do a final doublecheck using your lists. The end of the year really crept up on me, I usually do some planning for the challenges but this year I'm just going to go along and list as I read books that fit. I signed up for fewer challenges this year, 2 of the ones I joined last year haven't been repeated this year, and some of the others aren't as "challenging" as I'd like them to be. That means this year I should be able to read more NF than last year (although I did read more NF this year than the year before). I haven't chosen my first NF challenge book yet, I'll do that in the next few days. I have some really good possibilities that I've been acquiring over the last few months, but I look forward to seeing what everyone plans to read, and of course, stealing a lot of your suggestions to add to my wish and reminder lists. Happy New Year to everyone! Diane
|
|||
|
|||
Diane, I guess I should have read the instructions, LOL! I did better than I thought! Looking forward to this year's challenge, I got a bunch of good fiction from the PBS Market and the MAB program recently, so I am ready to start reading. |
|||
|
|||
My first challenge book of the year was, coincidentally, for the first category: Lone Survivors by Chris Stringer. Broadly it's about paleoanthropology, studying ancient humans (including all homo species, particularly the Neanderthals). Stringer is the first person to propose the "Out of Africa" theory that all modern humans had emerged from Africa at a relatively recent date in history. This book deals with how humans became "modern" and the question of why the Neanderthals died out, and there's a lot about possible mingling of moden Homo Sapiens and the Neanderthals, since there seems to be recent overlap in some of the genes. This stuff is generally interesting to me, but I was pretty disappointed with the book overall. The writing style was extremely dry and it was a real chore to finish it. |
|||
|
|||
Finished 1st challenge book early this morning for the history category: The Great Sea: A Human History of the Mediterranean by David Abulafia. I enjoyed it, although it was doorstop size (>600 pages). The book begins with prehistoric events and ends with current days, and covers interesting characters, empires, religions, throughout the ages. His writing style is active and interesting. I never was bored. |
|||
|
|||
Hello everyone! All credits are finally out to 2012 Challenge participants so if I missed anyone let me know. Matt, the book you're reading sounded like something I would love until you said you had a hard time finishing it. The writing style in a subject like that really makes a difference. Tess, welcome to the challenge! I'm impressed that you already finished a book over 600 pages--I have yet to start my first NF of the year! I've had 4 NF books sitting on my desk and I keep paging through and trying to decide which I want to start first--I think I've finally decided, and I'll start it tomorrow. Diane |
|||
|
|||
I came pretty close last year, but I'm determined to do it in 2013!! My problem is that I read too many history and biography books and forget to get to the rest. |
|||
|
|||
Last Edited on: 2/4/15 4:20 PM ET - Total times edited: 1 |
|||
|
|||
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Last Edited on: 12/7/13 1:26 PM ET - Total times edited: 48 |
|||
|
|||
Last Edited on: 2/4/15 4:21 PM ET - Total times edited: 1 |
|||
|
|||
The first book I finished for the challenge this year was
Tapped Out: Rear Naked Chokes, the Octagon, and the Last Emperor: An Odyssey in Mixed Martial Arts The Sports category was one I did not complete last year. Matthew Polly is a journalist who got a book contract by agreeing to study with several well-known martial arts instructors, then get into the ring for a UFC-type competition. Intersperced with his training stories are details of his relationship with the woman that will become his wife, and a history lesson on mixed martial arts and the rise of the sport's popularity. The tone is light-hearted for such a violent topic and Polly only competes in one fight, so no one really gets their a** kicked or seriously hurt. Still, this was an interesting introduction to a sport I know little about and have little interest in (thought some of my male contemporaries are kind of obsessed). |
|||
|
|||
Today I finished The Right Stuff by Tom Wolfe about the beginnings of NASA. I'd seen the movie as a kid, but the book had a very different tone. It did not paint a very flattering picture of the program or the astronauts and was more abotu them and what it meant to be a top pilot, and what it meant to their wives, than it was about the space program itself. The book was interesting in some respects, but I did not really care for the writing style. I think Wolfe wants to be a poet while writing nonfiction. It doesn't work. I'm counting this for the "reader's choice" category, since I'm not really sure where else to stick it. |
|||
|
|||
I've just completed Daniel Klein's Travels with Epicurus: A Journey to a Greek Island in Search of a Fulfilled Life. When he was a young man, Klein visited the Greek island of Hydra. Now, as an old man - on the verge of old old age (his words), he has returned, with philosophers like Epicurus, Kierkegaard, and others as guides to making the transition from being old to old old. These are his reflections on this transition. Epicurus's name in the title drew me in - I did not really know what the book was about until I started reading it. I was pleasantly surprised. |
|||
|
|||
Last Edited on: 2/4/15 4:21 PM ET - Total times edited: 1 |
|||
|
|||
Just finished The American Way of Eating: Undercover at Walmart, Applebee's, Farm Fields and the Dinner Table The author wants to learn about the how the food Americans eat is grown, distributed, and served, as well as learn about the workers who make these things happen. She works as a farm worker, clerk in a Walmart produce department, and in the kitchen at Applebee's. Tales of her experiences on these jobs and living in poor communities amongst her co-workers are interspersed with bits of history about American agriculture and the rise of unhealthy eating. While this book does a better job of pointing out problems than solutions (as most of this genre tend to do), it is an entertaining read and provided an interesting behind the scenes view of Walmart and Applebee's. (I have never liked Applebees. The last time I ate there was after Hurricane Sandy because it was the only thing open. I don't plan on eating at Applebee's again unless there is another hurricane and my food goes bad.) |
|||
|
|||
I finished another one! 50 Popular Beliefs That People Think Are True Author: Guy P. Harrison The only good thing about the flu is that it leaves plenty of time for reading. I put this book in the science category, though it could overlap into others. This book is broken into chapters of a few pages each. Each chapter addresses a fairly commonly held belief, such as "Ghosts are they live in haunted houses" and "Atlantis is down there somewhere." The author then makes counter arguments to each claim, using a combination of science, logic, and personal anecdotes. A list of references is given at the end of each section in case the reader wants to delve further into a particular topic. It is a bit much for one sitting, so I dipped in and out of this book over time. I skimmed chapters that did not particularly interest me, but the range of topics addressed in this book is so varied that there will be something of interest to most anyone. This book is a good introduction to skeptical thinking. |
|||
|
|||
For the Memoir/Biography category, I finished Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power by Jon Meacham. Meacham explores the development of Jefferson's leadership style over his lifetime and includes lots of direct quotations from correspondences of the day. |
|||
|
|||
Last Edited on: 2/4/15 4:21 PM ET - Total times edited: 1 |
|||
|
|||
Medical The Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat by Oliver Sacks - Dr Sacks was the doctor in the film Awakenings, and this is a compilation of other neurological cases. It was written in 1986 and reads pretty dated, the section on people with mental retardation is called "The Simple" and they are refered to as defectives, morons, simpletons, retards, retardates. They may have been acceptable medical terms of the time but seem so weird now. I'm not a PC person but it was kind of distracting. The case stories were interesting but he does tend to go on a lot, especially about things like whether a person with profound brain damage still has a soul, is still an actual person. He refers to Freud and several philosophers a lot. I prefer my science without any of that kind of stuff and ended up skimming a lot. He refers to Awakenings a lot too, I didn't even know the connection until reading the book. There are about 25 case studies, many of them people who have extraordinary abilities despite being extremely damaged in one way or another and are really interesting, but be prepared to skim over a lot of padding. |
|||
|
|||
Last Edited on: 2/4/15 4:21 PM ET - Total times edited: 1 |
|||
|
|||
For the category, Sociology, I read " At Home" by Bill Bryson. This book is just chockfull of fascinating and detailed information about the origin of, well, just about everything. Bryson uses the rooms of his English country house (a former rectory) to create an organizational structure for laying out all of these factoids. At times these connections are very tenuous and, on several occasions, Bryson has to make them explicit for the reader. Because of this lack of connectivity, I wasn’t able to read the book straight through. However, I did find it to be a most interesting and enjoyable read when taken in small doses at a time.
Last Edited on: 1/31/13 7:38 AM ET - Total times edited: 1 |
|||
|
|||
Lots of great reading going on for this challenge! Donna, I have At Home on my TBR, and I keep moving it to the front. When the book first came out I took it out from the library and read the first 50 pages or so, but I had the same experience you did, I couldn't just sit down and read it straight through. I couldn't renew it at the time because it had been recently released and was in demand, so I figured I'd start over again when I finally got a copy of the book. I really want to start it soon, I enjoyed the portion I read--and just the description of a big old English house is so appealing to me! I read my first NF of the year, The Knife Man, by Wendy Moore. It's about John Hunter, who is considered a pioneer in the field of surgery. He worked during the second half of the 18th century, before anesthesia, antiseptic techniques, and all the other things we take for granted today. His main contribution to medicine (which wasn't recognized until after his death) was his rejection of the status quo, his desire to experiment, learn new things, try new ways of doing surgeries even though these things were considered sacreligious. He also bucked the establishment by suggesting that species evolved over time and that all life on earth was interrelated and had characteristics in common. He was well known for his museum full of preserved specimens--human, animal, normal anatomy as well as abnormalities. I had to skim over several paragraphs throughout the book that described his experiments on animals (I just can't read fiction or nonfiction about animals in pain, it haunts me later). On the other hand, I found the sections about "body-snatching" to be fascinating, I knew about it but didn't realize quite how frequent it was in London (the book makes it sound like the only bodies that remained in their graves were the very wealthy who could hire bodyguards to stand over thier graves until enough time had passed by that the decay would have made thier bodies useless to anatomists). Good book, I can't imagine living in a time when there was no anesthesia--and if you lived through the shock of being operated on without anesthesia, you usually died from the infection, since there were no antibiotics or aseptic technique. It's kind of hard to understand how the human race survived at all! Diane
|
|||
|
|||
Just finished Until Tuesday: A Wounded Warrior and the Golden Retriever Who Saved Him Author: Luis Carlos Montalvan, Bret Witter It is about a veteran of the Iraq war who suffers from PTSD as well as physical injuries, and how a therapy dog helps him start living again. Get the tissues handy! At least the dog doesn't die in the end. |
|||
|
|||
Finished Body Piercing Saved My Life: Inside the Phenomenon of Christian Rock Author: Andrew Beaujon Here is my PBS review: Up until Junior High, I was not allowed to listen to "secular" music, so this book was really interesting to me. Andrew Beaujon interviews Steve Taylor, discusses Stryper, Petra, DC talk, and other Christian artists I remember. In addition to giving a competent history of Christian music, Andrew Beaujon also takes a reader on a tour of the current Christian Rock scene, which has become much more diverse. Apparently Christian Rock no longer sucks as much as it did when I was growing up. |
|||
Page: |