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From Lisa: "Each category would have histories, biographies, memoirs, how to books, informational books, essays, technical books and so forth related to the subject matter. Not necessarily books that would be classified under each of the Dewey decimal classes." "Class 000 – Computer science, information & general works Outsiders Still: Why Women Journalists Love - and Leave - Their Newspaper Careers by Vivian Smith Encyclopedia of Hair: A Cultural History by Victoria Sherrow Bill Gates: The Path to the Future by Jonathan Gatlin House of Lost Worlds: Dinosaurs, Dynasties, and the Story of Life on Earth by Richard Conniff 1,001 Books You Must Read Before You Die by Peter Boxall" I, too, see many possibilities for nonfiction memoirs, biographies, etc., fitting in lots of the areas. Sports of all types fit, too. Many sports are very technical such as sailing and isn't dance an artistic form? Team sports could fit Class 100 as there is certainly a psychological aspect to this type of competition. Use your imagination and just state how your selection qualifies. This is your challenge to design within a framework. Class 000 – Computer science, information & general works Class 100 – Philosophy & psychology Class 200 – Religion Class 300 – Social sciences Class 400 – Language Class 500 – Science Class 600 – Technology Class 700 – Arts & recreation Class 800 – Literature Class 900 – History & geography Last Edited on: 4/22/17 1:09 PM ET - Total times edited: 5 |
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My lists begin here. Thanks for the help Lisa. Here is a book I have just finished that is quite good but I have filled many categories so I'll list it here. The Cause Lost: Myths and Realities of the Confederacy by William C. Davis, 7/27/2017. The author looks at many of the myths and beliefs that have arisen around the Civil War,. focusing primarily on the Confederacy. In addition, he does nice biographical sketches of many of the key men involved in directing war efforts from the South. Three is a really good chapter about all the myths that surround Stonewall Jackson and they are still believed. One must take care in choosing a book about this Confederate general as a number of the authors have little factual background about the man.
Class 400 – Language
Class 800 – Literature Becoming Laura Ingalls Wilder: The Woman Behind the Legend by John E. Miller, in process
Last Edited on: 11/30/17 6:39 PM ET - Total times edited: 49 |
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I'm aiming for 6 or 8 categories. Class 000 – Computer science, information & general works Class 100 – Philosophy & psychology Class 200 – Religion Class 300 – Social sciences Devil in the White City - Erik Larson (365 Penal and related Institutions) Class 400 – Language Class 500 – Science The Outermost House - Henry Beston (508.744 Natural Science) Class 600 – Technology Rise of the Rocket Girls - Nathalia Holt (629 Other branches of Engineering) Class 700 – Arts & recreation Class 800 – Literature What the Stones Remember - Patrick Lane (811.5 American Poetry in English) Class 900 – History & geography The Road to Little Dribbling - Bill Bryson 6/23 (914.104 History and Travel in Europe-Great Britain) Enjoyable, expect to spend time looking up the places he travels online. Last Edited on: 6/23/17 9:29 PM ET - Total times edited: 1 |
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Class 000 – Computer science, information & general works Class 100 – Philosophy & psychology Class 200 – Religion Class 300 – Social sciences Class 400 – Language Class 500 – Science Class 600 – Technology Class 700 – Arts & recreation Class 800 – Literature Class 900 – History & geography |
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My List: Class 000 – Computer science, information & general works Class 100 – Philosophy & psychology Class 200 – Religion This is the autobiography of a young woman who lives in and eventually escapes a fundamentalist Mormon colony in Mexico. Class 300 – Social sciences Written by the former LATimes crime columnist, this book did an amazing job of bringing the problems of muder in the inner city to life. In the book, she follows several cases from beginning to end, showcasing an amazing empathy for the homocide detectives, the victims, the perpetrators and the families behind each of those groups. A truly eye-opening read. Written as a first person narrative, this memoir reflects the larger picture of what is occuring in the rust belt and appalachia. The author does an excellent job of linking his experiences to wider and disturbing trends in our country. Want to understand underachievement and drug addiction in the midwest, then this book is a great place to start. Class 400 – Language Class 500 – Science Class 600 – Technology & Medicine
Summing up this book:Take a walk on a sunny day to the coffee shop, when you're there have some coffee and maybe some nuts for a snack, sit and relax for a while. Pretty easy stuff to incorporate into your everday life to gain significant health benefits. So I'm on a big health kick in my January reading. Both this book and The Big Five above are excellent resources for small, tiny little changes I can make to my lifestyle to gain significant health rewards. This book was written by an MD diagnosed with brain cancer at 31. As he started traditional therapy for his cancer, he wanted to understand what else he himself could do to increase his chances for survival. The results are this book. He intersperses his own experiences throughout the book, along with similar stories from other people. A really good read - and the changes are beyond easy to make. Have a glass of wine every day? Sign me up!! Class 700 – Arts & recreation Class 800 – Literature Keeping with the non-fiction theme, this book is a review of The Great Gatsby, exploring how events, trends and Fitzgerald's own life and acquintances influenced the novel. Class 900 – History & geography Last Edited on: 3/25/17 11:50 PM ET - Total times edited: 7 |
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Class 000 – Computer science, information & general works Browsing: A Year of Reading, Collecting and Living With Books by Michael Dirda (28 Reading) This a collection of columns written in 2012 for The American Scholar. Fifty columns about book collecting, new books, old books, under rated books, the joy of book stores, conventions, some personal and political musings and quite a bit about the pleasures of physical books. A wonderful book that caused me to nod my head when he spoke of a book I've read, order from PBS a number I haven't read and add a lot of titles to my reminder list to order in the future. Class 100 – Philosophy & psychology Class 200 – Religion Class 300 – Social sciences Class 400 – Language Class 500 – Science Why Things Break : Understanding the World By the Way It Comes Apart by Mark Eberhart (620.1 Engineering mechanics and materials science) Class 600 – Technology Steal the Menu: A Memoir of Forty Years in Food by Raymond Sokolov (641-Food and Drink) An interesting look at how food criticism and the social/historical importance of food has been regarded has changed as well a look at how journalism itself has changed. It's a very workmanlike book but I was expecting more passion regarding the subject of food. I was thinking more along the lines of Ruth Reichl's writing. I hadn't realized that the author was a journalist/scholar who stumbled into the food world rather than a cook or gourmet who became a journalist. Still it was worth reading for the overview of the food world and how it has changed. Class 700 – Arts & recreation The Eternal Summer: Palmer, Nicklaus and Hogan in 1960, Golf's Golden Year by Curt Sampson (796.352 Golf) Class 800 – Literature FB Eyes: How J Edgar Hoover's Ghostreaders Framed African American Literature by William J. Maxwell (810.09896 African American Literature) Class 900 – History & geography Mapping the Paddocks by Chester Eagle (994 History of Australia) A memoir of the author growing up on a farm in Australia during the Depression and World War ll. While the cricket metaphors were a bit heavy handed, it was an interesting look at growing up in rural Australia and a young boy's life. Last Edited on: 5/21/17 3:14 AM ET - Total times edited: 7 |
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Class 000 – Computer science, information & general works Class 100 – Philosophy & psychology Option B: Facing Adversity, Building Resilience, and Finding Joy by Sheryl Sandberg. Finished in July. Rating B Facebook COO Sandberg reflects on life after the sudden death of her husband and, along with co-author Adam Grant share practical ideas for overcoming adversity. An inspiring and heartfelt book. Class 200 – Religion Born a Crime by Trevor Noah Finished in July. Rating: A+++ for the audio book. So, it might be a stretch to put this in the religion category, but Noah's memoir does focus a bit on his mother's religious fervor and practices. This was fabulously done in the audio version read by the author. Class 300 – Social sciences Hillbilly Elegy by J.D. Vance. Finished on January 4th. Rating: A J.D. Vance is a self-desribed hillbilly whose grandparents moved from the rural south to a small Ohio town in what is now part of the "rust belt" in order to seek a better life. They only partially fullfilled that dream as their lives and the lives of their extended family encountered unemployment, underemployment, unacceptance, alcoholism, drug addiction, and family discord/violence. The book has been touted as a explanation of the votes of poor whites in the last presidential election, and to some extent it provides that but it is really much more. Class 400 – Language Class 500 – Science For All the Tea in China: Espionage, Empire, and the Secret Formula for the World's Favourite Drink by Sarah Rose. Finished in July. Rating: B Robert Fortune was a Scottish botanist, gardener, and plant hunter who travels into China in 1848 to steal Chinese tea-growing and harvesting secrets for the East India Company. A little gem of a book. Class 600 – Technology Class 700 – Arts & recreation Class 800 – Literature Class 900 – History The Black Count by Tom Reiss Finished on January 28. Rating: A+ An excellent historical biography of the nearly forgotten father of writer Alexander Dumas. He was a brave, heroic and principled man who led several key battles during the French Revolution. He was also bi-racial and fell out of favor with Napoleon and the other powers-that-be when he returned home after a two-year imprisonment. I just loved all of the rich contextual background about the French Revolution. The book is a Pulitzer Prize winner. Last Edited on: 8/22/17 6:58 AM ET - Total times edited: 7 |
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