travelaround
Well-known member
Can't let this good old thread die...
So.. books I've read lately worthy of mentioning here:
High Sierra: A Love Story, by Kim Stanley Robinson - the author normally writes science fiction including the Mars Trilogy and I've never read his sci-fi books but I loved this book about hiking in the Sierra Nevada Mountains... it was published on May 10 this year. It combines his memoir about hiking adventures, some chapters on Sierra geology, and biographical chapters about other Sierra hikers and writers.
The Pioneers, by David McCullough - first time to read a book by this author and I was surprised at how much I liked it. This book is mainly about the settlement of Marietta, Ohio. Now, to offset that information I'm reading a book about the same area from a Native American point of view: Indigenous Prosperity and American Conquest by Susan Sleeper Smith - but I haven't read enough of that yet to say whether or not I like it. It was recommended.........
California, an American History by John Mack Faragher - this new history of CA focuses on multicultural issues including a lot of racism and the destruction of the California native cultures. I learned a lot about my state that I didn't know before. Suppressed history... all that. The book covers history from the time of the first European explorers on the coast to 2021.
Just finished: Unmasked: My Life Solving America's Cold Cases, by Paul Holes . . . this is the memoir of a person who worked as a forensic investigator in Contra Costa County, California. I don't normally read true crime books but I do like to read memoirs, and this one hooked me because of the location. I lived in that county from birth to age 18 then again in the 1990's - and I knew of some of the crimes and even recognized one of the people mentioned (a law enforcement officer) as someone I'd met while living in Pittsburg, CA for five years until 1999 while a series of homicides nearby made me want to pack up and move north.
All the books I've read in 2022 are listed here.... that's a page on Goodreads.
So.. books I've read lately worthy of mentioning here:
High Sierra: A Love Story, by Kim Stanley Robinson - the author normally writes science fiction including the Mars Trilogy and I've never read his sci-fi books but I loved this book about hiking in the Sierra Nevada Mountains... it was published on May 10 this year. It combines his memoir about hiking adventures, some chapters on Sierra geology, and biographical chapters about other Sierra hikers and writers.
The Pioneers, by David McCullough - first time to read a book by this author and I was surprised at how much I liked it. This book is mainly about the settlement of Marietta, Ohio. Now, to offset that information I'm reading a book about the same area from a Native American point of view: Indigenous Prosperity and American Conquest by Susan Sleeper Smith - but I haven't read enough of that yet to say whether or not I like it. It was recommended.........
California, an American History by John Mack Faragher - this new history of CA focuses on multicultural issues including a lot of racism and the destruction of the California native cultures. I learned a lot about my state that I didn't know before. Suppressed history... all that. The book covers history from the time of the first European explorers on the coast to 2021.
Just finished: Unmasked: My Life Solving America's Cold Cases, by Paul Holes . . . this is the memoir of a person who worked as a forensic investigator in Contra Costa County, California. I don't normally read true crime books but I do like to read memoirs, and this one hooked me because of the location. I lived in that county from birth to age 18 then again in the 1990's - and I knew of some of the crimes and even recognized one of the people mentioned (a law enforcement officer) as someone I'd met while living in Pittsburg, CA for five years until 1999 while a series of homicides nearby made me want to pack up and move north.
All the books I've read in 2022 are listed here.... that's a page on Goodreads.