Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

BOOKS!
Book Store and Library | June 8, 2003 | Various

Posted on 06/09/2003 7:47:33 AM PDT by KC Burke

Okay, fellow bibliophiles and freerepublic readers wanting to get some ideas on books and periodicals, get ready.

This is the Thread.

I've placed it in General Interest because it isn't a thread about a single book or even about a class of books, but instead, a thread to review once in a while to see what others have found interesting to read and why.

It doesn't need to be renewed daily, the software will keep it down to load-easy size on this wonderful forum. It does need to have a few guidelines for proper functioning however.

First, this is not a competition, we don't need lists longer than 25.

Second, make a point and give an opinion about a book, don't just list it. We know you aren't eloquent; you're here aren't you?

Third, trust us, we know the standard criticisms of the various wings of conservatism toward certain icons. We need no food fights on this thread about paeleocons, neocons, objectivists, libertarians, monarchists, stateists, and anarchists. You are welcome to say you didn't care for a book when it is posted, but make one, and only one, negative post in reference to the posting of a book and trust that readers will get your point. The book can be debated elsewhere in depth; in fact, if you are passionate about the issue, create a thread and rant to your hearts' content.

Fourth, remember that the purpose of the thread is to provide readers of the forum a place to find mention of books that they might want to add to their reading list or library. If a book has been added to the thread, discuss it, but let's not post the same books innumerable times. I will try to do a recapitulation every once in a while to make that point.


TOPICS: Books/Literature; Chit/Chat; History; Hobbies; Reference
KEYWORDS: books; readinglist
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-59 last
To: KC Burke
I guess the author would be helpful! LOL! His name is Erik Larson. This is the full name of the book:

The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair That Changed America

You are right about the fiction readers! They can crank them out. My mom reads fiction almost exclusively and it seems like she's always starting a new book.

41 posted on 06/19/2003 11:21:58 AM PDT by retrokitten
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 40 | View Replies]

To: KC Burke
KC!!!! Great choice of a Voegelin work!!!

I'd like to add some additions to this recommended reading list, from other authors -- just two for today.

Modern Physics and Ancient Faith, Stephen M. Barr, 2003.

From Dawn to Decadence, Jacques Barzun, 2000.

Both these books are written for the general reader. Barr's is an excellent resource for understanding recent breakthroughs in physical theory. Here's a review from amazon.com:

"Often invoked as justification for unbelief, modern science here provides the basis for an unusual and provocative affirmation of religious faith. A physicist at the University of Delaware, Barr deploys his scientific expertise to challenge the dogmas of materialism and to assert his belief that nothing explains the order of the galaxies better than divine design. To be sure, Barr recognizes that Darwin's work has swept away the arguments of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century theologians, who traced the handiwork of God in birds, flowers, and seashells. But the old argument-from-design reemerges with new sophistication after Barr presses evolutionary theory for a plausible account of the origin of what quantum physics demands--that is, a conscious observer--and comes away with nothing but skepticism about the skeptics. Barr indeed relishes the irony of a skeptical logic of random chance that forces unbelievers who balk at one unobservable God to accept, on doctrinal faith, a myriad of unobservable worlds on which the matter-motion lottery has not produced the winning ticket of conscious intelligence. The absurdity grows even more palpable among astrophysicists who avoid acknowledging the human-friendly pattern in subatomic and cosmic architecture found in the observable universe only by theorizing the existence of an infinite number of unobservable universes in which sovereign randomness has dictated other and more hostile architectures. Neither religiously sectarian nor technically daunting, this is a book that invites the widest range of readers to ponder the deepest kind of questions. -- Bryce Christensen"

Barzun's is a magnificent cultural survey. And never since Dante descended into Inferno has there been a better cultural "guide" than Jacques Barzun. Its subject is nothing less than the past 500 years of Western cultural development, from the Rennaissance to modern times. It covers everything: the arts, literature, music, philosophy, science, history. If you want to understand how we got to "where we are now," you've GOT to read this book.

Thanks for writing, KC -- and for the recommendation of The New Science of Politics. I'm delighted to hear you're reading it/have read it!!! (If you want to understand the rise of Hitler and the Third Reich, you've got to read this book.)

42 posted on 06/19/2003 12:08:21 PM PDT by betty boop (Conscious faith is freedom. Emotional faith is slavery. Mechanical faith is foolishness. -- G. I. Gu)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 38 | View Replies]

To: betty boop
While I have, of course, noticed the Barzun book in the stackes at the stores, I am now faced with the recommendation of both you and x to pick up this book. I guess I will have to go over the monthly book budget again......sixty-second time in six years, LOL, I was sick the other four months.
43 posted on 06/20/2003 8:10:45 AM PDT by KC Burke
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 42 | View Replies]

To: cornelis
< Nasty-grammar-shool-teacher-voice > Your book report is extremely overdue, young man. < /Nasty-grammar-shool-teacher-voice >
44 posted on 06/20/2003 8:21:48 AM PDT by KC Burke
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 43 | View Replies]

To: KC Burke; Z
KC, Barzun's is a wonderful, amazing work, a real education. I couldn't recommend it more highly. What comes across so strikingly is the idea that certain key ideas are representative of the various ages, and become drivers of cultural and social change. It helps us understand our own age to see how these signature ideas have evolved over time. It is an absolutely masterful work, wise, penetrating, of impeccable scholarship and erudition developed over a long lifetime -- Barzun was 94 in the year it was published. I think you will like it!
45 posted on 06/20/2003 8:51:41 AM PDT by betty boop (Conscious faith is freedom. Emotional faith is slavery. Mechanical faith is foolishness. --Gurdjieff)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 43 | View Replies]

To: KC Burke; x; general_re
I'm sorry KC, not to have responded to this earlier. This is a promising thread.

I had a reply in mind, wanting to respond to a comment of x made some time ago about how Michael Oakeshott is a very different fellow from Strauss. I wanted to add and say that Oakeshott is to Aristotle, as Strauss is to Plato, but I was shy of making that claim. So I pulled out Rationalism in Politics and read the essay on his view of the science of history. It was a good read, and good for clarity of thought, as Oakeshott moves with such calculated prose (Strauss is cursory and flighty). But that was a week ago.

I'm here now because I happend to be reading Inge and ran into a citation of Emerson which Inge calls Oriental pantheism, the "classical form of mystical philosophy, which by obliterating all outlines makes all things equally divine, and leaves no room for distinctions between right and wrong. Emerson has drunk deeply of this intoxicating draught of self-deification:

There is no great and no small To the soul that maketh all: Where it cometh, all things are, And it cometh everywhere.

I am the owner of the sphere, Of the seven stars and the solar year, Of Caesar's hand, and Plato's brain, Of Lord Christ's heart, and Shakespear's strain."


46 posted on 06/22/2003 9:29:32 PM PDT by cornelis (A is A and that's the only song I have to play.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 44 | View Replies]

To: cornelis
What of Inge contained that gem? (When you have the time, of course.)

And I am glad you mentioned Oakeshott who hasn't been listed on this thread yet. I have just read bits and pieces, perhaps for the thread you can add an item of two of his you recommend for the freeper wanting to get a taste of his fine mind. (Again, as you have the time.)

Today, I will add to the list:

Property and Freedom by Richard Pipes (ISBN 0-375-70447-7) It was given good marks by everyone from National Review, the Washington Times and The American Spectator on one side to Literary Review and The New York Times Review of Books on the other.

Pipes is a real Russian history scholar and contrasts how Property rights and law have developed in the west to how they developed in Russia and elsewhere to make his points on how Freedom is so closely tied.


47 posted on 06/23/2003 10:02:19 AM PDT by KC Burke
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 46 | View Replies]

To: KC Burke; Dumb_Ox; William McKinley; eastsider
Inge in Studies of English Mystics 1907. The first chapter, first of St. Margeret's lectures at Westminster) is Inge at his best. It seems that Pipes has studied out the implications of law using Soviet events as example--a topic that arose on this thread: A World Split Apart . Looks like Pipe's writing frequents the New York Review of Books.

Last night I was very happy with my recent purchase from Barnes & Noble: Dover's edition of Heath's Euclid (paperback, 3 vol. $10 each) You have to like it because it gives the axioms (A point is that which has no part; A line is a breadthless length) in Greek! (link for Bodleian MS pic) Shmeion estin, ou meroV ouqen. And then commentary on the Greek replete with references to Plato and Aristotle. Somehow that cigar had come to life last night.

Today its Jaspers on Kant. Jaspers is very readable and this edition is only $9.

48 posted on 06/24/2003 10:45:15 AM PDT by cornelis (Gold is hard to find.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 47 | View Replies]

To: cornelis
Very cool.

My lastest bit of reading is a history tome: The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party- Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War by Michael F. Holt.

This book is making it extremely clear to me that the more things change, the more things stay the same.

However, it is both interesting and heartening to consider that Bush may be doing to the Democrats what Jackson did to the National Republicans.

49 posted on 06/24/2003 12:23:57 PM PDT by William McKinley
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 48 | View Replies]

To: KC Burke; cornelis
Funny that you mention Pipes - in that same vein, I was going to suggest Richard Epstein's Principles for a Free Society: Reconciling Individual Liberty with the Common Good. I'm exceptionally short on reading time lately, but I was recently re-reading William Freehling's Road to Disunion - which is sure to be an unpopular choice with the vocal neo-confederate faction... ;)
50 posted on 06/24/2003 8:09:28 PM PDT by general_re ("Consistency is the last refuge of the unimaginative." - Oscar Wilde)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 47 | View Replies]

To: general_re
I have picked up Road to Disunion a dozen times and failed to buy it. I know it is definitive, but how readable is it for the non-history major?
51 posted on 06/24/2003 8:56:14 PM PDT by KC Burke
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 50 | View Replies]

To: KC Burke
The prose can bog down in places just due to the sheer detail he presents - his chapters on the Missouri Compromise and the annexation of Texas are among the most thorough I've seen presented anywhere - but overall, Freehling is a good storyteller, and he does a particularly good job of fleshing out the players into fully three-dimensional portraits, rather than just cartoon heroes and villains. As for non-historians, if you have a reasonable working knowledge of the period leading up to the Civil War, then I think you'll find that Freehling does a good job of taking that base foundation and expanding it into a great deal more. It's not a quick weekend read, but it is well worth the effort and time it takes to get through it - it's one of those nice books where I learn something new every time I pick it up. ;)
52 posted on 06/24/2003 9:16:11 PM PDT by general_re ("Consistency is the last refuge of the unimaginative." - Oscar Wilde)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 51 | View Replies]

To: ntnychik
Another thread you'd like.
53 posted on 06/24/2003 9:30:18 PM PDT by potlatch
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: potlatch
Thanks for the bump.
54 posted on 07/02/2003 12:06:00 PM PDT by KC Burke
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 53 | View Replies]

To: potlatch
I might mention that I just visited Barnes and Noble at noon. Local suburban location with five display areas of Living History by HRC and one display area for Treason by A. Coulter. A total of about fifty copies of the Clinton book and ZERO copies of the Coulter book.

With Coulter's past fast sales, it appears to be a deliberate under-order issue.

55 posted on 07/02/2003 12:09:16 PM PDT by KC Burke
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 53 | View Replies]

To: KC Burke
With Coulter's past fast sales, it appears to be a deliberate under-order issue.

We are in a war in this country, aren't we?!! It is frightening to see the lies and deception that go on now over most anything! We can't let them take our books away!

I was just on Freep Forevers thread "Pray for us - for our religous freedom". Freep Forever is in Hong Kong and describing the 'march for freedom' there.

56 posted on 07/02/2003 2:55:41 PM PDT by potlatch
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 55 | View Replies]

To: potlatch
Be sure to look up the book I listed at post #30, it may be right up your alley.
57 posted on 07/03/2003 7:42:13 AM PDT by KC Burke
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 56 | View Replies]

To: KC Burke
BUMP
58 posted on 07/03/2003 5:48:34 PM PDT by potlatch
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 30 | View Replies]

To: KC Burke; ntnychik
Did you happen to see this post last night?

Posted on 07/01/2003 4:32 PM CDT by MonroeDNA

Happy 4th of July

Have you ever wondered what happened to the 56 men who signed the Declaration of Independence? http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/938879/posts
59 posted on 07/03/2003 5:56:00 PM PDT by potlatch
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 57 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-59 last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson