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Cosmopolitan: A Bertender's Life By Toby Cecchini-
This book is hilarious, especially if you have ever served food or drinks.
Edit: Actually, now that I think abut it and have had my second cup of coffee, Behind Bars by Ty Wenzel is a better read, and funny whether you've ever served food/drinks or not.
Last edited by light_shimmer; 02-21-2011 at 07:01 AM..
Has anyone read "Thinking in Pictures" by Temmple Grandin? I started reading it, but it is very "text booky" ... rather disappointing, so I may not finish unless it's really worth the time.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by QuilterChick
Has anyone read "Thinking in Pictures" by Temmple Grandin? I started reading it, but it is very "text booky" ... rather disappointing, so I may not finish unless it's really worth the time.
I've read it, and I agree with you: It is very text booky. Had I not known that beforehand, I would have bailed on it, but I'd had fair warning and knew what to expect. I was happy to know her story, but it definitely wasn't an easy, light read.
I've read it, and I agree with you: It is very text booky. Had I not known that beforehand, I would have bailed on it, but I'd had fair warning and knew what to expect. I was happy to know her story, but it definitely wasn't an easy, light read.
Yep ... thank you, exactly what I thought. I'll save it on my Kindle and find something else.
BTW, if anyone is interested in true non fiction Civil War books, see if you can get "The Secrets of War" by Terrence Garren .... authentic people (his own family) and places in Western NC and surrounding local areas ..... and a great read. He has another one out now called "The Fifth Skull" which I hear is awesome as well.
History: When The War Was Over Elizabeth Becker Sideshow William Shawcross
Both are grim, but fascinating investigations of the before-during-aftermath that overtook the country of Cambodia between the mid 1960s and early 1980s.
Travel lit: The Snow Leopard Peter Matthiessen The Lady & The Monk Pico Iyer Red Dust Ma Jian Road Fever Tim Cahill
Four extraordinary pieces of travel narrative: the first is philosophical and naturalistic, the second is poetic and textured, the third almost reads like a Chinese On The Road with some heavier political intrigues (and a bit of ethnography) thrown in, and the last is just a rip-roaring gonzo read. All four are fantastic.
Arts: 100 Years Of Japanese Cinema Donald Ritchie Our Films Their Films Satyajit Ray When Harlem Was In Vogue David L Lewis
The first two may be a bit esoteric, but still deserve a recommendation. The first is a very readable and exhaustive survey of the history of Japanese cinema, from the silent film era up to roundabout 2000. It's illustrated with stills from hundreds of classic films, many never before seen in an English language publication, and if you think that samurai, monsters, anime and weird horror is all there is to Japanese cinema, this book will turn you on to one of the GREAT cinemas in the history of the art.
The Satyajit Ray book is even more specialized, but also personal. Ray was a graphic designer and film critic in Calcutta who was inspired to launch his own filmmaking career by a chance encounter with Jean Renoir (the French director, and nephew of the painter). His own career was quite anti-Bollywood, instead blending the very refined literary quality of Renoir's films with Bengali stories; his debut (the 'Apu' trilogy launched him from total obscurity to top prizes at the Venice film fest very swiftly in the mid-1950s. This anthology of Ray's critical writing is divided into a half about Indian film, and a half about American, European and other Asian films (including some great, perceptive writing about Kurosawa and Chaplin), and as sharp as Ray's critical eye was, he maintained an ability to write well for a general audience.
The Lewis book details the history of the Harlem renaissance, and is intricately detailed. It will make you want to listen to lots of swing music!
Art: The Arts At Black Mountain College Mary Emma Harris
Black Mountain College was around from the 1930s until the late 1950s near Asheville, NC. It was founded by German exiles who were connected to the Bauhaus movement, and was an experimental, non-degree, interdisciplinary arts college; the archives are now housed at NC State University. While in existance Walter Gropius, Buckminster Fuller, John Cage, Merce Cunningham, Robert Lowell, Charles Olson, and Willem DeKooning all taught there for short stints, and the school's influence on American modernism was enormous. This is a coffeetable-sized history of the school and an investigation of it's influence, all accompanied by hundreds of photos and reproduction of fine art, musical scores, architectural plans, textile designs, poems and other cultural output from the school. This is probably the best of the many books about the school.
Autobio: A Cambodian Odyssey Haing Ngor Speak, Memory Vladimir Nabokov
Three very different but excellent autobiographies. The first - Dr. Ngor was an M.D. in Phnom Penh who became trapped in the country when it fell to the Khmer Rouge. He survived those years, ended up in L.A., and was living in a housing project when he was cast in the film The Killing Fields, for which he won an Oscar. It's an extraordinary read.
Speak Memory is Nabokov's memoir of the first half of his life, and the man handled language more gracefully than almost anyone else I've ever read. His life story itself is a doozy, and his skill in placing the reader in the settings he recreates is outstanding.
Just remembered this one which I read a while ago and it was SUPERB. Predicatably Irrational. by Dan Ariely. he also has a website to give you a feel for it. It's a great read and extremely enjoyable. Dan Ariely
"One Day In The Life of Ivan Denisovich" by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
and then...
"Gulag Boss" by Fyodor Vasilevich Mochulsky
Solzhenitsyn's book is an account of a day in the life of a Soviet citizen forced into the GULAG system, and all of its miseries. It's a classic and spurred many discussions on life in the Soviet Union at the time of its release.
Gulag Boss takes place in the same time frame, and is written by a camp commandant. It's fascinating reading it from both sides of the table; the crushing injustices in the former are sensible policies in the latter. Insurmountable tasks with no purpose were important projects; sociopathic camp guards and administrators were likeable men with a sense of duty and impartiality.
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