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On Oct 26, 12:47*pm, "JT" wrote:
For the last several years my bride has given me a book for Christmas, something I have enjoyed a great deal. Are there any books that you would suggest? It doesn't necessarily have to be fishing/flyfishing related. *In past years I have read "The Ridge Runner" , "North to the Night", "Working on the Edge" and could hardly put them down... TIA, JT Whew! Book recommendations......this one always gives me the fantods. Where to begin? Where to end? Well, let's start with something that IS fishing related. Robert Traver's (Traver was the nom de plume of judge John Voelker) "Trout Madness" is still hard to beat after all these decades for encapsulating what the title alone says so eloquently. If you're a book lover (not every reader.....not even every avid reader.....is), Hans Zinsser's "Rats, Lice and History" is a must. So, what's to like about a 1930's vintage introduction to epidemiology? The subtitle; "Being a Study in Biography, Which, After Twelve Preliminary Chapters Indispensable for the Preparation of the Lay Reader, Deals With the Life History of Typhus Fever" gives some subtle clues. Zinsser was playful, garrulous, opinionated, well educated (a highly respected epidemiologist), as well as an extraordinarily good writer. Digression, rants, digressions, cool logic, digressions, wit, digressions, historical perspective, digressions, a keen sense of the absurd in contemporary culture and politics (in its time, of course) and digressions.....this book has got it all. This was the first first and only book I have ever read that made me laugh out loud on reading a footnote.....and has made me do so again on each of a dozen or so rereadings over the last forty years. But enough editorialising.....a few other favorites, in no particular order and sans (mostly) commentary (Google can find you billions and billions of better reviews than anything I could ever hope to provide): "Metamagical Themas"--Douglas Hofstadter. "The Man Who Mistook his Wife for a Hat"--Oliver Sacks any of Stephen J. Gould's books. "West With the Night"--Beryl Markham "Don Quixote"--Miguel de Cervantes. (Considered by many to be the first true "novel"......you'll have to ask them about the criteria.....and by many to be the best ever.....ibid. Bottom line; Cervantes got it right the first time). But be careful about the translation you pick (unless you decide to read it in the original).....some are very dreary. "Huckleberry Finn" by you know who, IS the quintessential "great american novel" despite being commonly (and egregiously) libeled as a children's book. (An old friend of mine, who took too many postgrad lit courses, once told me that the book is "episodic"! No, duh.) Pretty much anything by Barbara Kingsolver, but especially "The Bean Trees," "Pigs in Heaven," and "Animal Dreams." Anything by Annie Dillard. Um......uh.....well, one could go on for days. More? giles |
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