neotoma: Roadrunner fetish goes "beep beep!' (roadrunner)
neotoma ([personal profile] neotoma) wrote2011-09-12 05:35 pm

A book group for non-fiction...

I was talking to [personal profile] ellen_fremedon at Small Press Expo (more on that later) and in the course of our meandering discussion, I came to the realization that I really want to talk about non-fiction books with other fans in an organized setting. I want to found a book group!

Mostly, I'm thinking about history, anthropology, and science books for the interested layperson and maybe the more accessible academic texts. Given that it takes a while to read these kind of non-fiction books, I think that such a group would only meet every other month.

[personal profile] ellen_fremedon and I brainstormed a list of books that we think might be interesting to read and discuss:



Personally, I'd like to get read more by female researchers and more on non-Western cultures.

I'd be willing to organize such a group, and host it part of the time -- so who in the Washington Metro area think this sounds interesting? Or you can just give me suggestions for books to read.

ETA: Jesse Byock's Viking Age Iceland, which is fascinating
dorothy1901: OTW hugo (Default)

Recs

[personal profile] dorothy1901 2011-09-13 03:37 pm (UTC)(link)
You've got one of my all-time favorite non-fiction writers: Barbara Tuchman. You might be interested in the works of two others: Elaine Pagels and the late Stephen Jay Gould. Pagels wrote several books about the Gnostic Gospels. Stephen Jay Gould wrote mostly about natural history. Both writers combine a first-rate scholar's understanding of the subject with a gift for writing readable prose.

ETA: I also (tentatively) recommend Why We Eat What We Eat: How Columbus Changed the Way the World Eats by Raymond Sokolov. I haven't read the book, but I've read many of Sokolov's columns for Natural History Magazine, and they were excellent.
Edited 2011-09-13 15:47 (UTC)