So I started reading lately. I'm planning on reading some of the books I should have read for my history classes, but I am also interested in other books too. I just finished reading "Memories of World War I: North Carolina Doughboys on the Western Front." It was written by R. Jackson Marshall III who works/worked at the history museum. I liked it a lot. Before that I read "Wounded Fortress: The Story of 2D LT. Tommy Kohlhaas, U.S. Air Corps." He was my cousin who died in World War II. They even put the picture of his grave in Algona, Iowa in the book which is the town a lot of my family is from. Before that the last book I probably read was "Blood Done Sign My Name." You have to read this if you take HI 364 at NC State. It's a story about a murder in Oxford, NC and race issues in the 1960s. The all white jury found a white man innocent of murder after it was clear he was the person who murdered the black man. According to the book, our state court system and library system have destroyed all information about this case now.
4/27/2010 4:55:02 PM
Your post reads like a Reading Rainbow review
4/27/2010 5:09:28 PM
You don't have to take his word for it.
4/27/2010 5:12:28 PM
I don't know if you're interested in Jefferson or the founding fathers, or if it's your thing or not, but I just read a really interesting book called The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family. As you can probably guess, it's about the slave Jefferson had sex with and her family. Pretty good stuff...if you're a Jefferson guy like myself, you're sick of hearing the whole "but he had sex with his slaves" argument. This book puts a new spin on it.
4/27/2010 5:13:53 PM
4/27/2010 5:16:24 PM
^LOL
4/27/2010 5:18:21 PM
4/27/2010 6:28:01 PM
Thunder Below by Admiral Eugene Fluckey - the story of his war patrols in the Pacific during WWII in which he was awarded the Medal of Honor and FOUR Navy Crosses. The USS Barb set the standard for tonnage sunk during the war and his sub tactics were revolutionary. He also sent a patrol ashore on mainland japan which blew up a rail line, becoming the only US forces to set foot on japanese soil during the war
4/27/2010 7:05:37 PM
Bill Bryson - Made in America: An Informal History of the English Language in the United Stateshttp://www.amazon.com/Made-America-Informal-History-Language/dp/0380713810
4/27/2010 8:00:28 PM
Very good historical account told mostly in first person. Also,
4/27/2010 8:30:53 PM
4/27/2010 9:16:24 PM