Books : History

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Books : History

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  • The Forgotten Highlander: My Incredible Story of Survival During the War in the Far East

    Alistair Urquhart

    The Forgotten Highlander: My Incredible Story of Survival During the War in the Far East
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  • The End of the Party

    Andrew Rawnsley

    The End of the Party
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  • Wedlock: How Georgian Britain's Worst Husband Met His Match

    Wendy Moore

    Wedlock: How Georgian Britain's Worst Husband Met His Match
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  • Germania: A Personal History of Germans Ancient and Modern

    Simon Winder

    Germania: A Personal History of Germans Ancient and Modern
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  • Task Force Black

    Mark Urban

    Task Force Black
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  • Operation Mincemeat

    Ben Macintyre

    Operation Mincemeat
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  • Voices from the Grave

    Ed Moloney

    Voices from the Grave
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  • Seven Ages of Britain

    David Dimbleby

    Seven Ages of Britain
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  • At Home: A Short History of Private Life

    Bill Bryson

    At Home: A Short History of Private Life
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  • Molotov's Magic Lantern: A Journey in Russian History

    Rachel Polonsky

    Molotov's Magic Lantern: A Journey in Russian History
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  • Dressed to Kill

    Charlotte Madison

    Dressed to Kill
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  • Seeing Further: The Story of Science and the Royal Society: 350 Years of the Royal Society and Scientific Endeavour

    Seeing Further: The Story of Science and the Royal Society: 350 Years of the Royal Society and Scientific Endeavour
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  • Zeitoun

    Dave Eggers

    Zeitoun
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  • The Pacific (The Official HBO/Sky TV Tie-in)

    Hugh Ambrose

    The Pacific (The Official HBO/Sky TV Tie-in)
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  • The Art of War

    Sun Tzu, Sun Zi

    The Art of War
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  • The Time Traveller's Guide to Medieval England: A Handbook for Visitors to the Fourteenth Century

    Ian Mortimer

    The Time Traveller's Guide to Medieval England: A Handbook for Visitors to the Fourteenth Century
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  • A Short History of Nearly Everything

    Bill Bryson

    A Short History of Nearly Everything
    What on earth is Bill Bryson doing writing a book of popular science--A Short History of Almost Everything? Largely, it appears, because this inquisitive, much-travelled writer realised, while flying over the Pacific, that he was entirely ignorant of the processes that created, populated and continue to maintain the vast body of water beneath him.

    In fact, it dawned on him that "I didn't know the first thing about the only planet I was ever going to live on". The questions multiplied: What is a quark? How can anybody know how much the Earth weighs? How can astrophysicists (or whoever) claim to describe what happened in the first gazillionth of a nanosecond after the Big Bang? Why can't earthquakes be predicted? What makes evolution more plausible than any other theory? In the end, all these boiled down to a single question--how do scientists do science? To this subject Bryson devoted three years of his life, reading books and journals and pestering the people who know (or at least argue about it); and we non-scientists should be pretty grateful to him for passing his findings on to us.

    Broadly, his investigations deal with seven topics, all of enormous interest and significance: the origins of the universe; the gradual historical discovery of the size and age of the earth (and the beginnings of the awesome notion of deep time); relativity and quantum theory; the present and future threats to life and the planet; the origins and history of life (dinosaurs, mass extinctions and all); and the evolution of man. Within each of these, he looks at the history of the subject, its development into a modern discipline and the frameworks of theory that now support it. This is a pretty broad brief (life, the universe and everything, in fact), and it's a mark of Bryson's skill that he is able to carve a clear path through the thickets of theory and controversy that infest all these disciplines, all the while maintaining a cracking pace and a fairly judicious tone without obvious longueurs or signs of haste. Even readers fairly familiar with some or all of these areas o! f discourse are likely to learn from A Short History. If not, they will at least be amused--the tone throughout is agreeable, mingling genuine awe with a mild facetiousness that often rises to wit.

    One compelling theme that appears again and again is the utter unpredictability of the universe, despite all that we think we know about it. Nervous page-turners may care to omit the sensational chapters on the possible ways in which it all might end in disaster--Bryson enumerates with cheerful relish the kind of event that makes you want to climb under the bedclothes: undetectable asteroid colliding with the earth; superheated magma chamber erupting in your back garden; ebola carrier getting off a plane in London or New York; the HIV virus mutating to prevent its destruction in the mosquito's digestive system. Indeed, the chief theme of this sprightly book is the miraculous unlikeliness, in a universe ruled by randomness, of stability and equilibrium--of which one result is ourselves and the complex, fragile planet we inhabit. --Robin Davidson

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  • Ill Fares The Land: A Treatise on Our Present Discontents

    Professor Tony Judt

    Ill Fares The Land: A Treatise on Our Present Discontents
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  • The Checklist Manifesto: How to get things right

    Atul Gawande

    The Checklist Manifesto: How to get things right
    Amazon Exclusive: Malcolm Gladwell Reviews The Checklist Manifesto

    Malcolm Gladwell was named one of TIME magazine's 100 Most Influential People of 2005. He is most recently the author of What the Dog Saw (a collection of his writing from The New Yorker) as well as the bestsellers Outliers, The Tipping Point, and Blink. Read his exclusive Amazon guest review of The Checklist Manifesto:

    Over the past decade, through his writing in The New Yorker magazine and his books Complications and Better, Atul Gawande has made a name for himself as a writer of exquisitely crafted meditations on the problems and challenges of modern medicine. His latest book, The Checklist Manifesto, begins on familiar ground, with his experiences as a surgeon. But before long it becomes clear that he is really interested in a problem that afflicts virtually every aspect of the modern world--and that is how professionals deal with the increasing complexity of their responsibilities. It has been years since I read a book so powerful and so thought-provoking.

    Gawande begins by making a distinction between errors of ignorance (mistakes we make because we don't know enough), and errors of ineptitude (mistakes we made because we don’t make proper use of what we know). Failure in the modern world, he writes, is really about the second of these errors, and he walks us through a series of examples from medicine showing how the routine tasks of surgeons have now become so incredibly complicated that mistakes of one kind or another are virtually inevitable: it's just too easy for an otherwise competent doctor to miss a step, or forget to ask a key question or, in the stress and pressure of the moment, to fail to plan properly for every eventuality. Gawande then visits with pilots and the people who build skyscrapers and comes back with a solution. Experts need checklists--literally--written guides that walk them through the key steps in any complex procedure. In the last section of the book, Gawande shows how his research team has taken this idea, developed a safe surgery checklist, and applied it around the world, with staggering success.

    The danger, in a review as short as this, is that it makes Gawande’s book seem narrow in focus or prosaic in its conclusions. It is neither. Gawande is a gorgeous writer and storyteller, and the aims of this book are ambitious. Gawande thinks that the modern world requires us to revisit what we mean by expertise: that experts need help, and that progress depends on experts having the humility to concede that they need help. --Malcolm Gladwell


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  • Lark Rise to Candleford: "Lark Rise"; "Over to Candleford"; "Candleford Green": A Trilogy

    Flora Thompson

    Lark Rise to Candleford:
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