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BOOKS THREAD

Discussion in 'Anything goes' started by Moderator1, Apr 22, 2005.

  1. playthrough

    playthrough Moderator Staff Member

    "Among the Bros: A Fraternity Crime Story" is darned good, the tale of a kid who turned his drug dealing operation at College of Charleston into an empire alongside a story about southern fraternities and their royally fucked up values.
     
    sgreenwell and garrow like this.
  2. qtlaw

    qtlaw Well-Known Member

    I visited Charleston last year and have some colleagues there. Yeah, I could definitely see this playing out, zero doubt. Of course, as a fraternity member in college in CA, (near Tahoe), yeah saw it playing out there as well with royally f**ked up values.
     
  3. garrow

    garrow Well-Known Member

    Richard Norton Smith's bio of Gerald Ford---An Ordinary Man. Solid look at America's 38th president and a fascinating time in American history. From the author of previous bios on Thomas Dewey and Nelson Rockefeller.
     
    I Should Coco and Liut like this.
  4. Liut

    Liut Well-Known Member

    I've been wondering about this book. Watched a series of interviews with Smith on CSPAN a year or two ago (may have been repeats). A separate filming took place in his Grand Rapids apartment as he was working on this Ford project. Thanks for the reminder. Going to get this one.
     
    garrow likes this.
  5. Liut

    Liut Well-Known Member

    The Last Honest Man is a James Risen biography of Idaho senator Frank Church. Seems like Church was indeed a principled man but probably overly ambitious.
    Good detail on the Church Commission so if you're interested in CIA history/abuses, there is a lot of insight ... including the murders of Sam Giancana and Johnny Rosselli. Information on Patrice Lumumba and the agency's involvement in Chile was of particular interest to me.
    Interestingly, James Angleton (maybe the weirdest spook I've ever read about) is buried in Boise about 100 feet from Church.
     
    garrow likes this.
  6. garrow

    garrow Well-Known Member

    Skyjack by Geoffrey Gray about the D.B. Cooper case. Long been interested in the subject. Short, quick read. Recommend.
     
    Liut and I Should Coco like this.
  7. Liut

    Liut Well-Known Member

    Richard Norton Smith's book as arrived. Have jumped around, as prone to do.
    This Warren Commission stuff is fascinating.
     
    garrow likes this.
  8. garrow

    garrow Well-Known Member

    Smith absolutely destroys Fielding Yost. Sorry, John U. Bacon.
     
  9. Neutral Corner

    Neutral Corner Well-Known Member

    James Jesus Angleton was very talented, very strange, and his career has spawned any number of spy thrillers both good and bad, both books and films. He lived in a hall of mirrors, double agents and lies so long that they permanently warped him. We'll never know the truths of some of his theories and the twisted or blind alleys he explored in his role as chief of counter intelligence, although many of his assertions were proved correct (or close) after the fall of the USSR and East Germany. I can't imagine attempting a bio of that man, although a number of writers have done so. An interesting life for certain.

    Ironic that he is so close to Church in death, as the Church Committee was instrumental in forcing his resignation from the CIA, of which he was a founding member.
     
  10. Liut

    Liut Well-Known Member

    Tom Mangold's book "Cold Warrior" is the definitive work on that spook.
     
  11. clintrichardson

    clintrichardson Active Member

    Heartily recommend "Invitation to a Banquet" by Fuchsia Dunlop.

    It's a history of Chinese food, but the way she writes it, it almost functions as a broad history of cooking too. Top-notch writing combined with deep expertise. She had written several other books about aspects of Chinese cuisine and while I haven't read those, this feels like someone's masterpiece.
     
    Last edited: Feb 7, 2024
    Hermes, Liut, britwrit and 3 others like this.
  12. Liut

    Liut Well-Known Member

    Good to see you drop by, Clint. You are missed.
     
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