NFR What Are You Reading

Non-fishing related
Sometimes I think about a small group of books I have not finished , ones in a series Not read or others and find the hardest part of the internal quandery is which one? So I reread a classic read long ago in the 70’s and 80’s . I am not compelled by this little process just an alternate choice here in the campground- as Jeanne and I refer to her house where we live. The name came from the Covid days . Yes thinking the past 8 years have been from one outside torture to the next. There are always books to read. I have one in particularly difficult book in position as the last one to choose. Picked it up a few times getting further each consecutive time- The Water Knife/Paolo Bacigalupi
 
One of my favorites of KV’s is Galapagos.

“Thanks a lot, big brain.”
Studied KV for a short while in an English class at WWU and what I took away from the study was the importance of analogy in expression, be it fiction non fiction or visual arts and it had quite an impact on my realizations of the world around me thus loving all of Kurts work.
 
So just finished a great read with many historical references. As I read this book it reminded me of a man I worked with and became friends with. As I read it, several times I told my wife (who knew my coworker also) this sounds just like what he wrote about.

And then 2/3rds of the way through there he was referenced and as a character. Lynne M. Black Jr. he also wrote a book and is on several podcasts. Lynne's book is "Whiskey Tango Foxtrot" also worth a read.

Anyway the book I finished is "Cry Havoc" by Jack Carr.

20260406_115227~2.jpg
20260406_115353~2.jpg
 
in Jan. on my xmas island trip, i met 2 retired australian guys who had traveled to the island to surf (its a long way to travel with a surfboard). one of the guys was saying that he had been somewhat inspired to live his life in retirement years, after reading - 'An Island to Oneself' by Tom Neale.
neale was a new zealander who wanted to live on a south sea island, and managed to do it in his 50's back in the late 40's (i think that was the time frame). anyway, neale ended up doing 2 stints on the deserted island in the 40's and 50's - then wrote a book about it. the book was an interesting tale of of a determined guy, with a goal, and really no money.
i found it a good and interesting read. he had his challenges, figured things out - and enjoyed his little island..
i give it 2 thumbs up.
 
So just finished a great read with many historical references. As I read this book it reminded me of a man I worked with and became friends with. As I read it, several times I told my wife (who knew my coworker also) this sounds just like what he wrote about.

And then 2/3rds of the way through there he was referenced and as a character. Lynne M. Black Jr. he also wrote a book and is on several podcasts. Lynne's book is "Whiskey Tango Foxtrot" also worth a read.

Anyway the book I finished is "Cry Havoc" by Jack Carr.

View attachment 182275
View attachment 182274
This one interrupted paragraph just listed the creme de la creme of the special operations community for the 60's and 70's. John Plaster wrote several books on sniping and long range engagements with a rifle. Would not surprise me that Billy Waugh was listed on the next page.
 
I just re-read Helter Skelter by Curt Gentry and Vincent Bugliosi. It describes the Tate-Sebring-Frykowski-Folger and LaBianca slayings, the subsequent investigations, and tactical prosecutorial preparations for the Manson and friends trial. It is a fascinating read, especially for those who have known psychopathic killers. Note that it is graphic and not recommended for weak stomachs or youth.
 
I just re-read Helter Skelter by Curt Gentry and Vincent Bugliosi. It describes the Tate-Sebring-Frykowski-Folger and LaBianca slayings, the subsequent investigations, and tactical prosecutorial preparations for the Manson and friends trial. It is a fascinating read, especially for those who have known psychopathic killers. Note that it is graphic and not recommended for weak stomachs or youth.
I was in Glendale, California at the time that Manson was doing his evil. I wanted to go home to Oregon in the worst way.
 
“The Summer of ‘49” by David Halberstam Pulitzer Prize winner for non-fiction. I usually read this book at the start of probably every fifth BB season just to remember what baseball was, and meant to me, in my earliest years. Being New England born you had to pick one or the other of the teams..not both like me.
Red Sox vs Yankees 1949; Joe DiMaggio vs Ted Williams. One at the sunset of his career and the other reestablishing himself as the greatest hitter of all time (according to who you’re listening to) before, again, serving in Korea as a fighter pilot.
One might think Mr. Halberstam focused primarily on Joe vs Ted but he did not. The players, coaches, managers, front office, owners are described, quoted, and written of, worts and all. If you were born in the 40s, and collected BB cards and listened, and later watched, the games one’s mind can concur of memories of those years, and those players, at a time when your biggest problem was continuing to play and be late for supper or leaving when you were next up and two guys were in scoring position.
Greatest sports related book ever!
The current Red Sox appear to be a dumpster fire. Their local fans also.
The Yankees have righted the ship. Two weeks ago 81% of their fans wanted to fire the Manager. Normal.
I was hoping Seattle made the WS last year because I could dust off my copy of “Ball Four” by Jim Bouton and relive his days with the Seattle Pilots and his “friend”, the manager Joe Schultz in 1970(?).
And, by definition, Ellis Kinder was the best hung-over pitcher in the history of baseball.
 
The River of Consciousness by Oliver Sacks, for a 2nd time. Nice little bit about Darwin, species, and evolution, but the psychological section on memory, perception, and epistemology in general is a mind blower. Is anything real? Seems like a good fit with contemporary politics - you don't know what you're talking about, and you can't prove I'm wrong!
 
I just finished "A Woman Of No Importance" by Sonia Purnell, WOW! The book is a historical documentary (with some license) about Virginia Hall and the role she played as an American in Occupied France during WW-II. A strong 4.9 out of 5 stars.
 
That Wild Country by Mark Kenyon.

Excellent read. From the cover..." An Epic Journey through the Past, Present and Future of America's Public lands."... Kenyon nailed it. He doesn't preach. He just presents the facts and intersperses them with personal experiences of enjoying Public Land, be it camping, fishing, hunting etc.

If you are a user of Public Lands, which all of us on here are, you will enjoy this book. Personally, I think, right this minute, we are at the cliffs' edge regarding the future of our Public Lands. It is a very troublesome time. Pay attention and fight for the protection of what we have.

The positive side I took away from the book is this, what we are going through now.......has been going on since the beginning of our Public Lands. Greed and exploitation have been gnawing away at this American gift, since its inception. It gives me some hope for future generations.


 
978-0-226-53486-2-frontcover.jpg

An interesting read about an in depth journey through Vanuatu, The Solomons, and Santa Cruz Islands.
 
So just finished a great read with many historical references. As I read this book it reminded me of a man I worked with and became friends with. As I read it, several times I told my wife (who knew my coworker also) this sounds just like what he wrote about.

And then 2/3rds of the way through there he was referenced and as a character. Lynne M. Black Jr. he also wrote a book and is on several podcasts. Lynne's book is "Whiskey Tango Foxtrot" also worth a read.

Anyway the book I finished is "Cry Havoc" by Jack Carr.

View attachment 182275
View attachment 182274
We had one guy in our diving/spearfishing group also known as "The Frenchman"...his claim to fame was he was the original "Marlboro Man' in the commercials, which I found amusing as he was portrayed as a cowboy...his French accent was very thick...
 
I just finished "A Woman Of No Importance" by Sonia Purnell, WOW! The book is a historical documentary (with some license) about Virginia Hall and the role she played as an American in Occupied France during WW-II. A strong 4.9 out of 5 stars.
My wife and I just listened to The Nightingale by Kristin Hannah. Also about women in WWII but fiction. Engaging story
 
Back
Top