Return to Oz was seriously disturbing.
Oh my God… I forgot about that one. Yeah, I have some vague memories of seeing that at my aunt’s house late one night… made absolutely no sense to me. I just recall monkeys on unicycles.
I’ve jsut started reading Myths and Facts - A Guide to the Arab-Israeli Conflict. It’s very informative and helpful on the subject, especially because it includes information on events since 9/11.
i just read Slaughter House Five. good and funny book :)
Have to agree with you, Ewok. :wink:
As for books… I really suggest The Killer Angels (the book Gettysburg was based on).
i suggest the book Red Storm Rising by Tom clancy about a possible world war 3. good book and very interesting
“How Few Remain” by Harry turtledove was a good book describing the world if the Confederate States of America had won the Civil War in 1862.
Interesting. I’ve always like “What-if” books, and since I’m a Civil War nut, this one is worth checking out. :)
I also like Harry Turtledove’s alt-history books. Unfortunately, he does have a series where WWII came out differently-no A&A, horror of horrors! :D
I just finished an excellent book, called “Life Of Pi”. It doesn’t seem to fit in with the other books that have been suggested here, but it’s a good one! Very good storytelling.
A book that i consider most remarkable:
“Destined to Witness” by Hans J. Massaquoi
(german title: Neger, Neger, Schornsteinfeger)
have a look at
http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/0003/black_nazi.html
The web biography was interesting enough to me. :)
Berard Cornwell-
The man is a genius- Sharpe’s series, Starbuck, Archer’s tale etc.
Jefe- if you are going to read AnnCoulter’s recent book then I
Highly reccomend Sam Tannenhaus’ biography Whittaker Chambers.
I read TR Frehenbach’s This Kind of War (it’s about the Korean War)
every June for the last 4 years.
I also reccomend, Stanley Karnow’s, Vietnam.
Recently, I’m reading Ernest R. May’s, Strange Victory. It’s about how the French lost against The Germans in 1940.
-Joseph Ellis’, Founding Brothers.
-John Earl Haynes & Harvey Klehr’s Venona:
Decoding Soviet Espionage in America.
And Reading the Lord of the Rings Books with my oldest.