(2022-12-31) Hill HELS books
GeePawHill describes certain books as "HELS" - "high-end-layperson-suitable". A good To-Read list.
US history:
- Anderson: Crucible of War (Seven Years War)
- Foner: Reconstruction, (post-Civil War)
- Foote: Civil War trilogy.
- Hamalainen: The Commanche Empire.
- Robert Caro (all of it, especially the LBJ series.)
- Doris Kearns Goodwin:, Team of Rivals amd _The Bully Pulpit (might be technically MEL, but still magnificent),
- Barbara Tuchman: The Guns of August.
Evolutionary Biology:
- All of Stephen Jay Gould
- all of Richard Dawkins before he became rabid about atheism (I'm an atheist as a matter of faith, but I'm not rabid, it's faith, yo.)
- Judson's The Eighth Day of Creation
- Hrdy: The Maternal Instinct
- Konner: The Tangled Wing
World history:
- Paul Johnson, The Birth of the Modern, (most of Johnson is solid writing and medium-end, but this is amazing on both counts)
- Barbara Tuchman, A Distant Mirror
- all of Tony Judt
Rome:
- O'Donnell: The Ruin of the Roman Empire (plus everything else, but that one first)
- All of the Goldsworthy biographies
- The great Mary Beard, all of her, tho much of it is MEL.
- Edward Gibbon, believe it or not, who is a stunning writer, give him a few hours to learn his style, and is by and large not wrong.
AI -- not statistical mechanics w/neural nets on Markov chains
- All of Douglas Hofstadter
- all of Melanie Mitchell
- Roger Schank when you can find him, he's somewhat forgotten.
- Roger Penrose, The Emperor's New Mind, even though he's wrong.
- Daniel Dennett, but don't watch the TED talks first.
Western Art/Culture/Literature:
- Said: Orientalism
- Scarry's stunning The Body In Pain (the smartest writer I have ever been able to understand)
- Auerbach's Mimesis
- all of John Berger, to reawaken
- all of Julian Bell, to learn the mixed lot of bitterness and love.
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