I love to read. I’ve always loved to read. I remember reading Encyclopedia Brown, The Hardy Boys, Boy Scout merit badge pamphlets, encyclopedias, magazines, newspapers, yada yada. Usually I’m surrounded by people who love to read, even when I’m doing Army stuff.
I was a little shocked the other day when I was driving along with one of our radio operators and we were talking and I said, “Have you had a chance to read Rumsfeld’s book?”
To which he replied, “Oh I really never read any books. I don’t even read the newspaper.”
It actually took a moment for me to make a graceful recovery from that while the whole time thinking the guy was clearly far dumber than I had given him credit for.
So in honor of that, I wanted to list a few of my favorite books. I’ve tried several times to compile “Jon’s Reading List” but I never feel it is complete and it is always so many books as to be kind of useless.
The Book of Mormon – Another Testament of Jesus Christ
Religion
Simply stated: read it; test it; it’s true and it will change your life.
Basic Economics
Economics
The problem with economic illiteracy, as with historical illiteracy, is HUGE. Without a basic grounding in these principles, the behaviors of people, markets and governments seem random. In this LARGE primer, Thomas Sowell does an amazing job of clarifying and explaining without tedium and without dumbing it all down. Reading this book requires an investment of time, yes, but it is an investment that will be repaid when you see through the headlines with new clarity on economic matters – and really, most matters are economic at their heart.
Nothing Like It In The World
History
I love reading history, so picking just one history book really made me think. I settled in on one of Stephen Ambrose’s probably lesser known books. It tells the story of the US transcontinental railroad from its earliest conception to the epic battle between the Union Pacific and Central Pacific. One of perhaps the most cogent points Ambrose makes when discussing the shady financial dealings whereby the railroad-men reaped huge profits from the construction. He sums it up by saying simply (and I’m paraphrasing), that yes, it happened, but all those warrants for land along the right-of-way would have been worthless had they not succeeded in building the railroad and that for all the money earned, the cost to the Federal government was remarkably low relative to the amazing benefits to the public good.
Bonus points if you read this as a follow on to Ambrose’s Undaunted Courage – which covers Lewis and Clark. It feels like a natural set.
John Adams
Biography
David McCullough, despite his name being larger than his subject’s, provides a rich and well-told story of a life most excellently lived. The amazing blend of stalwart love of family and sense of duty and a sense of personal frustration. I felt sad for John Adams in that he was so attuned to any slight against him personally that he seems never to have appreciated his own value to the country he loved and helped create. And that leaves aside some of the painful and touching family moments. I believe there’s no way you can come away from this book without re-assessing your own life with fresh perspective.
The Inmates Are Running The Asylum
Technology
Alan Cooper’s 2004 cry for sanity is a bit aged for a tech book, but it is still remarkable to read it and see how much we’ve learned – and the lessons that still seem to elude us. Consider that when this book came out, the iOS with its emphasis on smooth transitions between user tasks didn’t even exist.
Whether you are in the tech business or just a victim of it, this book is worth your time.
Jude The Obscure
Classic
In Jude the Obscure, Thomas Hardy spins a tale that makes music by The Cure seem positively upbeat by comparison. If you can survive the trip through its pages, you are bound to feel a whole lot better about your own life. If nothing else, this story reminds the reader that every choice has a consequence, and you can’t pick the one without picking the other too.
Patton On Leadership
Leadership
A terrifying title, but an excellent book. It dissects some of the speeches and writings of a man who is arguably the finest combat general in the history of the United States and distills out the intent and application of these principles in a less deadly workplace.
And it has the added side-effect of looking very scary to co-workers when it is sitting on your shelf. Sun Tzu is passé! Patton is where it’s at.
Well, there it is.
I could go on and on with Science, Politics, etc. but the point was a brief list.
We have very different taste in book selections, but I loved this post and love that you read. I am consistently amazed at how few people read and those who consider it a chore. I have always loved the chance to lose myself in a book, magazine, newspaper, pamphlet, anything with words. My baby is four months old and I already spend time reading him several books before going to bed at night. He doesn't yet grasp the meaning, but I want to instill in him the great love of books.
ReplyDelete@Monica: I agree, it is so important to read to kids when they are little. From the time I was little, I would read the cereal box or whatever was handy. I still read boxes all the time.
ReplyDeleteI try to read a pretty broad spectrum. I'm currently reading "A Sentimental Journey" by Laurence Stern on my Kindle.
My wife is a huge Janeite and while I'm deployed I'm reading or listening to several of Austen's novels. I just finished Mansfield Park (Audible) and I have Pride and Prejudice in the chute for when I finish my current book later tonight.
Thank goodness for my Kindle. I'd never be able to tote all these books around.
Great selections of course. You know how I love Basic Economics. The great shame is that it is hidden away in the economics section of bookstores and libraries. It belongs in sociology, psychology or political science. And while it's not 'dumbed down' it is very readable.
ReplyDeleteI'll have to try A Sentimental Journey, but I never could finish 'Mysteries of Udolpho" when I was trying to slog through 'books Jane Austen read'.