The Delanceyplace.com Top Twelve Books of the Decade:
Tomorrow is the tenth anniversary of delanceyplace.com, and to celebrate we are doing three things. First, we are announcing our top books of the decade--all listed below. Second, we have tabulated all the many votes we received from our readers for best selections of the decade, and will be emailing them one-by-one in a countdown over the next couple of weeks. Lastly, we've randomly drawn ten names from among all those who submitted their choices, and will be sending a copy of all of our top books to each of the winners.
I've read roughly 1500 books in the past decade, but since Google tells us there have been129,864,880 books published in modern history, it seems like the smallest possible drop in the bucket. I tried over the last couple of months to narrow down these 1500 books into my own personal top ten.
I almost succeeded--I got it down to my top twelve. Or top seventeen. Or top twenty. Depending on how you count.
Tomorrow is the tenth anniversary of delanceyplace.com, and to celebrate we are doing three things. First, we are announcing our top books of the decade--all listed below. Second, we have tabulated all the many votes we received from our readers for best selections of the decade, and will be emailing them one-by-one in a countdown over the next couple of weeks. Lastly, we've randomly drawn ten names from among all those who submitted their choices, and will be sending a copy of all of our top books to each of the winners.
I've read roughly 1500 books in the past decade, but since Google tells us there have been129,864,880 books published in modern history, it seems like the smallest possible drop in the bucket. I tried over the last couple of months to narrow down these 1500 books into my own personal top ten.
I almost succeeded--I got it down to my top twelve. Or top seventeen. Or top twenty. Depending on how you count.
And I've listed sixteen more under the heading "Best of the Rest" -- almost any of which could rightly have been included in my top twelve.
To read history is to learn the patterns of human behavior. To read history is to learn to better read yourself, your spouse, your neighbor, your boss, your political leaders, and the world.
There were plenty of mediocre books among the 1500 I read. For example, I wanted to learn about the history of Brazil but couldn't find a good or great book on that subject -- so I took what I could find. And I started many books that turned out to be so lousy I simply stopped reading. Those never made it into my tally.
But every once in a while, I found myself deep inside of a book so compelling that I ended up lost in it, so fully absorbed that I lost track of everything else. Every single one of Robert Caro's four books on LBJ was like that for me. As was Alan Jay Lerner's Street Where I Live. I simply could not stop reading.
Other books, while imminently readable, were so unexpected or ideologically challenging that I had to put them down -- sometimes for days -- just to try and absorb what I had read. David Graeber's Debtwas like that for me. So were Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs, and Steel and Jacques Barzun's From Dawn to Decadence.
All the books below have stayed with me. Some haunt me. I can never forget the scene of the northern and southern American Civil war armies camped on opposite sides of a river, ready to do hideous battle with each other the very next day, but singing hymns in unison at Christmas. Nor Lerner's heartbreaking, fatalistic advice that the only way to cope with a failed relationship was to "simply love her."
So here they are. As always, it is all nonfiction -- and we include them if we read them in the last ten years even if they were published many years before that.
The Top Twelve
To read history is to learn the patterns of human behavior. To read history is to learn to better read yourself, your spouse, your neighbor, your boss, your political leaders, and the world.
There were plenty of mediocre books among the 1500 I read. For example, I wanted to learn about the history of Brazil but couldn't find a good or great book on that subject -- so I took what I could find. And I started many books that turned out to be so lousy I simply stopped reading. Those never made it into my tally.
But every once in a while, I found myself deep inside of a book so compelling that I ended up lost in it, so fully absorbed that I lost track of everything else. Every single one of Robert Caro's four books on LBJ was like that for me. As was Alan Jay Lerner's Street Where I Live. I simply could not stop reading.
Other books, while imminently readable, were so unexpected or ideologically challenging that I had to put them down -- sometimes for days -- just to try and absorb what I had read. David Graeber's Debtwas like that for me. So were Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs, and Steel and Jacques Barzun's From Dawn to Decadence.
All the books below have stayed with me. Some haunt me. I can never forget the scene of the northern and southern American Civil war armies camped on opposite sides of a river, ready to do hideous battle with each other the very next day, but singing hymns in unison at Christmas. Nor Lerner's heartbreaking, fatalistic advice that the only way to cope with a failed relationship was to "simply love her."
So here they are. As always, it is all nonfiction -- and we include them if we read them in the last ten years even if they were published many years before that.
The Top Twelve
Guns, Germs and Steel, Jared Diamond
An indispensable explanation of why certain of world's countries, continents, and peoples became dominant and certain others lagged behind. Be prepared for the unexpectedly pivotal importance of domesticable animals and the size and weight of grain seeds. History followed different courses for different peoples because of differences among peoples' environments, not because of biological differences among peoples themselves. Those who domesticated plants and animals early got a head start on developing writing, government, technology, weapons of war, and immunity to deadly germs. An immensely important book for understanding the world.
Master of the Senate, Robert Caro
No politician ruled the U.S. Senate with the ironclad, ruthless power of Senate Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson, and few have turned their power so unexpectedly for such a seemingly altruistic cause as civil rights. The third book in a projected five volume biography (the other three are The Path to Power, Means of Ascent and The Passage of Power--with a projected fifth volume forthcoming), it can nevertheless easily be read as a standalone book. Caro traces LBJ's career from his days as a newly elected junior senator in 1949 up to his fight for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1960. The milestone of Johnson's Senate years was the 1957 Civil Rights Act, whose passage he single-handedly engineered. The bonus is a brief but compelling history of the Senate: Do you want to know why U.S. government is so unwieldy and dysfunctional? The framers intentionally designed it that way.
The Prize, Daniel Yergin
If oil has had the greatest impact of any single factor on world history for the past 100 years -- and it likely has -- this is the book that chronicles that saga. The Prize traces oil's central role in most of the wars and many international crises of the 20th century and provides a lively history of the petroleum industry, tracing its ramifications, national and geopolitical, to the present day. If you want a deeper understanding of the Middle East, Russia, Texas, Venezuela or any other oil-focused region, this book will supply it.
Battle for God, Karen Armstrong
In our supposedly secular age, fundamentalism has emerged as an overwhelming force in every major world religion. A follow up to her more popularHistory of God, this book endeavors to explain why. As part of that, few developments have had more impact on recent political, social and military landscape than terrorism. But most see that terrorism in one dimensional terms --good versus evil, right versus wrong -- without ever examining the underlying causes of terrorism. Armstrong does that here with a masterful 500 year history of extremism and fundamentalism in Christianity, Judaism, and Islam.
|
Master of the Senate, Robert Caro
|
The Prize, Daniel Yergin
Battle for God, Karen Armstrong
Seriously Funny, Gerald Nachman/Comedy at the Edge, Richard Zoglin/ Groucho, Stefan Kanfer/Born Standing Up, Steve Martin
Almost as good are Zoglin's look at the decades just after the 1950s, Kanfer's examination of Groucho Marx and his times, and Martin's poignant, rueful reflections on his eighteen year stand-up career.
Emotional Intelligence, Daniel Goleman/Social Intelligence, Daniel Goleman
Death and Life of Great American Cities, Jane Jacobs
Empire of the Summer Moon, S.C. Gwynne/Rebel Yell, S.C. Gwynne
The Comanche were the most fierce of the Native American tribes, and Quanah Parker was the boldest of their chiefs. He took his stand against the unstoppable encroachment of settlers in the West at the very moment that Comanche resistance was doomed. Empire of the Summer Moon is a vivid historical account of the forty-year battle between Comanche Indians and white settlers for control of the American West. Gwynne is an extraordinarily gifted writer, and his follow up book, Rebel Yell -- a biography of the legendary Confederate General Stonewall Jackson -- is every bit as powerful.
The Scientists, John Gribbin
The West, Geoffrey Ward
Debt: The First 5000 Years, David Graeber
The Deluge, by Adam Tooze
The Best of the Rest
Learned Optimism, Martin Seligman
A Short History of Nearly Everything, Bill Bryson/Made in America, Bill Bryson
PT Barnum, Philip B. Kunhardt Jr. and Philip B. Kunhardt III
As proprietor of his museum, Barnum went on to promote an array of amazing acts: the midget Tom Thumb, the Swedish singer Jenny Lind, bearded ladies, Siamese twins, the first hippopotamus in America, and the world's most famous elephant -- Jumbo.
Our Magnificent Bastard Tongue, John McWhorter
History of the World in Six Glasses, Tom Standage/Salt by Mark Kurlansky
And if you do read it, you must follow it up with Kurlansky's history of Salt. For most of history up until the last century or so, salt -- with its critical role as a food preservative in the era before refrigeration -- was as important to the world as oil is today, and was a crucial determinant of wealth, politics, trade, and war.
The Singularity is Near, Ray Kurzweil
Stumbling on Happiness, Daniel Gilbert
Brunelleschi's Dome, Ross King
From Dawn to Decadence, Jacques Barzun
Over the Edge of the World, Laurence Bergreen
The Street Where I Live, Alan Jay Lerner
The Fortunes of Africa by Martin Meredith
Schulz and Peanuts by David Michaelis
Wilson, by A. Scott Berg
Galileo's Daughter, Dava Sobel
If you use one of the above links to purchase a book, delanceyplace proceeds from your purchase will benefit a children's literacy project. All delanceyplace profits are donated to charity.
No comments:
Post a Comment