Reading Shelby Foote's civil war "A Narrative" almost done Vol1 and "The Mortal Sea" W. Jeffrey Bolster.
Yep, my wife and I watched the first two seasons on demand, pretty much back to back. It was great. Jeremy Irons is always terrific and doesn't disappoint here. It's pretty amazing how much quality TV there is these days.If you liked the book about the Borgias and you get Show Time watch the series The Borgias.. Third season starts this Sunday. Rest is On Demand.Spectacular series
The newest book by Chip and Dan Heath: Decisive.
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/decisive-chip-heath/1111943853?ean=9780307956392
Abraham Lincoln: A Life is the antithesis of a thin slice from the Lincoln pie. In the sweeping style of Doris Kearns Goodwin's Team of Rivals, Burlingame has produced the finest Lincoln biography in more than 60 years and one of the two or three best Lincoln books on any subject in a generation. A distinguished scholar who probably knows more about Abraham Lincoln and his world than anyone else alive, Burlingame has devoted the last quarter century to editing 11 books on the Lincoln primary sources, including the writings of the president's secretaries John Hay, John Nicolay and William Stoddard. Now Burlingame has produced the most meticulously researched Lincoln biography ever written. He resurrected Lincoln's lost early journalism, when the young prairie politician—little more than an immature, unscrupulous hack—wrote more than 200 anonymous op-eds; Burlingame scoured thousands of 19th-century newspapers and discovered hitherto unknown stories; he read hundreds of oral histories, unpublished letters, and journals from Lincoln's contemporaries; and he re-examined the vast manuscript collections at the Library of Congress and National Archives. Burlingame's astonishing chapters covering Lincoln's hard early years and his difficult marriage, and his fresh insights on the profound crisis that made Lincoln great, are worth the price of the book. Do not let the intimidating length or the formidable price deter you. The book need not be read in one sitting. Each part stands alone. Burlingame's Lincoln comes alive as the author unfolds vast amounts of new research while breathing new life into familiar stories. This is a critical, skeptical, loving but never fawning tribute to the man Burlingame praises for achiev[ing] a level of psychological maturity unmatched in the history of American public life. This book supplants Sandburg and supersedes all other biographies. Future Lincoln books cannot be written without it, and from no other book can a general reader learn so much about Abraham Lincoln. It is the essential title for the bicentennial.
The newest book by Chip and Dan Heath: Decisive.
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/decisive-chip-heath/1111943853?ean=9780307956392
Foote's Civil War opus is essential. I like his writing style, very conversational and Southern as his Ken Burns' documentary. Philbrick is a wonderful writer. You might like his book about the Mayflower. I'm halfway through the first volume of Burlingame's Lincoln and it is terrific.
Read K 2- love mountaineering books, though the closest I get to a serious peak is, aw forget it. (Would love to see Everest in the flesh).The Billionaire's Vinegar by Benjamin Wallace - the story and provenance of bottles of french wine that appeared for auction, allegedly belonging to Thomas Jefferson. The story is that when he was leaving Paris he ordered some Lafite to be shipped to the US, but it somehow got walled up in a house in France and was uncovered during renovations to the house almost 200 years later.
K2 by Ed Viesters - A history of climbing on the world's 2nd highest peak. A mountain that is far more dangerous to ascend than the standard route on Everest.