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- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rpi!operators.its.rpi.edu!kasprj
- From: kasprj@operators.its.rpi.edu (Jim Kasprzak)
- Subject: non-fiction reading (was Re: _Dog Soldiers_ by R. Stone, a wild ride!)
- Message-ID: <!6r2+wb@rpi.edu>
- Nntp-Posting-Host: operators.its.rpi.edu
- Reply-To: kasprj@rpi.edu
- Organization: The Big Wedge
- References: <BzL9xt.6Gt@wsrcc.com>
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1992 17:15:02 GMT
- Lines: 40
-
- In article <BzL9xt.6Gt@wsrcc.com>, alison@wsrcc.com (Alison Chaiken) writes:
-
- |> By the way, does anyone on this group ever read NON-fiction? I read
- |> non-fiction about 50% of the time, but I would guess that I am in the
- |> minority here.
-
- I was going to say that about a third to a quarter of my reading is non-
- fiction, but going back over my list of what I've read in the past year,
- I'd have to amend that to about one-tenth. I _buy_ a lot of non-fiction,
- but somehow I find it easier to push it to the bottom of the reading queue.
- This sometimes results in amusing situations like the time last year when
- I was looking for material on the annexation of Texas and how the slavery
- question affected the issue. I knew that a few of my books covered subject
- areas similar to that, and figured that I could look in their bibiliographies
- for something that would point me in the right direction. So I looked among
- my American history books, and what should I find but a book I'd had for
- the past few years, entitled _Slavery and the Annexation of Texas_.
-
- My non-fiction reading consists mainly of history and biography dealing
- with late 19th/early 20th century Europe and America, plus a smattering
- of physics, astronomy, geology and anything else that catches my eye at
- the right time.
-
- I've also recently started collecting (I can't really say "reading" for
- the reasons detailed above) books on the history of cities. These prove
- to be harder to find than one might think. New York, of course, is easy
- given my proximity to it and the fact that _everyone_ writes about New
- York. If anyone can reccomend any good books on the history of specific
- cities in North or South America, I'd love to hear about them.
-
- Someday I'll take a year or two off and actually _read_ all the books I
- own. But then again, what fun is a library full of books you've already
- read?
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
- __ Live from Capitaland, heart of the Empire State...
- ___/ | Jim Kasprzak, computer operator @ RPI, Troy, NY, USA
- /____ *| Sam Adams,Spaten# Life is too short #Hudson Lager,Beck's
- \_| Pilsener Urquell#to drink cheap beer#Pete's Wicked Ale
- ==== e-mail: kasprj@rpi.edu or kasprzak@mts.rpi.edu
-
-