Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly linkup of book bloggers hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl! This week’s topic is books we don’t own that we would like to. I am a dedicated secondhand book shopper so I actually own most of the books I would like to own, but I found an angle on this one! The ten below books are ones I’ve listened to and enjoyed so much on audio that I’d like to have a hard copy!
The Lady in Gold: This was so good! It’s about how the Klimt painting “Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer” came to be painted, how its connection with its Jewish subject was erased by the Nazis, and the story of how members of the Bloch-Bauer family survived the war and were able to eventually reclaim the painting.
Marie Therese, Child of Terror: The only child of Marie Antoinette to survive to adulthood and the only member of her family to survive the Revolution, Marie Therese lived through some very interesting times.
China Road: A reporter who has covered China for several years takes a ride along a major road before leaving the country for his next assignment, relating stories about both the history of the country and its present in a way that feels fresh and held my interest.
The Gulag Archipelago (Volume 1): I’ve gotten very into Russian history lately, and the gulag system of Stalinist times a fascinating piece of the story. I’ve only listened to the first volume of the three, but it’s very good and I’m looking forward to getting to the next two.
Carthage Must Be Destroyed: I knew virtually nothing about Carthage beforehand except that it was one of Rome’s great enemies, and I learned some new stuff listening to this book. Honestly, though, this was a hard one to keep track of via audio, so I’d like to go over the material again on the page.
This is the Story of a Happy Marriage: I’m not super inclined towards personal essays, but this collection from Ann Patchett really grabbed me in a way I wasn’t expecting. It’s excellent.
Being Mortal: This book, about meaning and dignity as the end of life approaches, really made me re-evaluate the premium our culture places on the extension of life, even at the expense of purpose and the desire of the person themselves.
A Crack in the Edge of the World: We’ve obviously all heard of the Great San Francisco Earthquake, but I learned so much about the history of the Bay Area that gave a lot of context for that event in a way that was really engaging.
The Future is History: This was honestly not as good as Masha Gessen’s book about Putin, but gave a broader look how authoritarianism has reclaimed Russia.
Nixonland: A not insubstantial amount of the way politics has changed (for the worse) in America over the past several decades can be traced back to the presidency of Nixon. This look at the man, why he was the way he was, and the effects he had on the way the country operates is something I’d like to revisit in print.