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[–]DukeofWellington123 1ポイント2ポイント  (0子コメント)

Just before I left school, my history teacher gave me about ten books that he was going to throw out, so I've been reading them over the summer. Right now, I'm reading Keith Feiling's A History of England. It was first published in 1950 and my edition was printed in 1966, so it's quite sobering to read a book that's older than my parents.

I have a few questions about the topic and book specifically, to anyone that's read the book and/or knows about English history. How much more advanced is English historiography now compared to the 50s and 60s when the book was published? Is there anything that I would read in the book that is no longer the held view among historians, or is now controversial? Also, are there any more recent books that I could buy on English history, covering the same broad period?

[–]piwikiwi 1ポイント2ポイント  (0子コメント)

Does it have to be history books?:P I've been reading In Search of Lost Time and it is pretty amazing.

[–]seaturtlesallthewayWikipedia is peer-viewed. 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

Every Man A Tiger is an interesting read, especially the lessons on leadership by GEN Chuck Horner himself. Seeing the logistics and sheer work put in behind what I saw on the TV is humbling.

Is there a trick to getting use out of the Read for Free feature on JSTOR? All I can ever get are reviews, or articles that around 100 years old (which is pretty useless for, say, Slavery and the Civil War).

[–]WalkingOsteoclast 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

Currently reading Piggyback and Containers: A History of Rail Intermodal on America’s Steel Highway by David J. DeBoer, partially because I'm mildly nerdy about trains, but honestly slightly more so because I'm kinda interested in doing an American version of The Foresight War and containerization has always struck me as a good thing to introduce. Not too far into it yet, but some interesting tidbits nonetheless. The ICC, of course, screwed things up in the beginning.