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[–]chocolatepotChanel was the woooorst 1ポイント2ポイント  (0子コメント)

I started to read The Mind of America: 1820-1860, by Rush Welter, last week - quickly found that it's not a sit-down-and-read kind of a thing, very dense, probably better for reference. But it is from the late 1970s, so is it even good as a reference? Has anyone come across this book in their research, and if so, what do you think?

[–]TheFairyGuineaPigI'm a Jewish-Zionist conspiracy! 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

'Thoughts from Concentrated Minds: Some Verses Written before Execution' is interesting (it's in Neophilologus, journal of medieval and modern language and literature). I don't really read poetry or anything like that, but this was a moving and thoroughly depressing essay. I would be interested in looking at things written by people who weren't poets before execution though, or, rather, weren't professional poets.

Also, just finished 'Agency, Appropriation and Rhetoric under the Gallows: Puritans, Romanists and the State in Early Modern England' by Peter Lake, which you can read here which studies capital punishment before the time period I'm studying, I didn't wholly agree with a few very minor points and i would like it to have expanded on the botched execution of Thomas Pilchard.

For a something completely unconnected to what I'm studying, I'm reading 'The Old Man and his Sons' by Hethin Brú, set in the Faroe Islands in the 1960s. It's historical fiction, beautifully written, about an old man named Ketil going whale hunting with his sons, then going into debt after bidding on too much whale meat. The cover art is stunning btw.