Cheezy the Wiz
Socialist In A Hurry
Finally finished The Black Jacobins. Moving on now to school summer reading, The Making and Breaking of the Soviet System by Christopher Read.
For some reason the browser screwed up my post.
The skinny: I don't know if my recent trend towards biographies is a mood or just an unconscious coincidence of recent book selections and recommendations, I've only just now noticed it.
I've been working through Edmund Morris' three-volume set on Theodore Roosevelt; I've finished the second on his presidency and plan to start the third on the post-presidency after the Earl Warren bio. It's not as flattering as one might naively expect a bio to be (don't know how it would compare to Bradley's take, haven't read that yet), especially with regards to the Battle at San Juan, his actions in Panama, and his general handling of diplomacy. It still tells everything "over his shoulder" though, so while it is a great adventure I can't help but feel there could be a little more meat to the analysis.
Even when in the mood for biographies, I don't know of anyone I want a bio on enough to read a 3 volume set.Hell, even that Hamilton book was really a bit more than I really wanted to know.
Finally finished The Black Jacobins. Moving on now to school summer reading, The Making and Breaking of the Soviet System by Christopher Read.
the latter; if it were the former, I wouldn't have needed a few hours to get through itAnnotated as in 'written over by all the previous readers' or as in 'commentaries from the author and/or editor'?
Wrymouth3 said:All I know is C.L.R James is a big cricket guy, how much cricket is in The Black Jacobins?
None. There's also a distinct lack of black on white genocide![]()
The joys of university libraries.the latter; if it were the former, I wouldn't have needed a few hours to get through it![]()
Cheezy the Wiz said:Nope. He distinctly points it out and faults Dessalines for allowing it to happen after independence, although he notes how understandable it is. And he talks a lot about the early slave lashings out in revenge against slave-owners. But for the most part Toussaint kept violence against Whites and Mulattoes to an absolute minimum. He also faults Toussaint at one point for punishing some blacks who did lash out and massacre some whites, so YMMV.
I decided to reread the best children's book ever: The Phantom Tollbooth. Found an annotated version at a local library and immediately got lost in it for several hours.
The Name of the Wind - Well executed fantasy.
The Wise Man's Fear - We'll see if the author can keep it up. I am hopeful.