Been awhile since I've posted in this thread and elsewhere (long-needed vacation), but I have made a little time for reading. Was still working on Theodore Roosevelt and Nature's Metropolis when I left, but I wanted "fresh" books for the plane that I wouldn't finish it in the airport and then be left bookless.
So, I brought David Harvey's A Brief History of Neoliberalism, which is interesting despite its dense prose (seriously, I think only Galbraith wrote more severe English). The book has a few major sections on neoliberal ideology, the neoliberal state, then goes into recent historical examples and I'm in the middle of a chapter focusing on China right now. It's not for the faint of heart, but it is earning a recommendation for the political/economic crowd.
The other book I brought which I have not gotten past the introduction in is The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party by Michael Holt. It's something like 1,200 pages so this will be a long-term read for me, I'll post some more on it once I've had the chance to get into it, might be posting more on the works by Morris and Cronon first.