Question:
Great books!?
di....
2007-02-16 15:09:21 UTC
I'm at university...and there's this HUGE library at my disposal...i really want to get to read some great books here(i looove libraries!!!)I'm completely lost at how to start though...could anyone drop some titles of great books to read...those that would while away the spring break effectively?!!!!
Twenty answers:
Jess
2007-02-16 15:14:38 UTC
Phantom of the Opera by Leroux

Wicked and Son of a Witch by Maguire

Les Miserables by Hugo

Frankenstein by Shelley

The Princess Bride by Goldman

Enjoy!
Ray
2007-02-17 09:28:52 UTC
FICTION: Huckleberry Finn & Tom Sawyer (Mark Twain); Call of the Wild, Sea Wolf, White Fang, John Barleycorn & The Valley of the Moon (Jack London); The Sun Also Rises (novel), "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place," "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber" & several other short stories (Ernest Hemingway); The Iceman Cometh & Long Day's Journey Into Night (Eugene O'Neill); On the Road, The Dharma Bums, Desolation Angels, Big Sur & Vanity of Duluoz (Jack Kerouac); Tropic of Cancer (Henry Miller); Cannery Row, Sweet Thursday, Tortilla Flat, Of Mice and Men, East of Eden & The Grapes of Wrath (John Steinbeck); A Fan's Notes (Frederick Exley); The Lost Weekend (Charles Jackson); Steppenwolf, Siddhartha & Narcissus and Goldmund (Hermann Hesse); Burden of Proof (Scott Turow); The Remains of the Day (Kazuo Ichiguro); Bonfire of the Vanities & A Man in Full (Tom Wolfe); Florence of Arabia (Christopher Buckley)



NON-FICTION: Life On the Mississippi (Twain); The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test & The Right Stuff (Tom Wolfe); Travels With Charley (Steinbeck); Memory Babe: A Critical Biography of Jack Kerouac (Gerald Nicosia); Anais Nin, a Biography (Deirdre Bair); Lost Moon (Jim Lovell); Bias (Bernard Goldberg); America Alone (Mark Steyn); The Immortalist (Alan Harrington); Visions: How Science Will Revolutionize the 21st Century and Beyond (Michio Kaku); The Singularity is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology & Fantastic Voyage: Live Long Enough to Live Forever (Ray Kurzweil)



And I like mystery writers Philip R. Craig, Archer Mayor, Robert B. Parker & Kinky Friedman for "page-turner" leisure reading.
Adriana
2007-02-16 15:17:32 UTC
Everything by Jane Austen, all the Sherlock Holmes stories by Arthur Conan Doyle, Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte, and the wonderful Middlemarch by George Eliot. Many history books can be interesting - take time and just wander the stacks in the library and some titles may jump out at you - it's a wonderful way to pass the time.
kittydoormat
2007-02-16 18:36:02 UTC
There's actually a book at bookstores you may be interested in - it's called 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die by Peter Boxall. It gathers all these great books by period, so you can start at the beginning with stuff from Homer, etc, and work you way through more modern stuff. I don't know if they would have it at your library or not, but you should be able to find it at a bookstore, flip through it and see what grabs you.
anonymous
2007-02-16 16:42:45 UTC
Depends on what you like to read, I suppose. If you like classics try The Count of Monte Cristo or the Three Musketeers. Or Jules Verne's works. H. G. Wells has some great books as does Robert Louis Stevenson. If you like contemporary reading for mysteries try James Doss, John Dunning or J.A.Jance or Stuart Woods. For Sci-fi/fantasy try these authors: David Weber, John Ringo, Raymond Feist, Jane Lindskold or Dennis McKiernan. For thrillers try Matthew Reilly(in my opinion the greatest thriller writer today) or James Rollins or Jack DuBrul or Clive Cussler. Happy reading and have fun doing it.
oriella
2007-02-17 08:26:41 UTC
I've read a couple of really good books lately.. you might like them too..



* Shadow of the Wind - Carlos Ruiz Zafon (amazing book)

* Frankenstein - Mary Shelley

* The Picture of Dorian Gray - Oscar Wilde

* Perfume - Patrick Sueskind

* Persuasion - Jane Austen
anonymous
2007-02-16 23:28:08 UTC
These books are must reads in your lifetime so I would recommend you read them if you haven't already:



To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger

In Cold Blood by Truman Capote

Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

The Jungle by Upton Sinclair



Books for fun:

Marley and Me by John Grogan

The Shining by Stephen King

Midnight in the Garden of Good & Evil by John Berendt
accebere
2007-02-16 19:26:39 UTC
White Oleander by Janet Fitche

The Perks of Being a Wall Flower by Stephen Chbosky

Anything by Nersessian



But then again, these are my favorites. Ask yourself, what kind of books do I like? Then delve into them, because no matter how many books people say are good on popular demand the ones you like yourself are better. You find your choice more way more interesting. Do you like a challenge or do you just like some light reading?
bookworm_382
2007-02-16 15:30:03 UTC
Anything by James Patterson

Left Behind series

Anything by Danielle Steel

anything by Stephen King
Lisa O
2007-02-16 15:18:40 UTC
CHRISTOPHER MOORES BOOKS!!!



Hes my favorite author, his books are weird, sarcastic, and kinda twisted in a funny way. My favorite is Island of the Sequined Love Nun.



Heres the link to his site, specifically the book page where you can read the summaries. You WONT be disappointed.
Sarai
2007-02-16 15:29:46 UTC
Sherwood Smith books are really good, the Princess Bride by William Goldman is too. you might like L. E. Modesitt.
Wind Chime
2007-02-16 15:13:25 UTC
Anything by Ted Dekker or Frank Peretti
shambles
2007-02-16 15:12:50 UTC
don't know if these are just english...

but jodi picoult...especially my sister's keeper and keeping faith

virginia andrews - flowers in the attic

nora roberts - blue smoke

some of my latest favourites

if you read any would be interested to know what you thought
who2u
2007-02-16 15:17:10 UTC
memiors of a geisha

white oleander

HARRY POTTER

umm anything by Dean Koontz

Marley and Me

Lovely Bones
Stilettos
2007-02-16 15:11:30 UTC
Angels & Demons - Brown
DrPepper
2007-02-16 15:12:22 UTC
The dead sea scrolls
Alterfemego
2007-02-16 15:27:45 UTC
"The Secret"
anonymous
2007-02-16 15:12:39 UTC
vannah white's autobiography... its just a darn good book!
09'Ready
2007-02-16 15:12:58 UTC
ABSURDISTAN

By Gary Shteyngart. Random House, $24.95.

Shteyngart's scruffy, exuberant second novel, equal parts Gogol and Borat, is immodest on every level - it's long, crude, manic and has cheap vodka on its breath. It also happens to be smart, funny and, in the end, extraordinarily rich and moving. "Absurdistan" introduces Misha Vainberg, the rap-music-obsessed, grossly overweight son of the 1,238th richest man in Russia. After attending college in the United States, he is now stuck in St. Petersburg, scrambling for an American visa that may never arrive. Caught between worlds, and mired in his own prejudices and thwarted desires, Vainberg just may be an antihero for our times.



THE COLLECTED STORIES OF AMY HEMPEL

Scribner, $27.50.

A quietly powerful presence in American fiction during the past two decades, Hempel has demonstrated unusual discipline in assembling her urbane, pointillistic and wickedly funny short stories. Since the publication of her first collection, "Reasons to Live," in 1985, only three more slim volumes have appeared - a total of some 15,000 sentences, and nearly every one of them has a crisp, distinctive bite. These collected stories show the true scale of Hempel's achievement. Her compact fictions, populated by smart, neurotic, somewhat damaged narrators, speak grandly to the longings and insecurities in all of us, and in a voice that is bracingly direct and sneakily profound.



THE EMPEROR'S CHILDREN

By Claire Messud. Alfred A. Knopf, $25.

This superbly intelligent, keenly observed comedy of manners, set amid the glitter of cultural Manhattan in 2001, also looks unsparingly, though sympathetically, at a privileged class unwittingly poised, in its insularity, for the catastrophe of 9/11. Messud gracefully intertwines the stories of three friends, attractive, entitled 30-ish Brown graduates "torn between Big Ideas and a party" but falling behind in the contest for public rewards and losing the struggle for personal contentment. The vibrant supporting cast includes a deliciously drawn literary seducer ("without question, a great man") and two ambitious interlopers, teeming with malign energy, whose arrival on the scene propels the action forward.



THE LAY OF THE LAND

By Richard Ford. Alfred A. Knopf, $26.95.

The third installment, following "The Sportswriter" (1986) and "Independence Day" (1995), in the serial epic of Frank Bascombe - flawed husband, fuddled dad, writer turned real estate agent and voluble first-person narrator. Once again the action revolves around a holiday. This time it's Thanksgiving 2000: the Florida recount grinds toward its predictable outcome, and Bascombe, now 55, battles prostate cancer and copes with a strange turn in his second marriage. The story, which unfolds over three days, is filled with incidents, some of them violent, but as ever the drama is rooted in the interior world of its authentically life-size hero, as he logs long hours on the highways and back roads of New Jersey, taking expansive stock of middle-age defeats and registering the erosions of a brilliantly evoked landscape of suburbs, strip malls and ocean towns.



SPECIAL TOPICS IN CALAMITY PHYSICS

By Marisha Pessl. Viking, $25.95.

The antic ghost of Nabokov hovers over this buoyantly literate first novel, a murder mystery narrated by a teenager enamored of her own precocity but also in thrall to her father, an enigmatic itinerant professor, and to the charismatic female teacher whose death is announced on the first page. Each of the 36 chapters is titled for a classic (by authors ranging from Shakespeare to Carlo Emilio Gadda), and the plot snakes ingeniously toward a revelation capped by a clever "final exam." All this is beguiling, but the most solid pleasures of this book originate in the freshness of Pessl's voice and in the purity of her storytelling gift.



NONFICTION



FALLING THROUGH THE EARTH

A Memoir.

By Danielle Trussoni. Henry Holt & Company, $23.

This intense, at times searing memoir revisits the author's rough-and-tumble Wisconsin girlhood, spent on the wrong side of the tracks in the company of her father, a Vietnam vet who began his tour as "a cocksure country boy" but returned "wild and haunted," unfit for family life and driven to extremes of philandering, alcoholism and violence. Trussoni mixes these memories with spellbinding versions of the war stories her father reluctantly dredged up and with reflections on her own journey to Vietnam, undertaken in an attempt to recapture, and come to terms with, her father's experiences as a "tunnel rat" who volunteered for the harrowing duty of scouring underground labyrinths in search of an elusive and deadly enemy.



THE LOOMING TOWER

Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11.

By Lawrence Wright. Alfred A. Knopf, $27.95.

In the fullest account yet of the events that led to the fateful day, Wright unmasks the secret world of Osama bin Laden and his collaborators and also chronicles the efforts of a handful of American intelligence officers alert to the approaching danger but frustrated, time and again, in their efforts to stop it. Wright, a staff writer for The New Yorker, builds his heart-stopping narrative through the patient and meticulous accumulation of details and through vivid portraits of Al Qaeda's leaders. Most memorably, he tells the story of John O'Neill, the tormented F.B.I. agent who worked frantically to prevent the impending terrorist attack, only to die in the World Trade Center.



MAYFLOWER

A Story of Courage, Community, and War.

By Nathaniel Philbrick. Viking, $29.95.

This absorbing history of the Plymouth Colony is a model of revisionism. Philbrick impressively recreates the pilgrims' dismal 1620 voyage, bringing to life passengers and crew, and then relates the events of the settlement and its first contacts with the native inhabitants of Massachusetts. Most striking are the parallels he subtly draws with the present, particularly in his account of how Plymouth's leaders, including Miles Standish, rejected diplomatic overtures toward the Indians, successful though they'd been, and instead pursued a "dehumanizing" policy of violent aggression that led to the needless bloodshed of King Philip's War.



THE OMNIVORE'S DILEMMA

A Natural History of Four Meals.

By Michael Pollan. The Penguin Press, $26.95.

"When you can eat just about anything nature has to offer, deciding what you should eat will inevitably stir anxiety," Pollan writes in this supple and probing book. He gracefully navigates within these anxieties as he traces the origins of four meals - from a fast-food dinner to a "hunter-gatherer" feast - and makes us see, with remarkable clarity, exactly how what we eat affects both our bodies and the planet. Pollan is the perfect tour guide: his prose is incisive and alive, and pointed without being tendentious. In an uncommonly good year for American food writing, this is a book that stands out.



THE PLACES IN BETWEEN

By Rory Stewart. Harvest/Harcourt, Paper, $14.

"You are the first tourist in Afghanistan," Stewart, a young Scotsman, was warned by an Afghan official before commencing the journey recounted in this splendid book. "It is mid-winter - there are three meters of snow on the high passes, there are wolves, and this is a war. You will die, I can guarantee." Stewart, thankfully, did not die, and his report on his adventures - walking across Afghanistan in January of 2002, shortly after the fall of the Taliban - belongs with the masterpieces of the travel genre. Stewart may be foolhardy, but on the page he is a terrific companion: smart, compassionate and human. His book cracks open a fascinating, blasted world miles away from the newspaper headlines.
harry_potter_unfortunate_events
2007-02-16 15:41:21 UTC
Non-Fiction

Asinof, Eliot. Eight Men Out: The Black Sox and the 1919 World Series. 1963.

It's all here: the players, the scandal, the shame, and the damage the 1919 World Series caused America's national pastime.



Atkin, S. Beth. Voices from the Streets: Young Former Gang Members Tell Their Stories. 1996.

Gang members from all races and backgrounds describe why they joined, and why--and how--they left.



Alvarez, Walter. T. Rex and the Crater of Doom. 1997.

Geologist Alvarez presents the development of the impact theory of dinosaur extinction as the adventure/mystery it was.



Aronson, Marc. Art Attack: A Short Cultural History of the Avant-Garde. 1998.

Discover everything you ever wanted to know about bohemians, hipsters, and the development of the world's most radical art.



Bernstein, Leonard. The Joy of Music. 1959.

Bernstein describes all aspects of classical music.



Blackstone, Harry, Jr. The Blackstone Book of Magic & Illusion. 1985.

A well-known magician introduces readers to the history, principles, and effects of one of the oldest entertainment arts.



Blais, Madeleine. In These Girls, Hope Is a Muscle. 1995.

Learn about the year of heart, sweat, and muscle that transformed the Amherst Lady Hurricanes basketball team into state champions.



Bodanis, David. The Secret Family: Twenty-four Hours Inside the Mysterious World of Our Minds and Bodies. 1997.

The unseen world around us and within our bodies is shown in vivid detail as we follow a typical family through their day.



Boorstin, Jon. Making Movies Work: Thinking Like a Filmmaker. 1996.

Both novice and expert can enjoy this behind-the-scenes look at the art of filmmaking.



Brown, Dee. Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West. 1970.

There's another side of America's western expansion: the one seen through Native American eyes.



Brumberg, Joan Jacobs. The Body Project: An Intimate History of American Girls. 1997.

The historical evolution of body perception has turned the value system of American girls inside out.



Carson, Rachel. Silent Spring. 1962.

This landmark book gave birth to the environmental movement.



Chang, Iris. The Rape of Nanking: The Forgotten Holocaust of World War II. 1997.

Barely a postscript in official Japanese history, the horrific rape, mutilation, torture, and murder of hundreds of thousands of Chinese citizens took place over the course of just seven weeks.



Clark, Kenneth. Civilisation: A Personal View. 1970.

Clark explores history through the works, impulses, and beliefs of the great creative individuals of Western civilization.



Cooke, Mervyn. The Chronicle of Jazz. 1998.

Cooke provides a comprehensive guide to this uniquely American musical form.



Copland, Aaron. What to Listen For in Music. 1939.

The composer provides a basic introduction to the mysteries of musical composition and music appreciation.



Cumming, Robert. Annotated Art. 1995.

Art masterpieces are made understandable through the exploration of some of the world's greatest paintings.



DuBois, W.E.B. The Souls of Black Folk: Essays and Sketches. 1903.

Educator DuBois describes the lives and history of African American farmers, including the career of Booker T. Washington.



Day, David. The Search for King Arthur. 1995.

Discover through magnificent illustrations and romantic retellings what is fact and what is legend about this fifth-century hero.



Diamond, Jared. Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies. 1997.

Diamond contends that these three factors determined the course of world power throughout history.



Dorris, Michael. The Broken Cord. 1989.

The persistent physical and emotional problems of his adopted son baffled the author until he learned the condition had a name: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome.



Due, Linnea. Joining the Tribe: Growing Up Gay and Lesbian in the '90's. 1995.

Being young and gay in America means surviving cruelty, abuse, and isolation, as these individual stories of courage from teens around the country attest.



Edelman, Marion Wright. The Measure of Our success: A Letter to My Children and Yours. 1992.

A child advocate shares her thoughts on values, raising families, and the future of our country.



Epictetus and Sharon Lebell. The Art of Living: The Classic Manual on Virtue, Happiness, and Effectiveness. 1995.

A modern interpretation of the Stoic philosopher answers the timeless questions of how to be a good person and live a good life



Faludi, Susan. Backlash: The Undeclared War Against American Women. 1991.

This unflinching analysis examines the current status of American women.



Finn, David. How to Look at Sculpture: Text and Photographs. 1989.

To understand sculpture, you have to know what to look for.



Ford, Michael Thomas. The Voices of AIDS: Twelve Unforgettable People Talk About How AIDS Has Changed Their Lives. 1995.

Individuals whose AIDS experiences have been catalysts for making a difference share their poignant and personal stories.



Fouts, Roger. Next of Kin: What Chimpanzees Have Taught Me About Who We Are. 1997.

Describing his career of communicating with chimpanzees, Fouts explains evolutionary, genetic, and emotional bonds with our next of kin.

[Chimpanzee and Human Communication Institute]



Freedman, Samuel G. Small Victories: The Real World of a Teacher, Her Students, and Their High School. 1990.

How does this overcrowded, underfunded inner city school send 92% of its graduates to college?



Fremon, Celeste. Father Greg & the Homeboys: The Extraordinary Journey of Father Greg Boyle and His Work With the Latino Gangs of East L.A. 1995.

Conscience, parent, motivator, drill sergeant: Father Greg was all this and more to the gangbangers who called his barrio parish community home.



Garfunkel, Trudy. On Wings of Joy: The Story of Ballet from the 16th Century to Today. 1994.

Fascinating history, dancers, choreographers, and stories: here is everything that has helped create this wonderful art form.



Goldberg, Vicki. The Power of Photographs: How Photography Changed Our Lives. 1991.

Photographers and photographs evolve, rather than spring forth fully formed.



Gould, Stephen Jay. The Mismeasure of Man. 1981.

Gould's history of the attempt to quantify intelligence could be called the "misuse of science."



Gombrich, E. H. The Story of Art. 1995.

Everything from cave paintings to the experimental art of today is covered, in words and pictures, in this sixteenth edition of one of the most famous and popular art books ever published.



Green, Bill. Water, Ice, and Stone: Science and Memory on the Antarctic Lakes. 1995.

A chemist investigates Antarctica's ice-covered lakes and discovers beauty and poetry.



Hafner, Katie and Matthew Lyon. Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins of the Internet. 1996.

The origins of the world's first computer network are explained, with tales of the motivations, breakthroughs, and personalities that created it.



Hamilton, Edith. Mythology. 1942.

Gods and heroes, their clashes and adventures, come alive in this splendid retelling of the Greek, Roman, and Norse myths.



Hawking, Stephen. A Brief History of Time: From the Big Bang to Black Holes. 1988.

Cosmology becomes understandable as the author discusses the origin, evolution, and fate of our universe.

[Professor Stephen Hawking's Homepage]

[Stephen Hawking's Universe from PBS Online]



Hersch, Patricia. A Tribe Apart: A Journey into the Heart of American Adolescence. 1998.

An intimate three-year journey through contemporary adolescence with eight "typical" teens reveals a separate culture spawned not from personal choice, but rather from adult alienation and abandonment.



Hersey, John. Hiroshima. 1946.

Six Hiroshima survivors reflect on the aftermath of the first atomic bomb.



Holy Bible: New Revised Standard Version. 1973.

Biblical scholars revise text and modernize terms to bring one version of the Bible up-to-date.



Humes, Edward. No Matter How Loud I Shout: A Year in the Life of Juvenile Court. 1996.

Humes paints a tragic and heartbreaking portrait of the chaos characterizing America's juvenile justice system where, as one inmate writes, "my screams have no voice, no matter how loud I shout."



Hubbell, Sue. A Country Year: Living the Questions. 1986.

A former wife and librarian observes her natural surroundings during a year spent as a beekeeper on a beautiful Ozark farm.



Jonas, Gerald. Dancing: The Pleasure, Power, and Art of Movement. 1992.

This international survey explores dance as social, cultural, and religious expression.



Jones, K. Maurice. Say It Loud! The Story of Rap Music. 1994.

From a village in West Africa to a street in Brooklyn, to MTV, rappers make the Scene.



Junger, Sebastian. The Perfect Storm: A True Story of Men Against the Sea. 1997.

Haunting premonitions didn't save seven fisherman from the ferocious and deadly power of the sea.



Karnos, David D. and Robert G. Shoemaker, editors. Falling in Love With Wisdom: American Philosophers Talk About Their Calling. 1993.

Contemporary philosophers share their contemplations and epiphanies.



Kendall, Elizabeth. Where She Danced. 1979.

The contributions of major innovators and the conditions of their times are the basis for this history of modern American dance.



Kerner, Mary. Barefoot to Balanchine: How to Watch Dance. 1990.

Understand dance by reading about its history, choreography, and backstage action.



Kolb, Rocky. Blind Watchers of the Sky: The People and Ideas that Shaped Our View of the Universe. 1996.

Kolb delivers a witty and lively history of astronomy and cosmology.



Kotlowitz, Alex. The Other Side of the River: A Story of Two Towns, a Death, and America's Dilemma. 1998.

Geographically, only a river separates two closely neighboring towns, but the murder mystery surrounding the death of a young black man exposes a deeply rooted racial divide.



Kozol, Jonathan. Savage Inequalities: Children in America's Schools. 1991.

Kozol's stinging indictment of America's public school system advocates an equal distribution of per pupil funding to right the gross inequities in our current system.



Krakauer, John. Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mount Everest Disaster. 1997.

His dream expedition to Everest became a nightmare when human error and a sudden storm combined to claim the lives of some of the world's best mountain climbers.



McCloud, Scott. Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art. 1993.

A comic book asks and answers the question of whether or not comics are a literary form.



McPhee, John. In Suspect Terrain. 1983.

Traveling along I-80 with geologist Anita Harris, McPhee describes the geologic features that reveal the history of the Appalachians.



Murray, Albert. Stomping the Blues. 1976.

An aficionado gives the lowdown on what it is and its origins.

Occhiogrosso, Peter. The Joy of Sects: A Spirited Guide to the World's Religious Traditions. 1994.

This lively, easy to understand guidebook is for everyone from the faithful believer to the curious doubter.



O'Gorman, James F. ABC of Architecture. 1998.

Function, structure, and beauty are the interdependent basics -- the ABC -- of architecture.



Paulos, John Allen. Innumeracy: Mathematical Illiteracy and its Consequences. 1988.

Paulos illustrates the importance of understanding and the consequences of misunderstanding mathematical concepts in everyday life.



Penn, W. S., editor. The Telling of the World: Native American Stories and Art. 1996.

Traditional and contemporary legends, stories, and art from many tribes explain our world and its lifeforms.



Petroski, Henry. Invention by Design: How Engineers Get From Thought to Thing. 1996.

Using examples from paper clips to monumental bridges, Petroski shows how engineers work.



Pipher, Mary.

Reviving Ophelia: Saving the Selves of Adolescent Girls. 1994.

Pipher looks at societal "girl poisoning" and the emotional and psychological havoc it wreaks on the lives of young women.



Regis, Ed. Virus Ground Zero: Stalking the Killer Viruses with the Centers for Disease Control. 1996.

The history of the CDC is told through the handling of the Ebola outbreak in Zaire.



Rybczynski, Witold . The Most Beautiful House in the World. 1989.

The author's dream of building a boat evolves into the building of a home, a process he uses to explain complex architectural ideas.



Sheehan, Neil. A Bright Shining Lie: John Paul Vann and America in Vietnam. 1988.

A soldier exposes the corruption undermining the American war effort in Vietnam.



Sherman, Robert and Philip Seldon. The Complete Idiot's Guide to Classical Music. 1997.

This practical guide will help you understand and enjoy classical music.



Simon, David and Edward Burns. The Corner: A Year in the Life of an Inner-City Neighborhood. 1997.

Crack owns this corner and infects the lives of all those within reach.



Singh, Simon. Fermat's Enigma: The Epic Quest to Solve the World's Greatest Mathematical Problem. 1997.

A Princeton professor pursues a lifelong dream of solving a 350-year-old mathematical puzzle.

[Solving Fermat: Interview with Prof. Andrew Wiles from NOVA Online]

[Fermat's Last Theorem: Report from a conference on the proof by Andrew J. Wiles held at Boston University, August 9 -18, 1995]



Sobel, Dava. Longitude: The True Story of a Lone Genius Who Solved the Greatest Scientific Problem of His Time. 1995.

A self-taught eighteenth-century English clockmaker succeeded where the scientific community failed.



Spiegelman, Art. Maus: A Survivor's Tale and Maus II: A Survivor's Tale: And Here My Troubles Began. 1986.

Using comic book format, the author chronicles his father's experience of the Holocaust and its impact on his family.



Strickland, Carol and John Boswell. The Annotated Mona Lisa: A Crash Course in Art History From Prehistoric to Post-Modern. 1992.

From cave paintings to conceptual art, art history is demystified.



Stringer, Christopher and Robin McKie. African Exodus: The Origins of Modern Humanity. 1997.

The authors support the theory of a single origin of modern humanity with paleoanthropological, archaeological, and DNA evidence.



Thomas, Lewis. The Lives of a Cell: Notes of a Biology Watcher. 1974.

These essays offer an optimistic scientist's view of a wide variety of subjects.



Watson, James D. The Double Helix: A Personal Account of the Discovery and Structure of DNA. 1968.

The author recreates the excitement of participating in a momentous discovery and demonstrates to the non-scientist how the scientific method works.



Williams, Juan. Eyes on the Prize: America's Civil Rights Years, 1954-1965. 1987.

From Brown v. the Board of Education to the Voting Rights Act, Williams outlines the social and political gains of African Americans.



Yolen, Jane, editor. Favorite Folktales from Around the World. 1986.

This collection of international folktales provides an understanding of the roots of diverse cultures.



The annotated list of non-fiction titles on the Outstanding Books for the College Bound list.


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