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12-20-2013, 01:37 AM
I'd never really thought about biographies before taking a class in grad school about them as a subject and I'll admit, I became super interested in them. I thought I'd make a space to list and talk about autobiographies, biographies, and memoirs people are reading or interested in. I've listed a few of my favorites below. Anybody else interested in reading biographies or read a really great one lately?
Nixon's memoirs (RN, not In The Arena) are mind blowing. I never grasped how big a deal Watergate was until it dawned on me through his day to day recollections that it was the equivalent of every modern political scandal all rolled into one, and it was the first of its kind. Nixon's rise through the US political system over four decades as seen through his eyes completely changed my understanding of American history.
My FBI by Louis Freeh, a look inside what goes on in the head of an FBI director. Also gives good insight on what it takes to be a good law enforcement officer.
The Real Fidel Castro - Never gave much thought to Castro before, I usually just dismissed him as being a bygone relic from the Cold War who wasn't even of much relevance then. Turns out he's a total badass. He's had 638 attempts on his life over the past 87 years and once crossed into the US illegally through Mexico by swimming across the Rio Grande to buy guns and get support for his then-coming revolution.
Manchild in the Promised Land by Claude Brown and Soul On Ice by Eldridge Cleaver, two autobiographies about life as a young black man in an America that would rather they not exist and how without pattern interruption lives of meaningless violence and crime become cyclical.
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12-20-2013, 01:51 AM
I'd also like to read about the lives of the greats more often.
The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin was a game changer for me.
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12-21-2013, 07:29 PM
I love bios. In the last year, I've read "Sweetness" by Jeff Pearlman (Walter Payton), "Can You Feel the Silence" by Clinton Heylin (Van Morrison), "Somebody" by Stefan Kanfer (Marlon Brando), "Satchel" by Larry Tye (Satchel Paige). I've blown through some others that were given to me as gifts, but wouldn't have otherwise been interested in (Tiki Barber, Michael Strahan, Shaquille O'Neal - they're decent subway reads because they aren't real deep). Manning Marable's bio of Malcolm X is the next up, and I have both of Obama's books that I'll get to at some point. I'm always looking to snag one of someone I find interesting. In the past I've read Miles Davis' autobio, and JC Watts' "What Color is a Conservative." I read "Soul on Ice" when I was a kid, and still have the little tattered paperback laying around somewhere. I have a few on the list to pick up at some point and read.
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12-28-2013, 10:31 PM
I'm also going to pick up a bio of Norman Mailer ("Mailer: His Life and Times" by Peter Manso).
"The best kind of pride is that which compels a man to do his best when no one is watching."
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12-28-2013, 10:48 PM
i'm reading tyson's biography right now and it's really interesting
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01-02-2014, 06:25 PM
I don't usually read biographies but recently read William Manchester's book on Douglas MacArthur, a very well-researched and in-depth book that covers his entire life and is a very long book but at no point is it boring and does not drag on at all, it is an immersive, entertaining and educational read about a man who set his own standards, followed them, and never doubted himself
Now I'm gonna trawl back through my good reads account
"The Real Lincoln: from the Testimony of his Contemporaries" by Charles LC Minor if that counts as a biography is probably the most complete takedown of Abraham Lincoln that I have read, totally shatters all popular conceptions of him
Reflections of a Russian Statesman by Konstantin Pobedonostsev while not really a biography is a very well written and well thought out reaction to democracy, liberalism and Westernisation from an ideological perspective that is rarely if ever encountered these days
Wedemeyer Reports by Albert C Wedemeyer a pretty good first hand account from a General of his time in China and South-East Asia in World War 2 that really makes one rethink America's role in that area
The Roosevelt Myth by John Thomas Flynn is a great book basically the equivalent of the above mentioned 'The Real Lincoln' but for FDR
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01-02-2014, 07:36 PM
Tyson's autobiography is really cool. I also really enjoyed Sugar Ray Leonard's and Chuck Liddell's. Reading fighters' autobiography is worthwhile because they have wild lives (and thus the books are entertaining) plus you start to understand the backround and motivations that lead some one to become a champion fighter.
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01-03-2014, 04:14 AM
The two Richard Burtons have excellent biographies:
Captain Sir Richard Francis Burton by Edmund Rice, about the amazing explorer.
Richard Burton: A Life by Melvin Bragg, about the actor.
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01-03-2014, 07:29 PM
The Teddy Roosevelt Trilogy by Edmund Morris, The Last Lion Trilogy of Winston Churchill by William Manchester and Paul Reid, and John Adams by David McCollough are three of my favorite biographies. The First two are long. The Roosevelt trilogy is over 1000 pages and the Churchill trilogy is in the neighborhood of 2700 pages. Roosevelt had an absolutely fascinating life all around. It was interesting to read about Churchill being that he failed a lot of his life and his "grand finale" was keeping the Nazi's out of England and then getting booted from office. Plus he smoked cigars non-stop, had a cocktail on his at all times, and had suits from Savile Row.
Steve Jobs bio was good. Say what you want about Apple and Jobs, it isn't often you get to read about someone who truly "made a dent in the universe".
Vincent Van Gogh bio by Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith. Long, probably longer than it needed to be. Guy was kind of an asshole, but he did have a mental illness. It was interesting though to read about an artist who studied color intensely and is most known for his colors, but was opposed to painting in color for most of his career.
Tyson's bio. Awesome story.
I think those have been the only bios I have read in the past couple years.
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01-04-2014, 08:57 AM
Light My Fire: My Life with The Doors by Ray Manzarek. And also I recommend the new Mike Tyson biogprahy!! Worth reading
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01-04-2014, 11:58 AM
Any thoughts on the Morrisey autobiography?
I know he's not exactly the most masculine of characters, but he is one funny bastard!
I picked up a copy and had a browse through, and the first couple of pages I read almost had me falling on the floor with laughter, his brand of caustic wit is brilliant
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01-04-2014, 12:12 PM
Surely You Are Joking Mr Feymman is one of the best books I've ever read.
I am a science nuts myself, so I could relate to much of what he writes. Anyone into science or engineering has to read it. He was the proof than scientific geniuses can do much more than just science, and he was quite red pill in some aspects.
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01-25-2014, 05:57 PM
Anybody read the autobiography of Nikola Tesla? Recommend it? Any other biographies about the man?
How about a biography of Leonardo da Vinci?
I'd also love to read a great biography about Howard Hughes.
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06-26-2014, 12:55 AM
Bumping an old thread but do any of you have any recommendations on Alpha male type Biographies?
Some have been mentioned here such as Benjamin Franklin and Theodore Roosevelt.
Others I have in mind:
Genghis Khan, Frederick the Great, Napoleon, Tamerlane, Alexander the Great, Caesar Augustus, Julius Caesar, Hannibal, Issac Newton, Nicola Tesla, Bruce Lee, Mohammed Ali, Martin Luther King, etc.
Maybe not even a biography, something kind of like "A short history of nearly everything" type of book on great leaders and innovators. It is a lot to ask for, if you guys could recommend some good books I would appreciate it.
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06-27-2014, 03:03 AM
50th Law. Kind of a Biography of 50 cent with Robert Green (48 laws of power)
Good audiobook, 50 cent is a beat
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07-27-2014, 12:37 AM
Just finished Richard Clarke's biography, "Against All Enemies". He's very constricted by the nature of what he writes, but does a great example of how government simultaneously does work no private business can match and how it can be horribly ineffective and a detriment.
If you are going to impose your will on the world, you must have control over what you believe.
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07-27-2014, 02:37 AM
My Wicked Wicked Ways, the autobiography of Errol Flynn.
Its the mostly accurate life story of one of Hollywood's original international playboys.
Its got so many great lines and observations on life.
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07-27-2014, 06:05 PM
Rommel The Desert Fox
Really interesting book on life and military career of Erwin Rommel who is considered one Germany's best ever military strategists and tacticians. At the end he was conflicted by his sense of duty and loyalty to his country and his intense dislike for what Hitler was doing.
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