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Frantic Pedantic's avatar

I love this question. These titles come out on top for me:

Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Letters and Papers from Prison. Surprisingly apt to a time when we are all quarantined against our will. A case study in true moral courage and Christian witness.

Michael Sandel, The Tyranny of Merit. Excellent exegesis of why demagogic populism has swept the nation - his premise is that the myth of "meritocracy" is at the root of our widespread alienation. I've referred to this book in conversation more than any other I've read this year.

Barack Obama, A Promised Land. A reminder of what it was like to have a president with empathy, discernment, and grace - in short, someone who gave a sh*t about other people. Also works as a study in why activism and politics need each other to succeed. People who are mad that Obama did this or didn't do that while president should read it, as he explains himself and the constraints of the office exceptionally well.

Honorable mention: A Gentleman in Moscow, Dakota: A Spiritual Geography, A Separate Peace, A Libertarian Walks Into a Bear

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Marvelous. Thanks Peter!

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Hana's avatar

A Gentleman in Moscow - Amor Towles

The Read and the Blue - Steve Kornacki

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Towles gets better in my memory as time goes on.

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Scotty's avatar

Sherlock Holmes. All of it!

Les Mis

The Count of Monte Cristo

My tastes are more to classics. Would like to see a few more classics from you. Going to try to join you in W&P!

Also:

NLT Bible. The NLT is great for long-reading and and understanding what you read. I did 2-4 OT chapters, 1 NT, and 1 Ps. or Prov. a day. BEST THING I EVER DID. Eye opening. Next year going to take a step further and do NIV!

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Luke Sonnier's avatar

Born to Run by Christopher McDougall. It was difficult to finish because I wanted to strap on my running shoes and hit the pavement every time I sat down to read it. A wonderful, very readable book about running which is enjoyable even if you are not a runner.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Been on my list a while. Glad to hear it’s a good one.

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Kyle Smith's avatar

It is great.

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Richard Gudino's avatar

I'm going to go with Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry. Rare is a book that is hard to put down yet feels like a great work of literature. Superfun and deep, I want more :-)

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

The other three in the series are great too!

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Jason Voltz's avatar

The Road by Cormac McCarthy was my favorite this year. I also really liked the first two volumes of Robert Caro’s LBJ bio and The Body by Bill Bryson. A good US history book I read this year is American Nations by Colin Woodard.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

The Road is definitely an all-time favorite, for me. And I've heard really good things about Woodward's book. Thanks!

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Jeremy's avatar

The Road was an amazing read!

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Adam Farris's avatar

The Road was amazing! I picked up the Caro series (used) not too long ago and looking forward to tackling them soon.

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Adam Farris's avatar

Education of a Wandering Man by Louis L'Amour

In the Heart of the Sea by Philbrick

Man's Search for Meaning by Frankl

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

In the Heart of the Sea of one of the great underrated non-fiction narratives. Unbelievable story.

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Adam Farris's avatar

Agreed. I had seen the movie a while back and felt it was "meh" but I kept hearing from you and others that the book was great. It was, and so much better than the movie.

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Joe Waters's avatar

Heart of the Sea was great. All of Philbrick's books are incredible.

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Tyrel Sorensen's avatar

The Old Ways by Robert Macfarlane

Oathbringer by Brandon Sanderson

Hope is the Thing with Feathers: The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson

Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry

Educated by Tara Westover

Those are some of my favorites reads this year... It's pretty hard to pick an absolute favorite though. Heck... Even just narrowing it down to these was hard.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

I've not read any Macfarlane but he's been on my list a long time. thanks Tyrel!

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Tyrel Sorensen's avatar

His writing style is amazing! He weaves landscape with literature in a way I can't even describe. I seldom read multiple works from the same author in a short period of time, but I've read three of his books this year.

I hope you like him when you get to him!

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Neil Vanderwoude's avatar

Sanderson is amazing. I grew up on fantasy and I’ve been so impressed by his various works. The Final Empire is another I’d recommend if you like Stormlight Archives.

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Tyrel Sorensen's avatar

Thanks! I've been thinking about diving into the Mistborn series. I wasn't sure how it would be though, since I'd be going back in time to Sanderson's earlier years. But, knowing how Sanderson writes, even if his earlier writing was rough-around-the-edges (which it may not have even been!), it would still be fantastic compared to many other authors.

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Neil Vanderwoude's avatar

I thought Elantris was a bit clunky, though enjoyed it and my wife liked it. Mistborn definitely feels smoother than that. And Stormlight definitely the next level. He does a modern day superhero one (Reckoners) that wasn’t really my style (more sci-fi). And a sequel series to Mistborn that feels like a western that is a lot of fun (Wax & Wayne series). Highly recommend following up Mistborn with Wax & Wayne I’d you end up enjoying it.

His only problem is, he’s got like 4 open series going so you’re always waiting for the next installment. I swore I would never start another unfinished series... yet here I am.

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David Bard's avatar

Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson. Was one of the best books I've ever read.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Agreed! Read this one for book club this year. Eye-opening, to say the least.

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John Jackson's avatar

I loved that book. I am haunted by the chapter “Mitigation”

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Kyle Smith's avatar

I agree. Life changing.

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David Lopez's avatar

Lots of non-fiction picks on my end:

* Hampton Sides' On Desperate Ground (a recommendation of yours) was fantastic both in terms of readability and also educating me on a Korean War campaign that I knew very little about.

* Bad Blood by John Carreyrou was stunning as an exposé in how a lack of accountability and a culture of secrecy in a startup can quickly balloon into the scam of the decade.

* Masters of the Air by Donald Miller was a comprehensive overview of the Eighth Air Force in the Second World War, covering both the very personal experiences of the American bomber crews as well as the broader strategy of the bombing war over Europe until 1945.

* Sleepwalkers by Christopher Clark -- starting with a 70-80 page overview of the Serbian monarchy, this book is a wonderfully deep, detail-oriented view of the different political actors and context around the start of the First World War. It is lengthy but you will learn so much from it.

On the fiction front, I continued through Abir Mukherjee's Sam Wyndham books (Death in the East and Smoke and Ashes), which is a crime series set in India during the British Raj. Highly recommended for those that enjoy reading at the intersection of history & crime fiction.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

All of Hampton's work is superb. Bad Blood is incredible — good choice. I've not heard of the others. Thanks for the recs!

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David Lopez's avatar

No worries, Jeremy. I did also read another of your recs this year -- Candice Millard's book on Churchill. Very enjoyable!

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scm's avatar

I got into Tolstoy this year too, though all of it being his post-conversion work. Many of the short stories are very good, but his “A Confession” and his “My Religion” really got hold of me. I immediately read “Confession” again and filled my Commonplace Book with notes from both. He was a fascinated and brilliant man.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Awesome. Looking forward to reading some of that later stuff this year.

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Russell's avatar

I finally finished the Wheel of Time series. I made it halfway through in high school, then picked it up again last year. It's definitely a commitment, but it's a good story.

I also loved "Anxious People" by Fredrik Bachman just as much as I loved "A Man Called Ove"

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

I also loved Anxious People. One of those that grows better in my memory too.

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Kyle Smith's avatar

Congrats on finishing Wheel of Time!

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Jon B.'s avatar

Range by David Epstein! There's not one path to the top and it pays to have a breadth of experience.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

David is one of the best people. Period. Great book.

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Jsardines's avatar

Endurance: Shackleton’s voyage, open by Andre Agassi, recursion by Blake crouch, and The suspect by Kent Alexander about the Atlanta Olympic bombing.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Awesome. Thank you!

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Alex's avatar

Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss

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Jimmy Guikema's avatar

How to Read a Book by Mortimer Adler - I have wanted to read this for a while and took the time this year, it helped enrich my further reading later in the year.

The Illiad - First time reading it

Spiritual Leadership - by J. Oswald Sanders - I am finishing up my principal certification and my brother got this for me when I said I was looking for leadership books.

The Black Prism by Brent Weeks - I love the world building in this.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

I’ve not heard of the The Black Prism. I’ll have to check it out!

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Jeff W.'s avatar

1. My Struggle (6 volumes!) by Karl Ove Knausgård. The Proust of our times! Anything from him is fantastic.

2. What Were We Thinking? By Carlos Lazada. Out of all the books out there about Trump replaces all of them! A seminal read with a great annotated bibliography.

3. Mythology by Edith Hamilton. Read this years ago and is truly a timeless classic. The 75th anniversary edition has beautiful artwork too!

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Been waiting for What Were We Thinking at the library. Might have to take matters into my own hands. A book about presidential books! It's the perfect thing for me.

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Robert B's avatar

Got to go with Devolution, by Max Brooks. Great survival story. Very smart author.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

That was a good one for sure.

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Adam W's avatar

The Orphan Master’s Son by Adam Johnson

The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt by Edmund Morris

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Adam W's avatar

The Power of the Dog by Don Winslow. Memorable characters. Fantastic story.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

I’ve heard great things about Winslow but haven’t read anything of his yet.

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Adam W's avatar

I highly recommend The Power of the Dog. I started reading his book The Force last week. So far I really enjoy it as well.

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Kyle Smith's avatar

I've got a buddy obsessed with Winslow. It was a little dark for me. But felt very real, not just dark for dark's sake.

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Matt Hockley's avatar

The Road... Wow. That book.. so ugly yet beautiful. The characters anonymous yet so relatable. An amazing book.

Morris' Rise of TR was a great read as well. Very engaging. I'm looking forward to the next two volumes.

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Erik's avatar

The Count of Monte Cristo for sure. Took a while, but hands down the best "story" I've ever read. The plot is airtight, and dips and weaves through plots and subplots, with what I found to be an extremely satisfying ending. Will read again one day.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Been thinking about this one for too long without having read it. 2021!

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Ralph Rice's avatar

(?) maybe for our next bookclub read---after War and Peace

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scm's avatar

It’s flat out amazing how Dumas tied that story together.

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Greg's avatar

If you liked The Count of Monte Cristo (as I did), try The Black Count biography of Dumas' father. Outstanding!

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Jeremy's avatar

The Count is awesome!

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David's avatar

Jayber Crow by Wendell Berry. Not my usual kind of book but it was so incredibly well written and I was sad when it was done.

Churchill: Walking with Destiny. Awesome in the truest sense of the word.

The Sirens of Titan: I read a bunch of Vonnegut many years ago and didn’t care for him, but this time through my older, wiser, more cynical self loved him deeply.

Caste: changed how I see the world forever

The Boy, the Mole, the Fox, the Horse: incredibly sweet. I cry every time I read it to my kids or myself

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

These are all great. Seems we have very similar reading tastes!

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David's avatar

That’s why I value your work!

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Joe Waters's avatar

Grant by Chernow. A powerful and well-written book about an incredible man. When I'm in the Oval Office one day his picture will be with me! 😂

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

You'll have my vote!

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Jake's avatar

Definitely Education of a Wandering Man by Louis L’Amour.

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Adam Farris's avatar

Was just getting ready to write that one down in this thread. It was so good. This was the first L'Amour book I've ever read can't wait to dive into his fiction.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

I hate to say this about the novels, but once you've read a handful, you've read 'em all. My very humble opinion. That said, they're really nice reads and thoroughly enjoyable when you need an easy reader.

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Jake's avatar

Jeremy’s right about a handful being the lot of them, but I’d recommend The Walking Drum and Last of the Breed as my favorites by him.

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Tyrel Sorensen's avatar

I absolutely second this. Both a completely unexpected books for L'Amour, and they are my favorites as well. Last of the Breed is my favorite of his.

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Adam Farris's avatar

Thank you for the recommendation!

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scm's avatar

I have L’Amour’s entire catalog (pretty much) since I inherited it from my grandfather (he was a huge fan and one of L’Amour’s typical readers). The bulk of L’Amour’s fiction does little for me, though he does tend to sprinkle in bits of literary bread crumbs for the curious to follow. Having said that, his memoir is one of my favorite books of all time. He was a completely fascinating man and the memoir doesn’t do him or his life justice. There are several good interviews with L’Amour on YouTube, and in the podcast world one can find some of his lectures. I’m sure there is a lot more out there somewhere. As a writer, L’Amour was very good; as a man, he was a national treasure.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Love that book so hard.

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Jake's avatar

Fires me up to read!

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Ariel Elkayam's avatar

Musashi by Eiji Yoshikawa

Timeless Way of Building by Christopher Alexander

The Big Nowhere by James Ellroy

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Adam's avatar

The Whiskey Rebels

The Nightingale

Dark Matter/Recursion

The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck/Everything is F*cked

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

I'm not familiar with The Whiskey Rebels. Agreed that Nightingale and Crouch are amazing.

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Adam's avatar

It’s by David Liss. Historical fiction novel based around the Whiskey Rebellion. Highly recommend it.

The Whiskey Rebels: A Novel (Random House Reader's Circle) https://www.amazon.com/dp/0812974530/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glc_fabc_FKT1Fb6A3B76W

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Jeff W.'s avatar

Liss has written a number of great books. The Conspiracy of Paper is also a great read and is part of a series.

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Clayton Dorge's avatar

East of Eden - Steinbeck, A Year In The Maine Woods - Henrich, and Walking: by Kagge.

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Ryan Lynch's avatar

East of Eden...my favorite fiction book of all time!

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Ralph Rice's avatar

The discussion around the word 'timshel' is something I keep going back to. Definitely one of my favorite books.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

I've not heard of A Year In the Main Woods—I'll have to check it out!

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Clayton Dorge's avatar

If you enjoy nature reading...he's the master!

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Andy's avatar

I gotta say, Recursion was by far my favorite non-fiction of the year. For me, some markers of a really good fiction are how much I look forward to reading it and how much I think about it after I'm done. Recursion pretty much maxed out both of those.

Daring Greatly by Brene Brown. I've read all her books and this was my favorite. Read this twice, once quick, then a slow reread over about 6 months. The material on shame is some of the best I've come across. Very empowering book.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Excellent choices!

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Andy's avatar

And clearly I meant Recursion was my favorite FICTION...hopefully that type of story never becomes non-fiction or we're in trouble!

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JGL's avatar

The splendid and the Vile (all his books are great) by Erik Larson

This house of sky by Ivan Doig

Ghost fleet by PW Singer

Killing Patton by Bill O’Reilly

Dangerous River by RM Patterson

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Ted S's avatar

Call Sign Chaos - Jim Mattis - a leader on and off the battlefield

Words that Work - Frank Luntz - fascinating book on the use of diction in public

Paris 1919 - Margaret MacMillan - provides a deep understanding of the current geopolitical landscape

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Kevin's avatar

Materhorn by Karl Marlantes

Stoner by John Williams

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Butcher's Crossing by William was one of my favorite 2018 reads. So good if you haven't read it.

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Drew's avatar

A few from this year (in no particular order):

- SERPENT ON THE ROCK, by Kurt Eichenwald. It seems like it'd be super-dry to read about securities fraud from the 1980s (and securities regulation is my dry business!), but this book does a great job of making an extremely dry subject fascinating.

- THE DEVIL & SHERLOCK HOLMES, by David Grann. Grann's just such a good writer and this is a collection of some of his New Yorker pieces.

- THE SPY AND THE TRAITOR, by Ben Macintyre. What can I say? This true story of a Russian double agent was riveting.

- DEAD WAKE, by Erik Larson. This one was a fascinating zoom-in on the incident itself; haunting in a lot of ways.

- MISERY, by Stephen King. I made it a vague goal a few years ago to read one King book every fall, and this happened this year's. (Last year's was THE STAND, so that turned out to be prescient for this year...)

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Those all sound right up my alley. Glad to see we shared a love of Misery — one of my faves too.

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Eric Duncan's avatar

It’s a toss up between “the parade” by Dave Evers and “The Wall” by John Lanchester. The former has a quick pace with a gut punch ending that will leave you breathless. While the latter is a slow burn that will leave you questioning what we’re all doing with our lives.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

I have The Wall on my bookshelf — I'll be more eager to pick it up now. Thanks!

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David McCleve's avatar

I finally read Alexander Hamilton by Chernow, and it was remarkable.

Empire of the Summer Moon was great by SC Gwynne as well.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Both are indeed amazing.

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Patrick O'Donnell's avatar

Night Boat To Tangier- Kevin Barry

Blacktop Wasteland- S.A. Cosby

The Only Rule Is It Has to Work: Our Wild Experiment Building a New Kind of Baseball Team- Ben Lindbergh and Sam Miller

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

I've heard a ton of good things about Blacktop Wasteland. Thanks!

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Doug McConahy's avatar

“Super Pumped” by Mike Isaac about the rise and fall of Uber. It’s always astounding to get an inside look at how how dysfunctional and toxic a workplace can really be, especially when the money flow like water. It seems like a movie until you remember it’s real

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

That was such a good book. Nearly as good as Bad Blood.

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Stefan Kaluz's avatar

Power Broker by Robert Caro, No Ordinary Time by Dorris Kearns Goodwin, Titan by Ron Chernow and FDR by Jean Edward Smith

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

What a marvelous collection of biographies! That’s like an all-time list instead of just 2020.

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Stefan Kaluz's avatar

This year provided a lot of reading time to dig into these!

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Stephen Roe's avatar

I really enjoyed Principles by Ray Dalio! Lots of helpful mental models.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

On my shelf but I haven’t read it yet.

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Stephen Roe's avatar

Yeah, it was on my shelf for two years before I cracked it open! It's a 550-page time commitment but well worth it. :)

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Zagar's avatar

Chasing the Scream - Johann Hari. Make you rethink drugs, abuse and drug war policy.

Also, Collapse by Jared Diamond is how societies collapse.

Two paradigm shifting books for me.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Diamond has been on my list a long time.

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Ralph Rice's avatar

A Promised Land by Barak Obama. I think I (re)read Say Nothing at the beginning of this year. Both were tops for me this past year.

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Robert's avatar

As a high school principal, I’ve been making a commitment to mixing YA literature with my own as a means of connecting with classes.

- The Arc of a Scythe series by Neil Shusterman (Scythe, The Thunderhead, & The Toll) (YA)

-1984

- Turtles All the Way Done (YA)

- Killers of the Flower Moon

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Flower Moon has made a few appearances in this thread. GREAT book.

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Jeremy's avatar

I just taught Scythe to my classes for the first time this year. Most of the students really enjoyed it. Several asked me if they could borrow Thunderhead.

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Alex's avatar

Green Hills of Africa by Ernest Hemingway. I have been getting into hunting over the last few years, and I found it very entertaining and encouraging to read Hemingway complain about the feelings of hopelessness he got sitting in a blind with no game in sight. Remembered now as a legendary hunter, he actually becomes very relatable to a newb like me as those common fears and doubt and frustration and envy run through his mind.

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Guilherme Ferrão's avatar

Unfortunately, mental health problems kicked in during quarantine this year and it resulted in me not reading as much as I had planned initially. However, I would undoubtedly say Siddartha by Hermann Hesse was my favourite. Very well written and quite illuminating, it gave me a sense of calming beauty in every paragraph, every sentence, every word. It's quite a short read, definitely worth the few hours.

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Arturo Garza's avatar

I read quite few different topics, mostly at the beginning of the year. I had bought them actually before the pandemic kicked, but got reading them during the pandemic, suddenly I had the time to read them! It was a quit a different experience, having, well, as much time as I needed, regular day to day was hectic, but then everything had slowed down. So here it is:

How The World Works - Noam Chomsky.

The Art of Thinking Clearly - Rolf Dobelli.

Utopia for Realists - Rutger Bregman.

Everything Is Fucked - Mark Manson.

-I had already read already his first one The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuck, a few years back.

Like I said quite a few different topics and themes, no novels yet, I have a few waiting, but not yet.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

I haven't read any Manson yet, but he's made a few appearances in this thread. I'll have to check it out.

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Josh Cervone's avatar

The Heartbeat of Wounded Knee by David Treuer. A really great look at Native American history and experience in America from the perspective of a Native American. Would HIGHLY recommend.

The Stormlight Archive Series by Brandon Sanderson. Epic high fantasy series. The world building Sanderson does is unbelievable. The way the plot moves is awesome. I am not a huge fan of fantasy novels but I read nearly 4,000 pages in these three books in about 6 weeks. SO good!

Education of a Wandering Man by Louis L'Amor. L'Amor id far better known for his Western writing, which I have long enjoyed. This book is a memoir that follows his life by the books he read. I know that sounds weird but it is a deeply compelling read, especially for people who love to read.

Th Red and the Blue by Steve Kornacki. If you have ever looked at the current American political landscape and thought, "What the heck is happening?!?!" then this book is for you. Kornacki racks our current political discord back to Gingrich and Clinton and their political careers that began in the 1970's. As someone who was a kid during the Gingrich/Clinton heyday of the 90's, this book was really informative and fleshed out a ton of details that I simply didn't know because I was too young at the time.

There are more but I'll keep it to that :D

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

L'Amour's and Kornacki's are amazing books. Just finished The Red and the Blue after the election. That's good to know about Sanderson — I love a good world builder!

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Josh Cervone's avatar

Yeah man! If you haven't checked out Stormlight, I would definitely recommend it. He just released the 4th book in a planned 12 book series last month. So you can jump in in the first third and then keep going!

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Marie Radimsky's avatar

Last Kings of Shanghai

Quiet Americans

Cattle Kingdom

Lawrence in Arabia

Say Nothing

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

I've heard great things about all of these but have only read Cattle Kingdom. Thanks for the great recs!

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scm's avatar

I really enjoyed:

THE ROAD by Cormac McCarthy

JOHNNY TREMAIN by Esther Forbes

THE SCARLET LETTER by Nathaniel Hawthorne

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Josh Cervone's avatar

The Road is such a great book!

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scm's avatar

Yes, it grabbed me from the start and never let go. And the story and characters lingered on for a good while after I was done. That does not happen often enough.

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Tyler J.'s avatar

The Power and the Glory - Graham Greene

Sword of Honor trilogy - Evelyn Waugh

Strong Towns - Charles Marohn

Don Quixote - Miguel de Cervantes

Silence - Shusaku Endo

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Been a long time since I've read Quixote — may have to take it up again.

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Mark's avatar

-Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry

-Surprise, Kill, Vanish by Annie Jacobsen

-A Higher Call by Adam Makos

-Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens

-In Cold Blood by Truman Capote

Lonesome Dove would have to be my favorite read this year. I received the other three books in the series as a gift and can't wait to get started on them. A Higher Call might be the first WW2 book I've read that focused primarily on a German's perspective of the conflict, which made it very interesting and memorable.

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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

So much love for Lonesome Dove. Awesome. The whole series is amazing.

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Mary Pat Campbell's avatar

Journal of the Plague Year, by Daniel Defoe -- a bit of history

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