Some Favorite Non-Technical Books (2018)
Some Favorite Non-technical Books
Modified September 16, 2018
I'm often asked what non-technical books I read, so here is a list of a few of my favorites.
I (Bjarne Stroustrup) have also been asked where I find the time to read non-technical books. Actually, it is not a question of finding the time. Reading non-technical stuff is essential. Without it, I'd go nuts and lose my sense of proportion. As a practical matter, I read for about an hour almost every evening before going to bed -- trying to go straight from technical work to sleep is usually not a good idea. This "use" of literature and history is reflected in my choice of reading: There is very little "heavy" reading listed here.
Apologies for misspellings, slightly-wrong titles, etc. This list is made partly from memory.
Literature
- Adams, Douglas: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Dick Gentley's Holistic Detective Agency.
- Blixen, Karen (Isak Dinesen): Den Afrikanske Farm (Out of Africa). Etc. short stories.
- Camus, Albert: The Plague. The First man.
- Chandler, Raymond: The Long Goodbye. Farewell my Lovely.
- Dostovjevski, Fyodor: The Devils.
- Dumas, Alexandre: The Three Musketeers.
- Eco, Umberto: The Name of the Rose.
- Herriot, James: All Creatures Great and Small.
- Hansen, Martin A.: Orm og Tyr. Lykkelige Kristoffer. Loegneren (The Liar). -- If you appreciate subtlety and can find time to read one Danish book only, this is it.
- Hansen, Thorkild: Jens Munk. Det Lykkelige Arabien. Syv Sejlsten.
- Herodotus: The Histories. -- The first of its kind and still one of the best.
- Homer: The Odyssey. -- The first of its kind and still one of the best.
- O'Brian, Patrick: The Aubrey/Maturin series.
- Orwell, George: Animal Farm.
- Pears, Iain: An Instance of the Fingerpost.
- Sayers, Dorothy: Nine Taylors. Gaudy Night.
- Georges Simenon: Most Maigret stories.
- Steinbeck, John: Cannery Row. Sweet Thursday. The log from a voyage to the Sea of Cortez.
- Tolkien, J.R.R.: The Hobbit. The Lord of the Rings.
- Van Gulik: Judge Dee stories.
- ???: Beowulf.
- ???: Njall's Saga. Egil Skalagrim's Saga.
History
- Barber, Malcolm: The Trial of the Templars.
- Blanning, Tim: Frederick the Great.
- Bullock: Hitler and Stalin. -- if this doesn't scare you, nothing will.
- Churchill: A History of the English Speaking Peoples.
- Farwell, Byron: Queen Victoria's Little Wars.
- Hartfort, R.: Scott & Amundsen. -- what it takes to succeed isn't always what it takes to be seen as a hero (and vice versa).
- Hugh, Thomas: Conquest. -- the Spanish conquest of old Mexico.
- Keegan: History of WWII. The Face of Battle. The Price of Admirality.
- Manchester (and Reid): The Last Lion. -- a biography of Churchill.
- Massie, Robert K.: Dreadnought.
- McPherson: Battle Cry of Freedom. -- I usually find books on the American civil war boring and/or annoying; this one is exceptional.
- Norwich, John Julius: A History of Venice. The Byzantium trilogy.
- Roger, N.A.M: Safeguard of the Sea. Command of the Ocean. The Insatiable Earl.
- Runciman S.: The Sicilian Vespers.
- Schrama, Simon: Citizens. -- an antidote to revolutionary romanticism.
- Spence: The Search for Modern China.
- Tuchman, Barbara: The Guns of August. The Proud Tower. A Distant Mirror.
Etc.
- Ashe, G.: The Quest for Arthur. -- some facts about King Arthur.
- Bryson, Bill: Notes from a small island. In a sunburned country.
- Dahl, Roald: Boy.
- Dawkins, R: The Ancestor's Tale -- a must if you haven't looked at biology recently. The GOD Delusion. The greatest show on earth -- evidence with explanatory logic.
- Dennett, Daniel: Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon. -- modern philosophy.
- Gottlieb, Anthony: The Dream of Reason. The Dream of Enlightenment.
- Gould, S.: Wonderful Life (the story of the Burgess shale).
- Johnson, Paul: The Birth of the Modern. Intellectuals. A History of the Modern World: 1917 to the 1990s. -- interestingly biased.
- Kierkegaard, S.: Enten-Eller (Either-Or).
- Milligan, Spike: Adolf Hitler: My part in his downfall. -- "Bouts of insanity saved us from going mad."
- Paulsen, G.: Winterdance. -- doing the Iditarod.
- Rasmussen, K.: Den store slaederejse. -- Going to Nome the hard way: 12,000 miles over the ice from Thule.
- Solzhenitsyn: The Gulag Achipelago. August 1914. -- I'll stick with the 1972 version.
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