Evan Rail
Goodreads Author
Born
Fresno, California, The United States
Twitter
Genre
Influences
Member Since
December 2012
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The Absinthe Forger: A True Story of Deception, Betrayal, and the World’s Most Dangerous Spirit
6 editions
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published
2024
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Why Beer Matters
6 editions
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published
2012
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The Meanings of Craft Beer
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Why We Fly: The Meaning of Travel in a Hyperconnected Age
3 editions
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published
2014
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The Brewery in the Bohemian Forest
2 editions
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published
2014
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In Praise of Hangovers
3 editions
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published
2012
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Triplebock: Three Beer Stories
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published
2013
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Good Beer Guide Prague & the Czech Republic
3 editions
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published
2007
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Eine kleine Philosophie über Bier (Kindle Single)
by
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published
2013
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The Grain Men
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published
2014
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Evan’s Recent Updates
Evan Rail
and
9 other people
liked
John Kelly's review
of
The Absinthe Forger: A True Story of Deception, Betrayal, and the World’s Most Dangerous Spirit:
"The Absinthe Forger: A True Story of Deception, Betrayal, and the World’s Most Dangerous Spirit by Evan Rail is an engaging exploration of absinthe—its colorful history, its place in culture, and the mysterious world of collectors obsessed with rare "
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Evan Rail
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61 other people
liked
Fran 's review
of
The Absinthe Forger: A True Story of Deception, Betrayal, and the World’s Most Dangerous Spirit:
"He was known to have a “remarkable” palate and was considered to be a trusted authority. Based upon “a keen understanding of how a vintage bottle is supposed to appear…identifying…distinct aromas that intermingled and overlapped within…a hundred-year"
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“Once I leave — once I start the car or catch the bus to the airport, by which the voyage is initiated — my brain starts to relax at the absence of my things, and thus the familiar thoughts that they inspire. And it is not just about the books and trinkets on my desk, because a real trip usually means leaving behind innumerable other forms of familiarity: the faces and the voices that we know well, and which cause their own cataracts of memories and associations through their long histories with us. There are the sounds we always hear, and the recognition of what caused them, like the scraping of the gate at the construction site across the square from my apartment, which arrives every morning at 7 a.m. There are the quotidian streets of daily life, lined with memories of events at each address. The shops and offices we visit most often; the foods we buy, with their familiar tastes as we eat them. But as we go away from these things, our own thoughts change, or grow into the space previously occupied by the familiar. The light itself becomes different once we start to travel, as we change setting, latitude, or geography. And with these changes, with the disappearance of the familiar and its many calls upon our thoughts, we finally begin to think differently, or even just begin to think at all.”
― Why We Fly: The Meaning of Travel in a Hyperconnected Age
― Why We Fly: The Meaning of Travel in a Hyperconnected Age
“We want to sell ourselves the idea of travel as shown in airline commercials, the one in which each journey is filled with bright and vibrant stimuli and an almost mandatory sense of discovery: Travel is supposed to mean new foods, new sounds, and new friends. But much of the time, travel and the places we find ourselves as we travel are remarkably boring.”
― Why We Fly: The Meaning of Travel in a Hyperconnected Age
― Why We Fly: The Meaning of Travel in a Hyperconnected Age
“For what it’s worth, Dr. Verster’s list of drinks according to average congener content, from low to high, runs like this: Pure ethanol in orange juice Beer Vodka Gin White wine Whiskey Rum Red wine Brandy Not coincidentally, the study lists the increasing severity of hangovers in the same order.”
― In Praise of Hangovers
― In Praise of Hangovers
“We want to sell ourselves the idea of travel as shown in airline commercials, the one in which each journey is filled with bright and vibrant stimuli and an almost mandatory sense of discovery: Travel is supposed to mean new foods, new sounds, and new friends. But much of the time, travel and the places we find ourselves as we travel are remarkably boring.”
― Why We Fly: The Meaning of Travel in a Hyperconnected Age
― Why We Fly: The Meaning of Travel in a Hyperconnected Age
“Once I leave — once I start the car or catch the bus to the airport, by which the voyage is initiated — my brain starts to relax at the absence of my things, and thus the familiar thoughts that they inspire. And it is not just about the books and trinkets on my desk, because a real trip usually means leaving behind innumerable other forms of familiarity: the faces and the voices that we know well, and which cause their own cataracts of memories and associations through their long histories with us. There are the sounds we always hear, and the recognition of what caused them, like the scraping of the gate at the construction site across the square from my apartment, which arrives every morning at 7 a.m. There are the quotidian streets of daily life, lined with memories of events at each address. The shops and offices we visit most often; the foods we buy, with their familiar tastes as we eat them. But as we go away from these things, our own thoughts change, or grow into the space previously occupied by the familiar. The light itself becomes different once we start to travel, as we change setting, latitude, or geography. And with these changes, with the disappearance of the familiar and its many calls upon our thoughts, we finally begin to think differently, or even just begin to think at all.”
― Why We Fly: The Meaning of Travel in a Hyperconnected Age
― Why We Fly: The Meaning of Travel in a Hyperconnected Age

Long live the queen of psychological crime thrillers!