Bustle Reads 2016 discussion

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Tasks > 2. Read A Book About Non Western History

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message 2: by Kristin (new)

Kristin (kristinorlando) | 5 comments I've read, and really liked, Finding the Dragon Lady: The Mystery of Vietnam's Madame Nhu. It's about the First Lady of South Vietnam in the 1960s during the political turmoil there. And, bonus points, it's about a kickass female historical figure that I had never heard of before.


message 3: by Deirdre (new)

Deirdre | 7 comments I just picked up Nagasaki: Life After Nuclear War for this one.


message 4: by Stacy (new)

Stacy  Benedict | 47 comments I just realized Bustle recommended a book about Quanah Parker and the Comanche tribe as a book about "non-Western" history. Uhhh...whose history is it then? Just sayin...


message 5: by Teresa (new)

Teresa Starcursed or Island of A Thousand Mirrors or Girl From The Coast


message 6: by Natalie (last edited Nov 02, 2016 02:18PM) (new)

Natalie (naterby) | 23 comments I read First They Killed My Father: A Daughter of Cambodia Remembers by Loung Ung. I really didn't know any history of Cambodia, so this book was a great book for me to read. I would definitely recommend it to anyone who doesn't know what happened in Cambodia during the 1970's or is just interested in history.


message 7: by Jennie (new)

Jennie (tangledupinblue) | 65 comments This has been the hardest category for me to find a book for. I think I'm going to bend the rules a little and read Purple Hibiscus as I've seen it shelved under historical fiction a few times.


message 8: by Teresa (new)

Teresa I ended up reading The Blood of Flowers. It was really good.


message 9: by Constanza (new)

Constanza (unaconicualquiera) I read Revolutionary Iran: A History of the Islamic Republic and it was honestly the most boring book i have ever read, and i really like reading history. It was way to US-centric, it spend most of the time reviewing the tiniest details of every military operation and political scandal; even if it gave a very thorough analysis of Khomeini ideas, barely mention how the revolution was constructed, and leave way too many questions unanswered. For such a long book, the analysis were, in general, very shallow.

For latinamerican history I reccomend Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent. It's not terribly long, its easy to understand and its gonna break your heart.


message 10: by Julie (new)

Julie (julieannie) | 13 comments I read Nagasaki: Life After Nuclear War and found myself completely engrossed in it.


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