A challenge of relative ease and merriment discussion
Non-fiction and microhistories
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@Cathrin: is it Pox Americana? I know I saw that on the microhistory list. Which reminds me that I kinda want to read Pox, which is rather about syphilis. But I think I had a hard time finding a good copy when I did need it for a school project.
@Sofie: there are so many about food! Or why not join me in reading one about murder and the world fair?
@Sofie: there are so many about food! Or why not join me in reading one about murder and the world fair?

I probably won't enjoy a book about:
- War (stuff related to war is ok though)
- Space (scares the shit out of me)
- Diseases (hypochondriac)
What I find interesting:
- non-western cultures
- Psychological disorders
- Computers
- Lingustics

A friend of mine read

and really liked it. Maybe that would appeal to your linguistics interest?


For anyone:
This may be a little obvious, as it got a lot of attention, but I really enjoyed

I love

For outdoorsy types, or types who want to bolster your commitment to staying indoorsy (I'm the latter),

For those who would kind of enjoy giving the side-eye to an unpleasant author while also learning, I liked hating

I feel like there are some really obvious ones I'm leaving out, because I do love this type of book. I didn't get a lot of sleep last night and am spacey.
For my microhistory, I'm reading



It is about the photographer William Mumler who claimed he could photograph spirits, which he made a great deal of money from turning into a business. I was supposed to read it for a thesis in art history that I never finished, but now I've distanced myself enough from that failure to read this book just because it's an interesting subject :) I think this must count as a micro history as it is about one person and his little spiritual photography business? Well, it's also fits into the history of art, photography and religion. But still?
I think that could probably count as a microhistory yeah.
I'm currently on a Mary Roach spree and I highly recommend all her books (even if I've only read first three listed down there so far). So if one is about a subject you think seems relatively interesting, I say go for it! Personally I wouldn't count them as microhistories as they're a bit too wide in their scope, but absolutely excellent non-fiction!
She's releasing another one later this year about the military and I'll most likely end up reading that one too
I'm currently on a Mary Roach spree and I highly recommend all her books (even if I've only read first three listed down there so far). So if one is about a subject you think seems relatively interesting, I say go for it! Personally I wouldn't count them as microhistories as they're a bit too wide in their scope, but absolutely excellent non-fiction!





She's releasing another one later this year about the military and I'll most likely end up reading that one too

Books mentioned in this topic
Grunt: The Curious Science of Humans at War (other topics)Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers (other topics)
Packing for Mars: The Curious Science of Life in the Void (other topics)
Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex (other topics)
Spook: Science Tackles the Afterlife (other topics)
More...
Non-fiction and microhistories/social histories of one thing seems to be a tricky one for a lot of you. Personally it's one of the easiest ones, and as such I thought I'd open up this topic for those of you who don't read much non-fiction. Tell us your interests and what kind of non-fiction you might want to try and the other group members might be able to suggest some titles!
If you haven't noticed I have added "social history of one thing" to the microhistory category. That is cause the genre of microhistory seems to have gotten an additional meaning the last few years. As a research subject it deals with very narrow parameters like one family or one specific event, but lately it seems to have gotten the additional meaning of the (social) history of one specific thing (which is how I came in contact with it too). That could be a commodity (like salt, coffee, or spices), a disease (like cancer or smallpox), a concept (I once picked up a book on virginity), etc. And to be technical, since most of those are histories on a grander scale - spanning centuries and continents, they kinda are macrohistories. But the "micro" has come to refer to the object itself fitting in a very narrow frame (a book about only potatoes is pretty specific after all), rather than narrow time and space. I personally like to think of this new meaning and relatively new genre as books which could have almost one word titles like the classic "Salt", with the subtitle often being something like "the history of how X changed the world" (see what I mean by actually a grand scale?).
Anyways, same goes for this tricky category: tell us what you like and we'll see what we can find!