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pscot

(21,037 posts)
Tue Jul 30, 2013, 03:00 PM Jul 2013

What's the best biography or autobiography you've read recently?

I'm currently reading a (necessarily) speculative biography of Shakespeare, Will in the World by Stephen Greenblatt. Greenblatt is a Harvard prof. and editor of the Norton Shakespeare. He knows his Bard. We have a lot of factual information about Shakespeare and Greenblatt combines that with the history of the times and a knowledge of the people Shakespeare necessarily met and interacted with, and constructs a convincing portrait of the man. At the same time I'm reading Acting Shakespeare by John Gielgud, and several of the plays. Gielgud was the premier Shakespearian actor of the 1st half of the 20th century. He's witty, intelligent and brief. Also a great raconteur with considerable insight into the plays.

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What's the best biography or autobiography you've read recently? (Original Post) pscot Jul 2013 OP
Not exactly recently, but I liked Warlord by Carlo D'este. Neoma Jul 2013 #1
I read Wm. Manchesters 2-part biography pscot Jul 2013 #3
Oh, Warlord touches his flaws, that's for sure. Neoma Jul 2013 #5
If you can believe Manchester, he put on a brand new pair pscot Jul 2013 #6
Well, I can believe the alcohol consumption. Neoma Jul 2013 #7
I was so looking forward to reading Manchester's third volume Zorro Dec 2013 #11
Woody Guthrie: A Life limpyhobbler Jul 2013 #2
I saw Arlo once, in concert pscot Jul 2013 #4
Sounds like a nice place to live. limpyhobbler Jul 2013 #8
This message was self-deleted by its author Sweeney Dec 2014 #21
Three quarters of a century pscot Dec 2014 #22
This message was self-deleted by its author Sweeney Dec 2014 #23
It's a great life if you don't weaken pscot Dec 2014 #24
This message was self-deleted by its author Sweeney Dec 2014 #25
I just finished No Ordinary Time kag Aug 2013 #9
I haven't read that pscot Aug 2013 #10
It is a fascinating book GeoWilliam750 Jan 2018 #44
Not recent but last year I read The Honeycomb by Adela Rogers St. Johns Zorro Dec 2013 #12
There's a new biography of Barbara Stanwick pscot Jan 2014 #14
Destiny of the Republic: SheilaT Jan 2014 #13
That sounds like a good one pscot Jan 2014 #15
I read some of them a very long time ago, when SheilaT Jan 2014 #16
That's why we have time to loaf around pscot Jan 2014 #17
This message was self-deleted by its author Sweeney Dec 2014 #26
It is very much a different world today. SheilaT Dec 2014 #29
This message was self-deleted by its author Sweeney Dec 2014 #30
I agree this is a great book very fast and easy for such a large book I gabeana Dec 2017 #40
My three books cntrygrl Jan 2014 #18
The best part of reading is the way one book leads you on pscot Jan 2014 #19
Thank you pscot I will cntrygrl Jan 2014 #20
This message was self-deleted by its author Sweeney Dec 2014 #28
This message was self-deleted by its author Sweeney Dec 2014 #27
She was illiterate but dictated naratives. Olive Gilbert cntrygrl Dec 2014 #31
This message was self-deleted by its author Sweeney Dec 2014 #32
Right now I'm reading "Sins of the Father" CountAllVotes Jan 2015 #33
My library has it only a a 3M ebook pscot Jan 2015 #34
I bought a hard bound copy of it for $5 from Abebooks.com CountAllVotes Jan 2015 #36
Just started Haywire, by Brooke Hayward - tell you this, closeupready Jan 2015 #35
The Autobiography of Angela Davis. lovemydog May 2015 #37
So Anyway by John Cleese. camelfan Jun 2015 #38
Just finished photographer Sally Mann's memoir "Hold Still" womanofthehills Sep 2015 #39
Fatal Passage Mendocino Dec 2017 #41
Harry Truman and Civil Rights: Moral Courage and Political Risks JonLP24 Dec 2017 #42
My favorite president pscot Dec 2017 #43
My Cross to Bear - Greg Allman The Polack MSgt Jan 2018 #45

Neoma

(10,039 posts)
1. Not exactly recently, but I liked Warlord by Carlo D'este.
Tue Jul 30, 2013, 03:31 PM
Jul 2013

I didn't expect Winston Churchill to be such a badass. I also didn't realize he originally had red hair, but besides that point I don't think don't think people dig much at his life before becoming prime minister. It's worth it.

pscot

(21,037 posts)
3. I read Wm. Manchesters 2-part biography
Tue Jul 30, 2013, 05:12 PM
Jul 2013

a couple years ago. It was entertaining but kind of one-sided. Churchill had his flaws, but Manchester doesn't really go there.

Neoma

(10,039 posts)
5. Oh, Warlord touches his flaws, that's for sure.
Tue Jul 30, 2013, 05:17 PM
Jul 2013

He sounds pretty bipolar to me actually. Complaining about his "black dog" and his manic-ish behavior going about. Weird sleeping hours as well.

pscot

(21,037 posts)
6. If you can believe Manchester, he put on a brand new pair
Tue Jul 30, 2013, 05:21 PM
Jul 2013

of silk drawers and drank a fifth of brandy every day.

Neoma

(10,039 posts)
7. Well, I can believe the alcohol consumption.
Tue Jul 30, 2013, 05:25 PM
Jul 2013

Since he had a speech impediment, people thought he was drunk. (That's one thing that bugs me about The Kings Speech. He never had a stuttering problem! Argh.) Something about alcohol with breakfasts too.

Zorro

(16,296 posts)
11. I was so looking forward to reading Manchester's third volume
Sun Dec 29, 2013, 11:37 PM
Dec 2013

but he got too old and senile to finish it. Quite a disappointment.

pscot

(21,037 posts)
4. I saw Arlo once, in concert
Tue Jul 30, 2013, 05:17 PM
Jul 2013

Met him, in fact. I guess he's gone all Libertarian these days. Lives on Kauai, where the weather is always fine and the weed is abundant, cheap and the genuine sativa strain.

limpyhobbler

(8,244 posts)
8. Sounds like a nice place to live.
Tue Jul 30, 2013, 07:44 PM
Jul 2013

I don't know much about Arlo Guthrie but he seems pretty rich and laid back in Hawaii.

Response to pscot (Reply #4)

Response to pscot (Reply #22)

Response to pscot (Reply #24)

kag

(4,108 posts)
9. I just finished No Ordinary Time
Fri Aug 2, 2013, 12:10 AM
Aug 2013

by Doris Kearns Goodwin. It has been on my shelf for years, and I finally bit the bullet. It was long, and I'm a slow reader, so it took me several weeks (ahem..months) to finish. I loved reading about how Eleanor Roosevelt pretty much single-handedly garnered the nomination for her husband's third term by giving a speech in his stead at the convention. Strange to think of what might have happened had she not gone, not given a speech, or not rocked the house the way she did. Would we have even gotten INTO WWII? She was truly incredible.

pscot

(21,037 posts)
10. I haven't read that
Fri Aug 2, 2013, 11:45 AM
Aug 2013

But I agree, Eleanor was quite amazing. I did read W. H. Brand's A Traitor to His Class recently. She was a prolific writer; hundreds of daily columns and an autobiography and a huge influence on FDR.
Don't say "slow". Say careful, deliberate, thoughtful.

GeoWilliam750

(2,540 posts)
44. It is a fascinating book
Sun Jan 28, 2018, 01:46 AM
Jan 2018

So much detail around progress in civil rights as well as labour rights, and so much detail about how the wealthy industrialists were willing to effectively take the world hostage in WWII until they were provided with vast profit.

Zorro

(16,296 posts)
12. Not recent but last year I read The Honeycomb by Adela Rogers St. Johns
Sun Dec 29, 2013, 11:44 PM
Dec 2013

which I found quite fascinating with her observations both as a reporter of early Hollywood and her personal involvement with a number of personalities of the era (Hearst, Valentino, etc.).

I'm about 3/4ths of the way through Julia Phillips's autobiography You'll Never Eat Lunch In This Town Again, which also has some catty remarks about current Hollywood personalities and also describes her decline from a noted producer to freebasing druggie. It takes a real arrogant attitude to do a line of coke in front of everyone in the middle of a marketing meeting.

pscot

(21,037 posts)
14. There's a new biography of Barbara Stanwick
Thu Jan 9, 2014, 11:00 AM
Jan 2014

you might like. The author is Victoria Wilson. I haven't read it yet, but it sounds interesting. Here's a review to whet your appetite.
http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/books/2013/11/barbara_stanwyck_biography_steel_true_by_victoria_wilson_reviewed.html

 

SheilaT

(23,156 posts)
13. Destiny of the Republic:
Thu Jan 9, 2014, 01:59 AM
Jan 2014

A Tale of Madness, Medicine, and the Murder of a President by Candice Millard.

It's about the assassination of President Garfield and is riveting. In the end, it was his doctors who killed him, but everything that happened before, including how he so unexpectedly became president, is just an amazing tale. Millard is an excellent writer and so far has only one other book out, which I haven't read yet, River of Doubt about a journey Theodore Roosevelt took along the Amazon after he left the Presidency. I'll get to it eventually.

pscot

(21,037 posts)
15. That sounds like a good one
Thu Jan 9, 2014, 11:08 AM
Jan 2014

I'll look for it. Have you read Gore Vidal's American history novels? Not biography as such, but a wonderful tour of 19th century American politics.

Response to SheilaT (Reply #13)

 

SheilaT

(23,156 posts)
29. It is very much a different world today.
Wed Dec 10, 2014, 01:23 AM
Dec 2014

Garfield had to talk every single day to people petitioning for government jobs. Anyone could walk into the White House back, then. Things have changed very, very much.

Response to SheilaT (Reply #29)

gabeana

(3,170 posts)
40. I agree this is a great book very fast and easy for such a large book I
Thu Dec 14, 2017, 05:32 PM
Dec 2017

Had a hard time putting it down

cntrygrl

(357 posts)
18. My three books
Sun Jan 19, 2014, 09:59 AM
Jan 2014

On a whim I purchased the book entitled, "Sojourner Truth" (1797? - 1883) about a woman who was born in to slavery in my part of the country, near Kingston, NY. This gal was absolutely amazing. She had no education - couldn't read or write. A heroine who fought for the freedmen and women's rights.

Wanting to learn more about NY I read, "Henry Hudson and the Algonquins of New York: Native American Prophecy & European Discovery, 1609" which is very interesting.

Right now I'm reading "Native New Yorkers: The Legacy of the Algonquin People of New York" learning the history of my home state.

pscot

(21,037 posts)
19. The best part of reading is the way one book leads you on
Sun Jan 19, 2014, 11:11 AM
Jan 2014

to others on related topics. You might like The Island at the Center of the World by Russell Shorto. It's about the Dutch on Manhattan. They were only there for about 75 years, but they really left their stamp on the place. Have you read 1491, by Charles C. Mann? America before Columbus. It just blew me away. There were a lot more Native Americans than the empire builders would like us to know about. Most of our colonial "history" seems to be based on lies or propaganda.

cntrygrl

(357 posts)
20. Thank you pscot I will
Mon Jan 20, 2014, 08:51 AM
Jan 2014

check out those you've mentioned. You posted: "Most of our colonial "history" seems to be based on lies or propaganda." and since leaving high school ('68) I've been amazed at how little we were taught in history class. Yes, much of it was lies and propaganda with so much of the suffering at the hands of the 'conquering' whites that makes me ill. We were never taught how barbaric we whites were.

I never heard of Sojourner Truth, birth name Isabella Baumfree, and how much she contributed to the freed slaves and women's rights. She should be mentioned, IMHO.

Ivan E Pritchard (author of my two books on Hudson and Algonquins) is a direct descendant of that tribe. His writings are amazingly accurate from what I can tell.

Thank you again for mentioning the other books.

Response to pscot (Reply #19)

Response to cntrygrl (Reply #18)

cntrygrl

(357 posts)
31. She was illiterate but dictated naratives. Olive Gilbert
Sun Dec 14, 2014, 09:47 AM
Dec 2014

edited for her and you can read it in PDF format here: www2.hn.psu.edu/faculty/jmanis/sojtruth/sojtruth.pdf

Yes, it's said that she did, in fact, suckled many planter's children. On the following link you can scroll down to read a paragraph (page 139) which states that: http://docsouth.unc.edu/neh/truth84/truth84.html

Response to cntrygrl (Reply #31)

CountAllVotes

(21,068 posts)
33. Right now I'm reading "Sins of the Father"
Mon Jan 5, 2015, 11:08 AM
Jan 2015

Its about Joe Kennedy, Sr. and his life and all of the things he did.

is about all I can say so far and also *eek*!!!



CountAllVotes

(21,068 posts)
36. I bought a hard bound copy of it for $5 from Abebooks.com
Tue Jan 6, 2015, 05:37 AM
Jan 2015

Free shipping too and quite a few pictures.

Still reading this book. Very interesting ...

 

closeupready

(29,503 posts)
35. Just started Haywire, by Brooke Hayward - tell you this,
Tue Jan 6, 2015, 12:21 AM
Jan 2015

it's gripping from the opening page - she knew how to write, that's for damn sure. Lot of sad stuff but it happened, she wanted to break the Hollywood illusion, I guess. Going to really enjoy this, I think.

lovemydog

(11,833 posts)
37. The Autobiography of Angela Davis.
Fri May 29, 2015, 05:25 PM
May 2015

Supplementing it with watching a documentary on her and reading her more recent writings. The book was originally published in the early 1970's. It covers her childhood, intellectual growth, firing from University of California, time on the run and her subsequent trial and acquittal. It's told with great compassion & wit. Very exciting and well written. Since that book she has remained a brilliant humanist, activist and scholar.

camelfan

(130 posts)
38. So Anyway by John Cleese.
Wed Jun 10, 2015, 11:00 PM
Jun 2015

Finishing it tomorrow. It's an illuminating and hilarious book about the life of a comic genius. It covers his childhood, school days including Cambridge University and the Footlights, and his show business career right up until the creation of Monty Python. Highly recommended.

http://amzn.to/1B3QxNW

womanofthehills

(9,272 posts)
39. Just finished photographer Sally Mann's memoir "Hold Still"
Sat Sep 12, 2015, 09:05 AM
Sep 2015

and now I'm reading Tom Robbins memoir Tibetan Peach Pie.

Interesting reads - both authors lived in Virginia. Mann lived on a farm in Lexington and Robbins in Richmond. Both talk about Jim Crow laws in the south when they were young.

Robbins is his usual funky self but Sally Mann's book was a bit of a surprise - she majored in creative writing in college and it comes through in this book.


The Polack MSgt

(13,425 posts)
45. My Cross to Bear - Greg Allman
Wed Jan 31, 2018, 02:18 PM
Jan 2018

Not because it's a literary classic, just because I am such a fanboy of the Allman Brothers

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