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1493
1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created | Charles C. Mann
Reveals how the voyages of Columbus reintroduced plants and animals that had been separated millions of years earlier, documenting how the ensuing exchange of flora and fauna between Eurasia and the Americas fostered a European rise, decimated imperial China and rendered Manila and Mexico City the center of the world for two centuries. Reprint.
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Owls31092
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Pickpick

A great read- I love how Charles Mann talks about people you don‘t normally read about, and I love reading about his travels for his research.

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Owls31092
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Owls31092
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For some reason, this reminds me of that part in The Last Kingdom when Alfred the Great and was fleeing the Vikings with his family.

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Owls31092
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Owls31092
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Why I want to be a teacher

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Owls31092
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Owls31092
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African history is the one part of history I want to learn about but don‘t know where to begin. Hopefully, this section will help.

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Owls31092
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Owls31092
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I kinda gotta argue against this one. I think it depends on the species and its uses.

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Owls31092
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We‘re still dealing with the effects of the Colombian exchange. Just like viruses, Colorado potato beetles mutate and find ways to survive every single pesticide we throw at them. Now we have crops covered in God knows what that we invest every day of our lives. It makes me think about our current food shortage and what is really going on. Are we just having a shortage or is this the year everything mutates?

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Owls31092
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Owls31092
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KateD1
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Mehso-so

This book took me an incredibly long time to read; not just because it‘s about 500 pages.
It‘s extremely interesting how globalization has been around since the first recorded voyage in 1492. The impacts of that first voyage are very interesting to see and the world would be an entirely different place without it.

6 likes1 stack add
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Owls31092
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Owls31092
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Owls31092
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Owls31092

Reading about malaria makes me realize that sometimes, good can come out of bad situations. It makes me think about the current pandemic and makes me wonder what good is going to come out of all of this that we can‘t see today, but maybe future historians might see?

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Owls31092
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Owls31092
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Owls31092
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Owls31092
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Pocahontas had a name. That name was Mataoka. Pocahontas was a nickname that meant “little hellion”
#1493 #charlesmann #pocahontas #mataoka #ushistory #indigenouspeople #indigenouspeopleshistory #history #nativeamericanhistory

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Owls31092
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Owls31092
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QBub
Pickpick

Engaging, informative

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OrangeMooseReads
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Bailedbailed

Not the right time mentally for this one.

Trashcanman 👁👁 4y
42 likes1 comment
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Lynnsoprano
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1. The tagged book. Fascinating history.
2. Love, Lies, and Hocus Pocus. I bailed, and I do that rarely.
3. So much I want to read, but can‘t think of anything specific.
4. Goodreads annual challenge set for 65 books this year. So far I‘m at 25, so I‘m behind, but not going to stress about it.
Tagging @tdrosebud and @theresidentromantic @Lorene come join the fun!
#thursdaysurvey

Crazeedi I must get that book to read!! 6y
48 likes1 comment
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Lynnsoprano
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Pickpick

An incredibly interesting and unique take on history. Not at all what I was expecting. This book expounds on the Columbian Exchange, the movement and exchange of commodities and people between Americas and Europe, Asia, and Africa. A huge amount of information, well written. Recommend enthusiastically.

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Lynnsoprano
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We moved #booksandcoffee to Monday, since tomorrow‘s schedule looks crazy. I may finish this #chunkster today😄

Crazeedi Are you liking it? I have this on a tbr list 6y
vumblereads This looks interesting 😃 6y
Lcsmcat My mother loved this book, and its companion. (edited) 6y
See All 6 Comments
Lynnsoprano @Crazeedi It‘s really good. The section on escaped slave/native communities and tensions was kind of confusing, because the names were so unique and hard to sort out. But overall it‘s excellent and I learned a lot. 6y
Crazeedi @Lynnsoprano good to know, thanks 6y
Crazeedi @Lcsmcat thanks! Will look up 6y
63 likes1 stack add6 comments
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Lynnsoprano
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Back to normal, or as close to normal as my schedule ever gets😂 Glad to be able to do #booksandcoffee with hubby again. Very close to finishing this chunkster.

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Lynnsoprano
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Hubby is off with our son, judging the state science fair. So for a change, I‘m out for #bookandcoffee by myself. A great start to my reading day.

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Lynnsoprano
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It‘s a gray, rainy day, perfect for our weekly #booksandcoffee morning. It‘s supposed to be like this all day. I plan to get a lot of reading done 😎

Mdargusch Sounds like a great day! 🤗 6y
60 likes1 comment
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Lynnsoprano
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I‘m going to be spending most of the day working with middle school choirs getting ready for performance assessment. But I‘m not missing our #booksandcoffee weekly “date.” It‘s just a little earlier than usual 😄

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Lynnsoprano
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About the Irish potato famine: “...it was one of the deadliest famines in history, in terms of the percentage of population lost. A similar famine in the United States today would kill almost 40 million people.”

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Lynnsoprano
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It‘s supposed to be stormy today and a perfect day for #coffeeandbooks but right now it‘s beautiful. Still, I‘m enjoying our weekly date, and will take my walk when we get home.

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Lynnsoprano
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Back to #coffeeandbooks plus a bagel after missing last week. This book is fascinating. Today I‘ve read about silver mining in South America and trading silver with the Chinese, subjects I‘ve never encountered before.

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Lynnsoprano
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Between my sinus infection and hubby teaching a class yesterday, we missed our weekly #coffeeandbooks date. We decided to stay home this morning do books with tea. I‘m reading a section on Chinese monetary policy in the 16th century, not what I expected, but quite interesting.

64 likes1 stack add
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Lynnsoprano
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1. 1493 and The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie.
2. Ravenclaw
3. New Amsterdam
#weekendreads

rachelsbrittain The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie is such a cute book! Thanks for joining in 💙🖤💙 6y
52 likes1 comment
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Lynnsoprano
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Sitting in the waiting room at the doctor‘s office and thankful that I brought my book. A half hour and counting...

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Lynnsoprano
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If it‘s Tuesday, it must be time for our books and coffee date😊

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Lynnsoprano
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Tuesday coffee and book date with hubby. I‘m so sore from painting the last few days, I need a day off to relax and read.

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Lynnsoprano
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“Newspapers usually describe globalization in purely economic terms, but it is also a biological phenomenon; indeed, from a long-term perspective, it may be PRIMARILY a biological phenomenon.”

I may be highlighting a lot in this book!

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Lynnsoprano
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Starting this as my first #nonfiction of 2019. I‘m hooked already, and I‘m only through the prologue.

Crazeedi Definitely want to read ! 6y
Lynnsoprano @Crazeedi It‘s so different from what I originally expected, but it‘s wonderful. I‘m learning so much! 6y
Crazeedi @Lynnsoprano I saw it when it came out, and now it's on my list. I enjoy a well written nonfiction book 6y
73 likes2 stack adds3 comments
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Lynnsoprano
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My bookish gifts from hubby. I know next to nothing about this period, so the history should be fascinating. And I‘ve already found a recipe in the cookbook that I want to make this weekend.

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UrsulaMonarch
Pickpick

Fascinating and also felt all over the place - I'm not sure how much of that was due to the audiobook format, but I was able to appreciate most of the flow of information, even if it sometimes felt transient.

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Readerann
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Pickpick

Finished my second book for #24in48 (started this one earlier). I got bogged down in a few places, but most of it was very interesting. Not stuff you learned about in school.

Kristy_K Did you read 1491 first or jump right into this one? I wasn‘t sure if they should be read in chronological order. 7y
Readerann @Kristy_K I did read 1491 first and would probably recommend them in order if you want to read both. 7y
Kristy_K @Readerann Ok, thanks! 7y
21 likes1 stack add3 comments