Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
#AsianHistory
review
Anna40
Side by Side: Parallel Histories of Israel-Palestine | S?m? ?Abd al-Razz?q ?Adw?n, Peace Research Institute in the Middle East
post image
Pickpick

The Peace Institute in the Middle East collected contributions by Israeli & Palestinian teachers & historians into a history of Israel & Palestine since the establishment of the State of Israel that you can read side by side. The book ends with the second Intifada. It provides the reader with context & helped me understand the conflict. Sadly, it also makes it clear that there will never be peace.

23 likes1 stack add
review
Hooked_on_books
post image
Pickpick

Following 4 young people and their families, this book looks at life in Shanghai during the Japanese occupation in WWII then on to the communist takeover of China and thereafter. It‘s a terrific, personalized way to explore history and excellent narrative nonfiction. I can‘t recommend it enough.

TrishB Stacked 👍🏻 sounds fascinating. 5mo
46 likes6 stack adds1 comment
review
Graywacke
post image
Mehso-so

Japan medieval history is very confusing and Clements makes it more confusing by giving the reader too many compressed details and not enough clear analysis. Still, lots of interesting stuff here. I was entertained to learn the origins of sushi and kabuki theater.

blurb
Graywacke
post image

Looking for audiobooks and indecisive, I found this free on audible. I‘m fascinated, all of 20 minutes in.

BarbaraBB Stacked! 8mo
47 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
BC_Dittemore
post image
Pickpick

This nearly 40 hour audiobook is nothing if not thorough. At such a length it‘s hard to stay focused on everything, and after a while it becomes tough to keep names straight. Nonetheless, I learned a lot about a period of Japanese history in which I was uneducated.

A pick for me, but if I had read a hardcopy, I‘m not sure I could‘ve made it all the way through. The narration by Eric Jason Martin contributed much to my enjoyment of this tome.

blurb
Purpleness
post image

“for some reason…” Huh, wonder why they had that idea?

Suet624 🥴 10mo
AnnCrystal 😢 10mo
37 likes2 comments
quote
Purpleness
post image

blurb
Purpleness
post image

So, today I learned that
a. Mt. Everest was named for, but not by, George Everest.
b. George Everest was actually a proponent of learning the local name of mountains he surveyed, rather than coming up with new English names.
and c. He hated it when people pronounced his name Ever-est, rather than Eve-rest.

quote
Purpleness
post image
quote
Purpleness
post image

“We instinctively think of mountains as eternal, but they‘re not. They are falling to bits and being remade like the rest of nature - like us.”