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Which Unlikely Books Have Been Responsible For Enhancing Your Education?
17 Answers
Louisa May Alcott's 184th birthday today. 'Little Women', beautiful and unforgettable of course, but having read it as a child I had no idea why the girls' father was away at war, and the book didn't explain, so it led me to investigate. Further reading on the American Civil War resulted.
Which book, if any, has encouraged you to investigate further?
Which book, if any, has encouraged you to investigate further?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Not books but I find whatever I am reading I am constantly using my Kindle to look up more information, I am very good at going off at a tangent. I find that a lot of my trivia has been picked up from novels I've read, I recall doing the French Revolution for 'O' level History exam. My teacher was very impressed at the amount of reading I did around the topic, I never told him that I'd gleaned it all from the Dennis Wheatley Roger Brooke series.
Gosh Tilly, fancy that, it had a similar affect on me too, and prompted us to go to Belgium to visit all the war sites and cemeteries. It stayed with me a long, long time, and considering I'd not had the least interest in anything like that before it was something of a revelation.
The other book for me was The Island, about Spinalonga the leper colony. It dispelled so many myths I had about leprosy and made me find out more about it.
The other book for me was The Island, about Spinalonga the leper colony. It dispelled so many myths I had about leprosy and made me find out more about it.
John Stuart Mill's 'Utilitarianism' in terms of political thinking....
Hermann Hesse's The Glass Bead Game for philosophical thinking, the ending devastating in the suddenness of death of a leader.
'If you hate a person, you hate something in him that is part of yourself. What isn't part of ourselves doesn't disturb us.'
Hermann Hesse's The Glass Bead Game for philosophical thinking, the ending devastating in the suddenness of death of a leader.
'If you hate a person, you hate something in him that is part of yourself. What isn't part of ourselves doesn't disturb us.'
The Koran is a tough read, AgChristie, lacking any context or narrative direction. It's not arranged in chronological order, you're always left wondering why such and such a verse was "revealed". So you need the commentaries and the biographical detail to make it intelligible to make sense of it.
This version (£7.01 on the Kindle) arranges the book chronologically AND gives the historical background, so you actually learn the life of Mohammed and the points in it when the revelations occurred (and why) :
https:/ /www.am azon.co m/Abrid ged-Kor an-Isla mic-Tri logy-Bo ok-eboo k/dp/B0 0DXPR1Q 0
Like you I'm struggling with an answer to the OP.
This version (£7.01 on the Kindle) arranges the book chronologically AND gives the historical background, so you actually learn the life of Mohammed and the points in it when the revelations occurred (and why) :
https:/
Like you I'm struggling with an answer to the OP.
The Gauntlet, (a novel for kids) led me into medieval history, also The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe gave me a taste for the literary world and an understanding of the isolation needed. Then there was the artist in me. Somehow it all coalesced and I became whatever I am. I am proud to be certain that I was a good teacher and still helping kids in my voluntary sessions at the local academy.
The Power of One by Bryce Courtney opened my eyes to the inherent multi-cultural racism of South Africa. A fabulous book that stays with me to this day.
I can't remember the title or author but I read a murder mystery set in New York when they were building bridges across the river, the engineering detail was fascinating and I found myself googling for more information. The author was an historian and he had researched the book very thoroughly.
I can't remember the title or author but I read a murder mystery set in New York when they were building bridges across the river, the engineering detail was fascinating and I found myself googling for more information. The author was an historian and he had researched the book very thoroughly.
William Cobbett's "Rural Rides" - opened a whole window into a period of English history that I had never even dreamt would interest me.
I have re-read the book many times - the parallels with today's society grow ever more pertinent.
https:/ /en.wik ipedia. org/wik i/Rural _Rides
I have re-read the book many times - the parallels with today's society grow ever more pertinent.
https:/
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