Caligula_K wrote:
Recently read:
Karen Armstrong- Islam: A Short History. One of the worst histories I've ever read. No context for anything, blanket statements without any citations at all, bare use of any type of footnoting, and an apologist's agenda rearing its head every five seconds (not that I disagree with a lot of her points, but you don't need to tell me that Islam is not a more violent religion than others after EVERY GODDAMN WAR). What a piece of shit.
Mohsin Hamid- The Reluctant Fundamentalist. Interesting read, and a nice counterpoint to Salman Rushdie's Shalimar the Clown, which I just read and which has some similar themes. They actually balance each other quite nicely- here the protagonist's transformation into an anti-American quasi terrorist is much better handled than in Shalimar the Clown, but Hamid's take on Pakistani society and the Middle East's relationship in general with the West is pretty one note. In Shalimar, the Kashmiri problem is presented tragically, as multifaceted, and in extreme depth, but Shalimar the Clown's transformation into a cold blooded terrorist killer comes a bit out of nowhere. Shalimar is definitely the more ambitious book, though, dealing with a large cast of characters and other events such as the WW2 resistance. Both very good books with some flaws.
Then read A Brief History of Time by Stephen Hawking. A very interesting read, but as someone who hasn't taken more than high school physics, obviously I only understand about half of it. Still good to get a basic understanding of some of the ideas and theories about the nature of the universe.
Now reading:
Gore Vidal- Julian. Loving it so far.
Yes, I read Wilson's A History of the Crusade a couple years back and she could simple not restrain her bias.
Glad you are enjoying Julian so far.