I never read the Anthony Bourdain book, but I remember reading an excerpt (?) in the New Yorker a year or two after I stopped working in restaurants and nodding my head at all the stuff he wrote about. Wilkerson's books are very readable and go quickly. Great list of recommendations.
Do not be discouraged by the size of The Warmth of Other Suns. It is a very engaging reading, read at times like a novel. Hope you enjoy your reads for Non-fiction November!
Wow! I’m overwhelmed! Great choices for 2022! ! The Warmth of Other Suns… Fun Home,; the Soul Of An Octopus; Kitchen Confidential (love AB)…what a great list and you eloquently described each to entice us!
Wow! I am not a Nonfiction reader but I'm very excited about some of the books you shared. I paused you and went and bought Kitchen Confidential. I love(d) Anthony Bourdain and when I saw he narrates it I had to have it! I think The Soul of an Octopus sounds great as the creature fascinates me. The same with The Book of Eels. Thanks for the awesome recommentations! Looks like I will be reading some Nonfiction in November after all.
Greg, you mentioned several very interesting books! As a lover of non-fiction, I'm regretting not having got around to any of these yet. I did start "The Warmth of Other Suns", but it is not a quick read, thanks for sharpening my resolve to get back to non-fiction.
Crying in H mart is one of my favorite books because of the lasting impact it has had on my life. He descriptions of food were so vivid that I had to immediately drive an hour to my nearest Asian market and learn to make Korean food. Two years later…I actually have kimchi fried rice in my fridge right now!
The Soul of an Octopus sounds amazing. Octopuses are my fave animals! They are like real life wild pokemon. I got to see a Great Pacific Octopus in Blue Planet aquarium only 40 minutes' drive away from me. They are fascinating creatures.
there is a bbc doc natural world and they did an episode on a scienti who had an octopus in his living room it played tricks on him and his daughter it watched Tv and all sorts!
I haven’t read any of these! Except Educated! It was amazing! The Five sounds like one that I would like! I am trying to decide on my November nonfiction TBR…. So many great options!
Great recommendations! I have read several that you mentioned and all were good, but Caste is amazing. I still need to get to The Warmth of Other Suns. I have The Day the World Came to Town and I must read it soon. Maybe this year. I also really want to read The Five.
Some absolutely fantastic recs! You single handedly expanded my TBR, haha. Soul of an Octopus reminds me of the Netflix documentary My Octopus Teacher which was stunning and got me so invested in this one octopuses life. I read Caste earlier this year and it was brilliant, such an eye-opening read.
Just stumbled upon your channel. great recs! I've read Hidden Valley Road and Kitchen Confidential, loved em both. TBR'ing a few of these as well. Subbed
I’ve listened to The Warmth of Other Suns and it was such a great listening experience! I hope you’re able to get to it soon, it will NOT disappoint you!
i unhauled Assassination Vacation just recently because i thought i'd never get around to it. kind of regretting that now. finished Crying in H Mart last week, such a beautiful book. heartbreaking and full of so much love. Pictures at a Revolution sounds great too. amazing recommendations all around! thanks!
I want to read more nonfiction but so many are such difficult reads, emotionally. For some reason they were easier to read when I was younger. Lots of love from the Pacific Northwest 🧡
Awesome!! I remember After the Eclipse as being incredibly personal. Also, The Warmth of Other Suns is an all-time favorite. I have, Little Devil In America by Hanif Abdurraqib and Jesus and John Wayne by Kristin Kobes Du Mez for November.
Wow, your comments about the Hollywood book made me understand why I've always liked '70s movies so much. Can't stand movies made earlier than that, and later decades never captured the mood a '70s movie gave me.
I actually just finished The Five, and I totally agree with you about true crime. This book about the victims is SO important, and very well done. 👏 I also read Assassination Vacation earlier this year, and it was great! I'm in Virginia, so I also had a similar experience of being able to visualize the places she was referring to. I love her sense of humor too. Great choices!
A few recent nonfiction books I’ve read and would recommend are: The Pink Line: Journeys Across the World's Queer Frontiers Last Call: A True Story of Love, Lust, and Murder in Queer New York Let the Record Show: A Political History of ACT UP New York, 1987-1993 I’ve recommended Hidden Valley Road to everyone. Powerful story, difficult to read in parts but worth the effort. I just checked out Overground Railroad from my library. I’m sure it will be excellent.
I hope you enjoy Overground Railroad! For some reason I felt like I couldn't include Deviant War and Let the Record Show, but that one is on my list as well--as is The Pink Line. I almost included Last Call as well. Hidden Valley Road is one of my favorite reads of the year--definitely my favorite nonfiction book (so far).
Just finished Hidden Valley Road. For me it was the most compelling book I've read to date. If for nothing else, it makes one extremely grateful for their family...however messed up they may be. Correction: 6 were diagnosed with schizophrenia instead of 8.
Thank you for the recommendations! A lot of those I had never heard of. I am especially interested in the graphic novels. I will have to check those out! My favorite nonfiction writers are David Sedaris and Bill Bryson. Also, I know it’s a weird choice but Mark Twain wrote some great nonfiction. I think they are better than a lot of his fiction. One I recently read was The Anthropocene Reviewed by John Green.
You had me at Fun Home! I thoroughly enjoyed reading it. It was interesting, funny, and well written. I knew the whole time about the dad, because he was way too OCD to be straight, in my opinion. I think Eviction might be too close to home for me to read anytime soon. I was involved in a bitter back and forth with my shady property management, here in CT for the past few years. As a military veteran I was able to obtain an attorney. However, The system made it near impossible for me to actually win the case. At the end of the day, the case was thrown out because they never produced any viable information or documents to the discovery and the court date was pushed back 3 times. I ended up moving out and now I live with my parents again. Needless to say, I'm already passed off at the system. Idk, I've been thinking about reading the story about the dust bowl, as well as Crying in H Mart. Caste and the Warmth of Other Suns are on my TBR list and I've considered adding the Hidden Valley title, as well as Educated. Thanks for sharing!
Educated is such an engaging book. The Five was great to listen to as an audiobook. There's a great 2018 film called Green Book, that was what opened my eyes to that segregation. I have Hidden Valley from the library, have just started it. Fun Home was really good. So many other great books on your list! I'll be reading Australian non-fiction, especially Fathoms by Rebecca Giggs, if I can get to it. Plus two others from the library (that aren't Australian) Under a White Sky by Elizabeth Kolbert and Square Haunting by Francesa Wade.
Just discovered your channel. I’ve read Hidden Valley Road, Educated, Kitchen Confidential, Crying in Hmart and Fun Home (fun fact: my father went to school with her father in Lock Haven/ Beech Creek Pa). The others are on my list. Thanks
I just finished Overground Railroad, and I'll agree with you that it's a fabulous book. I had a hardcopy from the library, but I'm thinking of, like you, getting myself a copy for my shelves because it's just such a gorgeous book physically as well. I'm going to echo others that you should not be intimidated by either of Isabel Wilkerson's books, in spite of their heft. They are very readable and engaging and so, so worth it. (maybe Warmth even a bit more than Caste, as it focuses on personal stories, but they're both wonderful). Caste is interesting and frames the race question in America in a slightly different way, but Warmth I learned so much from - I really knew nothing about The Great Migration other than my high school history book gave it a line or two. Also agree Evicted was so good but enraging - also just finished Empire of Pain, which hit me similarly - good but makes you sooo mad.
I'm so glad you enjoyed Overground Railroad--it really is a gorgeous book. Thank you for the feedback on Wilkerson--I'll have to try to fit her in ASAP. I also don't know much about the great migration so it will be a huge learning experience for me. Empire of Pain is something I'm interested in but need to wait for until it won't make me so angry.
Hello, just getting into your channel and wondering if you have reviewed any Dave Goulson ? A sting in the tale, The garden jungle and Silent earth ....I found amazing the latter being tough to read.
What a thoroughly enjoyable video! I have read quite a few of these books. Caste and Warmth of Other Suns are imminently readable due to Wilkerson’s writing. I remember reading Caste and stopping in wonder at how a human (Wilkerson) could be so smart. Crying in H Mart is a must-read as well. The author narrates the audiobook wonderfully. In this instance, I feel reading the physical book would be shortchanging yourself. I read Evicted by Desmond when it was published and it was an eye-opener. Have you read Barbara Ehrenreich’s book Nickled and Dimed : On (Not) Getting By in America?
There's been so much overwhelmingly positive feedback on Wilkerson--I'll have to try to get to her ASAP. I liked Nickel and Dimed until the last chapter--it felt like once she was getting ready to go back to her own life she started making excuses for why she should be allowed to make a mess in stores.
Thanks for the recommendations. In November, I would like to read: Invisible Women by Caroline Criado Perez Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer All Our Relations by Tanya Talaga
I thought soul of an octopus was going to be about how fascinating octopuses are but no, it's about how fascinating this lady's obsession with octopuses is. I only finished it to see if she was going to cross any major lines cause it sure felt like she was going to.
A couple of my favorites are David Simon's "Homicide" which he wrote over the course of a year as a reporter embedded with the Baltimore Police Homicide Unit. Also "Inside the Third Reich" by Albert Speer. "Chaos" by Tom O'Neil which is about Charles Manson and the CIA mind control programs of the 1960s. I'm currently reading "All We Are Saying" by David Sheff, which is John Lennon's final interview given to Playboy Magazine, in it he goes in depth describing every single Beatles song in the order the albums came out. Fascinating stuff to me I love non-fiction as a kind of break into reality from fictional stories
I sometimes say "octopoda" since that's the Greek declension, but I cringe when people say "octopi" because the word is Greek, not Latin. But you're right: 'octopuses' is the standard Anglicization.
As someone who worked in kitchens for years I don't have love for kitchen nonfiction or competitions even though I love cooking so much. All Boys Aren't Blue is high on my list so is Valley High Road. Crying In H Mart has come on and off my library app waiting to be ready to read it. Are you familar with Come From Away the musical. It is a Canadian musical based on Gander and those who were diverted there. It's free on apple tv.
It's hard to feel enthusiastic for something when you've worked in the trenches. I used to work at a Borders in a mall and I refused to go to malls for about five years after. We don't have Apple TV but are looking into it--thank you for pointing out that it's available there!
My TBR for #nonficnov The Road to Middlemarch(author explains how the book has influenced her life) Hidden Valley Road War Doctor Empire of Pain The Body Keeps the Score Let Me Not Be Mad The Collected Schizophrenia’s 🍀👋☘️📚🫖☕️📖🐝
This channel is so underrated
Thank you so much! That means a lot.
I really feel like you're talking to a friend and I love it. Great content.
Thank you so much!
I never read the Anthony Bourdain book, but I remember reading an excerpt (?) in the New Yorker a year or two after I stopped working in restaurants and nodding my head at all the stuff he wrote about.
Wilkerson's books are very readable and go quickly.
Great list of recommendations.
Thank you! That's good to know re: Wilkerson.
Kitchen Confidential was a really good book. Loved it
Do not be discouraged by the size of The Warmth of Other Suns. It is a very engaging reading, read at times like a novel. Hope you enjoy your reads for Non-fiction November!
That's good to know--thank you!
Wow! I’m overwhelmed! Great choices for 2022! ! The Warmth of Other Suns… Fun Home,; the Soul Of An Octopus; Kitchen Confidential (love AB)…what a great list and you eloquently described each to entice us!
Thanks so much--that means a lot!
Wow! I am not a Nonfiction reader but I'm very excited about some of the books you shared. I paused you and went and bought Kitchen Confidential. I love(d) Anthony Bourdain and when I saw he narrates it I had to have it! I think The Soul of an Octopus sounds great as the creature fascinates me. The same with The Book of Eels. Thanks for the awesome recommentations! Looks like I will be reading some Nonfiction in November after all.
Thank you for watching! I hope you enjoy any of the books you pick up. Happy Nonfiction November!
I read Caste in the last month. I was surprised how fast it went for its size. Really learned so much. So well done.
A lot of people have had similar feedback--thank you for sharing!
I love this video. I have added some of these to my TBR list.❤️
I hope you enjoy them!
Great recommendations!! Thank you!
Thank you for watching.
Greg, you mentioned several very interesting books! As a lover of non-fiction, I'm regretting not having got around to any of these yet. I did start "The Warmth of Other Suns", but it is not a quick read, thanks for sharpening my resolve to get back to non-fiction.
Crying in H mart is one of my favorite books because of the lasting impact it has had on my life. He descriptions of food were so vivid that I had to immediately drive an hour to my nearest Asian market and learn to make Korean food. Two years later…I actually have kimchi fried rice in my fridge right now!
The Worst Hard Time is terrific! I have recommended to my friends and they also enjoyed it. Great choices 🎃
Thank you! I'm glad you also liked The Worst Hard Time.
The Soul of an Octopus sounds amazing. Octopuses are my fave animals! They are like real life wild pokemon. I got to see a Great Pacific Octopus in Blue Planet aquarium only 40 minutes' drive away from me. They are fascinating creatures.
there is a bbc doc natural world and they did an episode on a scienti who had an octopus in his living room it played tricks on him and his daughter it watched Tv and all sorts!
I haven’t read any of these! Except Educated! It was amazing! The Five sounds like one that I would like! I am trying to decide on my November nonfiction TBR…. So many great options!
I hope you enjoy the books you pick!
Great recommendations! I have read several that you mentioned and all were good, but Caste is amazing. I still need to get to The Warmth of Other Suns. I have The Day the World Came to Town and I must read it soon. Maybe this year. I also really want to read The Five.
I hope you enjoy The Five if you pick it up.
Wow man, love your videos. Reviews are short and sweet, and engaging. Learning from you for my channel. Best of luck!
Thanks so much--that means a lot!
Some absolutely fantastic recs! You single handedly expanded my TBR, haha.
Soul of an Octopus reminds me of the Netflix documentary My Octopus Teacher which was stunning and got me so invested in this one octopuses life.
I read Caste earlier this year and it was brilliant, such an eye-opening read.
My Octopus teacher was a GREAT documentary. If you liked that, you will probably enjoy The Soul of an Octopus.
Just stumbled upon your channel. great recs! I've read Hidden Valley Road and Kitchen Confidential, loved em both. TBR'ing a few of these as well. Subbed
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed this.
I’ve listened to The Warmth of Other Suns and it was such a great listening experience! I hope you’re able to get to it soon, it will NOT disappoint you!
Thank you for the feedback! That one has gotten a lot of positive response so far.
i unhauled Assassination Vacation just recently because i thought i'd never get around to it. kind of regretting that now. finished Crying in H Mart last week, such a beautiful book. heartbreaking and full of so much love. Pictures at a Revolution sounds great too. amazing recommendations all around! thanks!
Thank you for watching!
I want to read more nonfiction but so many are such difficult reads, emotionally. For some reason they were easier to read when I was younger. Lots of love from the Pacific Northwest 🧡
🥂
Awesome!! I remember After the Eclipse as being incredibly personal. Also, The Warmth of Other Suns is an all-time favorite.
I have, Little Devil In America by Hanif Abdurraqib and Jesus and John Wayne by Kristin Kobes Du Mez for November.
Thank you for the feedback. The two you have lined up sound interesting!
We have started a new green book. The Overground Railroad continues. It’s 2023.
Great list! So many I have read and loved.
Thank you!
I really enjoy this book channel.
Thank you so much!
Wow, your comments about the Hollywood book made me understand why I've always liked '70s movies so much. Can't stand movies made earlier than that, and later decades never captured the mood a '70s movie gave me.
Wow, I think I will have to copy and study those recommendations
there were so many and many were interesting too.
I hope you like any that you pick up!
I actually just finished The Five, and I totally agree with you about true crime. This book about the victims is SO important, and very well done. 👏
I also read Assassination Vacation earlier this year, and it was great! I'm in Virginia, so I also had a similar experience of being able to visualize the places she was referring to. I love her sense of humor too. Great choices!
A few recent nonfiction books I’ve read and would recommend are:
The Pink Line: Journeys Across the World's Queer Frontiers
Last Call: A True Story of Love, Lust, and Murder in Queer New York
Let the Record Show: A Political History of ACT UP New York, 1987-1993
I’ve recommended Hidden Valley Road to everyone. Powerful story, difficult to read in parts but worth the effort.
I just checked out Overground Railroad from my library. I’m sure it will be excellent.
I hope you enjoy Overground Railroad!
For some reason I felt like I couldn't include Deviant War and Let the Record Show, but that one is on my list as well--as is The Pink Line. I almost included Last Call as well.
Hidden Valley Road is one of my favorite reads of the year--definitely my favorite nonfiction book (so far).
Just finished Hidden Valley Road. For me it was the most compelling book I've read to date. If for nothing else, it makes one extremely grateful for their family...however messed up they may be.
Correction: 6 were diagnosed with schizophrenia instead of 8.
Thank you for the recommendations! A lot of those I had never heard of. I am especially interested in the graphic novels. I will have to check those out!
My favorite nonfiction writers are David Sedaris and Bill Bryson. Also, I know it’s a weird choice but Mark Twain wrote some great nonfiction. I think they are better than a lot of his fiction.
One I recently read was The Anthropocene Reviewed by John Green.
Mark Twain is a great writer so I don't think that's a weird choice at all. If you do pick up either of the graphic novels, I hope you enjoy them!
You had me at Fun Home! I thoroughly enjoyed reading it. It was interesting, funny, and well written. I knew the whole time about the dad, because he was way too OCD to be straight, in my opinion. I think Eviction might be too close to home for me to read anytime soon. I was involved in a bitter back and forth with my shady property management, here in CT for the past few years. As a military veteran I was able to obtain an attorney. However, The system made it near impossible for me to actually win the case. At the end of the day, the case was thrown out because they never produced any viable information or documents to the discovery and the court date was pushed back 3 times. I ended up moving out and now I live with my parents again. Needless to say, I'm already passed off at the system. Idk, I've been thinking about reading the story about the dust bowl, as well as Crying in H Mart. Caste and the Warmth of Other Suns are on my TBR list and I've considered adding the Hidden Valley title, as well as Educated. Thanks for sharing!
The Five is on my short list...and I absolutely loved The Worst Hard Time!
I hope you enjoy The Five!
Educated is such an engaging book. The Five was great to listen to as an audiobook. There's a great 2018 film called Green Book, that was what opened my eyes to that segregation. I have Hidden Valley from the library, have just started it. Fun Home was really good. So many other great books on your list! I'll be reading Australian non-fiction, especially Fathoms by Rebecca Giggs, if I can get to it. Plus two others from the library (that aren't Australian) Under a White Sky by Elizabeth Kolbert and Square Haunting by Francesa Wade.
Thank you for the Australian recommendations--most of the Australian authors I've tried have been great.
Just discovered your channel. I’ve read Hidden Valley Road, Educated, Kitchen Confidential, Crying in Hmart and Fun Home (fun fact: my father went to school with her father in Lock Haven/ Beech Creek Pa). The others are on my list. Thanks
I'm rereading Tales of the City (inspired by Simon Savidge) and really want to read Maupin's Memoir.
I've read two of the later books in the series but still need to get to the original. Hopefully soon!
I just finished Overground Railroad, and I'll agree with you that it's a fabulous book. I had a hardcopy from the library, but I'm thinking of, like you, getting myself a copy for my shelves because it's just such a gorgeous book physically as well.
I'm going to echo others that you should not be intimidated by either of Isabel Wilkerson's books, in spite of their heft. They are very readable and engaging and so, so worth it. (maybe Warmth even a bit more than Caste, as it focuses on personal stories, but they're both wonderful). Caste is interesting and frames the race question in America in a slightly different way, but Warmth I learned so much from - I really knew nothing about The Great Migration other than my high school history book gave it a line or two.
Also agree Evicted was so good but enraging - also just finished Empire of Pain, which hit me similarly - good but makes you sooo mad.
I'm so glad you enjoyed Overground Railroad--it really is a gorgeous book. Thank you for the feedback on Wilkerson--I'll have to try to fit her in ASAP. I also don't know much about the great migration so it will be a huge learning experience for me. Empire of Pain is something I'm interested in but need to wait for until it won't make me so angry.
What a wonderful list of books! I don’t read much non-fiction but you have piqued my interest! Thanks so much for this!😀
Thank you for watching! I hope you enjoy any books you pick up!
Hello, just getting into your channel and wondering if you have reviewed any Dave Goulson ? A sting in the tale, The garden jungle and Silent earth ....I found amazing the latter being tough to read.
What a thoroughly enjoyable video! I have read quite a few of these books. Caste and Warmth of Other Suns are imminently readable due to Wilkerson’s writing. I remember reading Caste and stopping in wonder at how a human (Wilkerson) could be so smart. Crying in H Mart is a must-read as well. The author narrates the audiobook wonderfully. In this instance, I feel reading the physical book would be shortchanging yourself. I read Evicted by Desmond when it was published and it was an eye-opener. Have you read Barbara Ehrenreich’s book Nickled and Dimed : On (Not) Getting By in America?
There's been so much overwhelmingly positive feedback on Wilkerson--I'll have to try to get to her ASAP. I liked Nickel and Dimed until the last chapter--it felt like once she was getting ready to go back to her own life she started making excuses for why she should be allowed to make a mess in stores.
Nice video!
Thank you!
Great video, thank you!!!!
Thank you!
Thanks for the recommendations.
In November, I would like to read:
Invisible Women by Caroline Criado Perez
Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer
All Our Relations by Tanya Talaga
That's an interesting list!
I thought soul of an octopus was going to be about how fascinating octopuses are but no, it's about how fascinating this lady's obsession with octopuses is. I only finished it to see if she was going to cross any major lines cause it sure felt like she was going to.
So many good recommendations Perfect for non fiction nov
Thank you!
Great video!
hey thanks for the recommendations. Have you ever been told that you resemble Alex Ovechkin?
I had never been told that before! That's a new one.
A couple of my favorites are David Simon's "Homicide" which he wrote over the course of a year as a reporter embedded with the Baltimore Police Homicide Unit. Also "Inside the Third Reich" by Albert Speer. "Chaos" by Tom O'Neil which is about Charles Manson and the CIA mind control programs of the 1960s. I'm currently reading "All We Are Saying" by David Sheff, which is John Lennon's final interview given to Playboy Magazine, in it he goes in depth describing every single Beatles song in the order the albums came out. Fascinating stuff to me
I love non-fiction as a kind of break into reality from fictional stories
I sometimes say "octopoda" since that's the Greek declension, but I cringe when people say "octopi" because the word is Greek, not Latin. But you're right: 'octopuses' is the standard Anglicization.
As someone who worked in kitchens for years I don't have love for kitchen nonfiction or competitions even though I love cooking so much.
All Boys Aren't Blue is high on my list so is Valley High Road. Crying In H Mart has come on and off my library app waiting to be ready to read it.
Are you familar with Come From Away the musical. It is a Canadian musical based on Gander and those who were diverted there. It's free on apple tv.
It's hard to feel enthusiastic for something when you've worked in the trenches. I used to work at a Borders in a mall and I refused to go to malls for about five years after.
We don't have Apple TV but are looking into it--thank you for pointing out that it's available there!
@@SupposedlyFun I just used the 7 day free trial. 😆
@@KierTheScrivener Clever 😉
older book is the triangle shirtwaist fire. it has stayed with me for many years.
It’s such a terrible-but important-story.
❤️
New Subscriber.
Thanks and welcome!
Try to read "Four canonical Gospels of the New Testament from an atheist" by V. Panteleev, 1.4 million characters with spaces
the wager
*Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire* - nothing else comes close
Please add chapters
My TBR for #nonficnov
The Road to Middlemarch(author explains how the book has influenced her life)
Hidden Valley Road
War Doctor
Empire of Pain
The Body Keeps the Score
Let Me Not Be Mad
The Collected Schizophrenia’s
🍀👋☘️📚🫖☕️📖🐝
I hope you enjoy Hidden Valley Road! I've heard good things about Empire of Pain but I think it would make me too angry to read it right now.
Hidden valley road is so good! I highly recommend!
katherine gramham autobiography. she was where you should be when you should be.
I’ve always been curious to read that one.
mother by jamaica kinkaid
der buchhandel berlin germany
Why 'my husband' many times?
Why not?
If you liked Persepolis, you might also enjoy “And Then They Came for Me” by Maziar Bahari. It’s an excellent memoir
the wager