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Favorite Biographies?


"Last Man Standing: Mort Sahl and the Birth of Modern Comedy" by James Curtis
"Cassavetes on Cassavetes" by John Cassavetes and Ray Carney
"Heartland" by Mort Sahl
"Jim Morrison: Friends Gathered Together" by Frank J. Lisciandro
"The Trials of Jimmy Hoffa,: An Autobiography" by Jimmy Hoffa
"Brando: Songs My Mother Taught Me" by Marlon Brando
"The John Lennon Letters" by John Lennon

99% of what I read are biographies, and the rest are probably diaries. I have a habit of not finishing books.
Even though I have all these in physical form, I get an e-book so I can increase the font as I watch on a TV, which is also more relaxing on my neck/shoulders.

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"Nicholas and Alexandra" by Robert Massie

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It's really weird, I loved Nicholas and Alexandra, but the thing I remember most about it was a quote by Marie Corelli

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Yes, it was so very prophetic. I read the book when it was first published to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the Russian Revolution. I read and referenced it so many times that it fell apart, so I bought a new one.

I had the pleasure of meeting Robert Massie at a lecture he gave here in Cincinnati, It was part of the Nicholas and Alexandra exhibit that was touring the country. The most moving item at the exhibit was Alexandra's diary for 1918 - it was opened on the page where she made her last entry. So sad.

I'm huge Russian history buff and was so excited when I was able to visit St Petersburg in 2004 and visit the Alexander Palace.

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Last Train to Memphis: The Rise of Elvis Presley in 1994
Washington - Ron Chernow
The Autobiography of Malcolm X - Alex Haley
The Bully Pulpit - Doris Kearns Goodwin
Team of Rivals - Doris Kearns Goodwin
Just Watch Me: The Life of Pierre Elliott Trudeau - John English
Gorbachev: His Life and Times - William Taubman
Augustus: The Life of Rome's First Emperor by Anthony Everitt



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Grant - Ron Chernow
Walter Lippmann And The American Century - Ronald Steel
Lincoln - Carl Sandberg

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i read that one on grant. his administration was a mess but a decent person overall. he knew what was going to happen in the south once the military left.

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Also reading, based upon its mention in an interview between Gen. Petreus & Chernow relating to the Grant biography, 'Grant Takes Command', by Bruce Catton - which goes into minute detail the events surrounding Grant following his massive transformative victory at Vicksburg going forward, thru Chattanooga and onto taking command of the entire Army in the final years of the war.

Grant is such a fantastic subject of study - a thoroughly fascinating character, in some respects seemingly ordinary, in most important respects absolutely extraordinary. His stunning rise from failure & obscurity within a year or two to national leadership, saving the union & setting the stage for the first cut at equality for Blacks, a distinguished career as a two-term president, elected twice by wide margins.

The Southern apologists did a number on his historical reputation. That is presently being rehabilitated. His administration initiated a merit-based civil service, stamped out the KKK completely (the current version dates from the 1920s), oversaw the massive infrastructure development of the interior. There was corruption, but a lot of it is a bad rap, selective criticism. He was personally incorruptible.

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i always saw him as a bit of a tragic figure. lost all of his money and finishing his memoirs just before dying. he also wanted the republican nomination in 1880 but he was a spent force by then.

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"The White House gives Lippmann daily briefings. Valenti said they usually last about an hour or so. Or however long it takes the CIA to raid Lippmann's home"

-Mort Sahl

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Lippmann, a co-founder of the New Republic, was without any doubt the most prominent public intellectual in the US from the 20's through the 60's. He spoke English, French & German, was the friend & confidante of Presidents, Political Elites, Diplomats & Kings throughout the world, went on annual junkets. It was a different, more insular time - he had an unprecedented likely never equaled, for a private citizen, access & sway w/ the leaders of the world, influence w/ the public & consequently, policy makers.

He transmogrified from progressive socialist to realpolitik conservative, through the years - he ended his public life by breaking w/ LBJ early on Vietnam.

At bottom, Lippmann was a thoroughgoing elitist, one who believed that experts, though intrinsically unqualified, were meant to guide public opinion, which tended to be volatile, barely rational. He was probably right. (As for volatility, I'm not sure - it seems to me more intransigent, only periodically inclined to spasms of reappraisal/realignment, at every turn in the direction of the most selfish of self-interest).

He also stole & married his best friend's wife. :(

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Lippmann

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Woah. Interesting. Especially that last part. Thanks!

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I liked Elvis: What Happened?

https://www.amazon.com/Elvis-What-Happened-Steve-Dunleavy/dp/034530635X

Was able to find a rough but readable copy.

If you like Elvis, I recommend you track down a copy - although don't pay $200+ for it.

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Very cool, thanks.. Reminds me of $190 for Chuck Negron's "Three Dog Nightmare" which I was lucky to get for free at the local library, although there are plenty of e-books online for free.

Did you ever read the book Red and Co. wrote? He's recording Elvis secretly and it's on YouTube
https://youtu.be/aTmnvH6m9I4

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That's the book in the link, and I read it.

Have not listened to the phone call, will check that out - thanks.

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You're welcome. There's a couple of others on YouTube with Elvis.

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"Mr. Nice" by Howard Marks

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I read quite a few biographies, but the first one that comes to mind is "Snow, Stars, and Wild Honey" by George P. Morrill. It's about how a family built a good life on a Vermont wilderness homestead post-WWII. I admire them because I know I could never do what they did.

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River of Doubt by Candice Millard

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