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calendar   Tuesday - June 27, 2006

Summer Reading

Several of you have asked me what I’m reading and occasionally I review one of the books I’ve completed here. This time I’m going to get the jump on you and give you the books that are currently in The Skipper’s lineup for summer reading. I’m already fifty pages deep in Ann Coulter’s “Godless” and the other books are on the shelf waiting their turn at bat.

I just received Coulter’s book yesterday evening, after a two week wait, and started on it this morning. You’re lucky anything at all was posted here so far today. I like this woman’s style. I’ll be catching pages of it on break and at lunch today. I’ll probably be up half the night finishing it - if I don’t die laughing at her exposure of the Looney Left first.

Through the summer months I’ll try to remember to post other book lists for your to browse through. One note: although I’ve linked the Amazon buy pages for these books you can usually save even more by joining book clubs like the History Book Club or the Conservative Book Club. Find the best deal and kick back and relax with a good book this summer. It’s brain food ...

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imageimage“Godless" by Ann Coulter (Amazon - $15.65)

Description: “If a martian landed in America and set out to determine the nation’s official state religion, he would have to conclude it is liberalism, while Christianity and Judaism are prohibited by law.

Many Americans are outraged by liberal hostility to traditional religion. But as Ann Coulter reveals in this, her most explosive book yet, to focus solely on the Left’s attacks on our Judeo-Christian tradition is to miss a larger point: liberalism is a religion—a godless one. And it is now entrenched as the state religion of this county.

Though liberalism rejects the idea of God and reviles people of faith, it bears all the attributes of a religion. In Godless, Coulter throws open the doors of the Church of Liberalism, showing us its sacraments (abortion), its holy writ (Roe v. Wade), its martyrs (from Soviet spy Alger Hiss to cop-killer Mumia Abu-Jamal), its clergy (public school teachers), its churches (government schools, where prayer is prohibited but condoms are free), its doctrine of infallibility (as manifest in the “absolute moral authority” of spokesmen from Cindy Sheehan to Max Cleland), and its cosmology (in which mankind is an inconsequential accident).



imageimage“Roman Britain” by Guy de la Bédoyère (Amazon - $25.17)

Description: In this lively, authoritative new account of Britain as a Roman province, Guy de la Bédoyère puts the Roman conquest and occupation of the island within the larger context of Romano-British society and how it functioned.

Following introductory chapters outlining events from the Iron Age period to the emperor Honorius’ advice to the Britons in 410 to fend for themselves, the author tackles the issues facing Britons after the absorption of their culture by an invading army, including the role of government and the military in the province, religion, commerce, technology, and day-to-day life both in towns and in the countryside.

The narrative is brought vividly to life by quotations from inscriptions found on tombstones and buildings and the writings of historians such as Tacitus and Dio. The text is supplemented throughout by box features devoted to topics ranging from the Roman city of London and the building of Hadrian’s Wall to discoveries such as the Vindolanda writing tablets and the treasure hoards found at Mildenhall and Thetford.



imageimage“Getting America Right” by Edwin J. Feulner, Doug Wilson (Amazon - $16.98)

Description: Flag, faith and family; free markets and free trade; limited government, local control and individual responsibility are the ideals championed by Heritage Foundation president Feulner and Townhall.com chairman Wilson in this conservative manifesto on what’s wrong with America and how we can fix it.

Drawing on Heritage Foundation research, according to the foreword, they prescribe a litmus test for government policies that readers can employ on their own by asking the following questions of any proposed policy: “Is federal action necessary?… Does this measure promote self-reliance?… Is it [fiscally] responsible?… Does it make us more prosperous? Does it make us safer?… Does it unify us?” Censuring both “tax and spend” Democrats and today’s “borrow and spend” Republicans, the authors are critical of the Bush administration and the mushrooming national debt—$7.7 trillion at the time of publication, they note.

But their tally of federal waste (e.g., overpayments in tax credits for “the undeserving poor") and fraud to cut—$100 billion worth—comes nowhere near closing the huge federal deficits they decry, and their solutions (e.g., flat tax and Social Security privatization) will surely provoke partisan debate. Regardless of the reader’s ideology, however, this book makes for a clear articulation of core conservative ideas.



imageimage“Mayflower" by Nathaniel Philbrick (Amazon - $17.97)

Description: In this remarkable effort, National Book Award–winner Philbrick (In the Heart of the Sea) examines the history of Plymouth Colony. In the early 17th century, a small group of devout English Christians fled their villages to escape persecution, going first to Holland, then making the now infamous 10-week voyage to the New World.

Rather than arriving in the summer months as planned, they landed in November, low on supplies. Luckily, they were met by the Wampanoag Indians and their wizened chief, Massasoit. In economical, well-paced prose, Philbrick masterfully recounts the desperate circumstances of both the settlers and their would-be hosts, and how the Wampanoags saved the colony from certain destruction. Indeed, there was a first Thanksgiving, the author notes, and for over 50 years the Wampanoags and the Pilgrims lived in peace, becoming increasingly interdependent.

But in 1675, 56 years after the colonists’ landing, Massasoit’s heir, Philip, launched a confusing war on the English that, over 14 horrifying months, claimed 5,000 lives, a huge percentage of the colonies’ population. Impeccably researched and expertly rendered, Philbrick’s account brings the Plymouth Colony and its leaders, including William Bradford, Benjamin Church and the bellicose, dwarfish Miles Standish, vividly to life. More importantly, he brings into focus a gruesome period in early American history. For Philbrick, this is yet another award-worthy story of survival.



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Posted by The Skipper   United States  on 06/27/2006 at 11:12 AM   
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Not that very many people ever read this far down, but this blog was the creation of Allan Kelly and his friend Vilmar. Vilmar moved on to his own blog some time ago, and Allan ran this place alone until his sudden and unexpected death partway through 2006. We all miss him. A lot. Even though he is gone this site will always still be more than a little bit his. We who are left to carry on the BMEWS tradition owe him a great debt of gratitude, and we hope to be able to pay that back by following his last advice to us all:
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It's been a long strange trip without you Skipper, but thanks for pointing us in the right direction and giving us a swift kick in the behind to get us going. Keep lookin' down on us, will ya? Thanks.

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