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History and Current Events
September 2020
Recent Releases
To Start a War: How the Bush Administration Took America Into Iraq
by Robert Draper

What it is: an eye-opening history of the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

Read it for: a richly detailed and evenhanded account of how hubris, Bush administration infighting, congressional support, and favorable media coverage facilitated this fateful policy decision.

What's inside: interviews with key officials including Colin Powell, Paul Wolfowitz, and Condoleezza Rice. 
After the Last Border: Two Families and the Story of Refuge in America
by Jessica Goudeau

What it is: an intimate interwoven chronicle of two refugee families' disparate experiences seeking asylum in America.

Starring: Mu Naw, a Christian woman from Myanmar who found success in America as a businesswoman; Hasna, a Syrian Muslim who became separated from her family after the Trump administration's travel ban was implemented in 2017.  


About the author: Texas journalist and activist Jessica Goudeau has spent over a decade working with refugee resettlement organizations.
Exploration and Exploitation
Silver, Sword, & Stone: Three Crucibles of the Latin American Story
by Marie Arana

What it is: a concise history that explores how exploitation, violence, and religion have shaped 1,000 years of Latin American history.

Why you might like it: Peruvian American author Marie Arana weaves her compelling narrative between past and present by profiling three contemporary Latin Americans (a Peruvian miner, a Cuban exile, and a Spanish priest in Bolivia) and connecting their stories to the history of the region.

Awards buzz: A Booklist 2019 Top of the List Pick, Silver, Sword, & Stone was also longlisted for the Andrew Carnegie Medal.  
Jungle of Stone: The Extraordinary Journey of John L. Stephens and Frederick Catherwood...
by William Carlsen

What it's about: In 1839, American diplomat John Lloyd Stephens and British architect Frederick Catherwood explored the jungles of  Yucatán, where they encountered 1,500-year-old Mayan ruins.

Why it matters: Stephens and Catherwood's findings challenged their contemporaries' notions of Indigenous cultural inferiority.    

Read it for: a lively and evocative tale of friendship, adventure, and rediscovery.
The Last Wild Men of Borneo: A True Story of Death and Treasure
by Carl Hoffman

What it's about: two enigmatic Westerners -- one a "buccaneer," the other a "do-gooder" -- who called Borneo home in the 1970s and '80s.

Starring: 
American art dealer Michael Palmieri, who made a fortune acquiring native relics for museums; and Swiss environmentalist Bruno Manser, who lived among the Penan tribe, fought logging efforts in the region, and mysteriously disappeared in 2000. 

Awards buzz: This haunting cautionary tale from travel writer Carl Hoffman was a 2019 Edgar Award Nominee for Best Fact Crime and a Banff Mountain Book Awards Finalist.  
To the Edges of the Earth: 1909, the Race for the Three Poles, and the Climax of the Age...
by Edward J. Larson

What it is: a breathless account of a pivotal year for exploration, which saw concurrent expeditions led by Ernest Shackleton, Robert Peary, and Prince Luigi Amedeo, Duke of the Abruzzi.

Where they went: Shackleton headed to Antarctica, where he set a new Farthest South record; Peary embarked on his eighth North Pole expedition; the Duke of the Abruzzi led a summit of K2 in Asia.    

Read it for: an evocative narrative that's "so well-related as to make you feel the chill" (Kirkus Reviews). 
Endeavour: The Ship That Changed the World
by Peter Moore

What it is: a comprehensive history of the HMS Endeavour, the British ship that circumnavigated the globe from 1768-1771.

Why you might like it: This accessible page-turner details Endeavour's complicated legacy as a symbol of remarkable discovery and destructive imperialism. 

Reviewers say: "History at its most exciting and revealing" (Kirkus Reviews); "Maritime history that opens onto much more" (Booklist).  
Contact your librarian for more great books! 
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