Blackace said:
A Plague upon Humanity : The Hidden History of Japan's Biological Warfare Program by Daniel Barenblatt
good read...
This is a really good thread, lately for some reason I find myself interested in obscure parts of history that didn't really get covered in school. I'm actually interested in picking up a book about Aboriginal culture and lifestyles, anybody have any recommendations? I'm gonna order the book on the Rwanda genocide and A Plague Upon Humanity off of amazon pretty soon.
Oh yeah and kudos to the Guns, Germs and Steel book. I really enjoyed it and recommended it to lots of my coworkers. There's some interesting passages about how germs evolve to find the best possible way to spread, how populations split and diversified, how lots of food we take for granted was the result of mutations (almonds were originally extremely poisonous, but genetic mutants that didn't contain this poison existed, which were the basis of almonds becoming a food item; acorns contain a really bitter and unpleasant chemical that make them uneatable to humans, but they are a good source of nutrition, possibly something similar will happen with acorns in the future) Jared Diamond beats some of his points into your head and it can get repetitive at points, but its a great counterpoint to "The Bell Curve" and its claims of ethnic superiority in some races.
Some other ones I liked:
Fast Food Nation - Insightful book about what goes on behind the scenes of the fast food industry. From the whole way agribusiness and franchises operate, to how fast food marketing specifically targets the young to hook a customer for life (kind of like the tobacco industry). I would eat fast food on occasion but after reading this book, never again (I will make an exception for Mighty Taco and Ted's Hot Dogs though!)
The Underground History of American Education: This book was by a guy who was voted NY's best teacher one year (2002 I think?), although its extremely preachy, extra verbose (bring your vocabulary with you on this one!), and dosed with lots of pro-libertarian anti-government talk, its still worth a read. I necessarily don't agree with lots of his points (is home schooling really a panacea to everything?) but anybody wondering why the hell they suffered through high school can at least find some stuff to relate to and agree with. There are parts in the book that talk about eugenics and sterilizing "undesireables", back then it were the Jews and the Italians, southern Blacks, the poor, etc... lots of research into eugenics went on at a lab in Cold Spring Harbor, LI, interestingly enough. This is something I'd like to read more about, if anybody can point to a good book.
It's available for free, actually, at
http://www.johntaylorgatto.com