The Latest

A brilliant Indian novel about the First Opium War

A brilliant Indian novel about the First Opium War

A review of River of Smoke, by Amitav Ghosh. @@@@ (4 out of 5). The second book in Amitav Ghosh’s planned Ibis trilogy set among the momentous events of the massive 19th-Century opium trade between India and China. Details the life at sea and in the foreign enclave in Canton of the immensely rich men who dominated the trade, principally Britons and Americans.

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SCIENCE FICTION

MYSTERIES & THRILLERS

A murder and a cover-up jump-start this Travis McGee thriller

A murder and a cover-up jump-start this Travis McGee thriller

From 1964 to 1985 a World War II veteran officer and Harvard MBA named John D. MacDonald published a series of 21 remarkable short crime novels centered on a "Florida beach bum" named Travis McGee. Travis, of course, was MacDonald's alter ego, with an incisive mind, a head for...

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NONFICTION

How a team of rebel Tories ousted Neville Chamberlain

How a team of rebel Tories ousted Neville Chamberlain

You may have the impression that Winston Churchill stood alone in warning England of the rising Nazi menace. Many histories of the period paint that picture. But it's not accurate. In fact, a group of younger Conservative MPs were vocal opponents of the Tory Establishment's...

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Popular Fiction

A brilliant Indian novel about the First Opium War

A brilliant Indian novel about the First Opium War

Balzac (and lots of people after him) thought that "Behind every great fortune there is a crime." Nowhere is that aphorism more baldly pictured than in the 19th Century opium trade that enriched England, Scotland, and the United States. There, trade in the drug created a score...

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Explore My “BEST OF the category” selections

WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE BOOK?

When people ask me that question, I never know what to say. In a lifetime of reading, I’ve read many thousands of books. And I’ve reviewed well over 2,000 of them on this site. Picking just one as a “favorite,” or even a handful of them, makes no sense to me.

The problem is, I read for many different reasons. Perhaps you do, too. And I read many different sorts of books. Mysteries and thrillers. Popular fiction, especially historical fiction. Science fiction.

And nonfiction, history in particular. You’ll find hundreds of reviews in every one of those categories on this site.

Look to the right for a rotating random selection culled from throughout this site.

Happy reading!

 

The Sanctuary Sparrow

A cozy mystery set in 12th-century England

In the previous entries in Ellis Peters' Cadfael Chronicles, much of the focus lies on the contest between King Stephen (1096-1154) and his cousin Empress Maud (1102-67) over the English crown. The warring cousins crowd the background. But the seventh book, The Sanctuary Sparrow, resembles a cozy...
Becoming is the Michelle Obama memoir.

The Michelle Obama memoir is an extraordinary story

If you've ever wondered what it might be like to live in the White House, you can get a pretty good idea from the Michelle Obama memoir, Becoming. Assuming you ever had any fantasies about becoming President of the United States, this book may drive the thought from your mind. Life in the White...
Image of "The First Tycoon," one of the great biographies listed here

12 great biographies

I've read a lot of biographies and memoirs since I began posting book reviews in January 2010. I'm listing here 100 titles that I can recommend, omitting many that underwhelmed me (in addition to others I couldn't finish reading). These books cover a wide range of both historical and contemporary...
Cover image of a novel about Watergate

Watergate through a novelist’s eyes

If you're under the age of 45 or so, it would be surprising if you had any active memory of Watergate. More likely, your knowledge of the scandal comes from history books. Certainly, though, if you were born before, say, 1965 -- or, for sure, before 1960 -- the events of those tragic days are...
A Tale of Two Murders is a mystery starring Charles Dickens.

Charles Dickens falls in love in “A Tale of Two Murders”

Charles Dickens is England's best-known author after William Shakespeare. In fact, during the peak of his career in the mid-19th century, he was more famous (and far richer) than Shakespeare had ever become in his lifetime. Estimated reading time: 4 minutes In some ways, Dickens was just as...
A Night at Camp David is a novel that anticipated Donald Trump.

A novel that anticipated Donald Trump, five decades ago?

Its title is Night of Camp David, but the publisher topped off the cover with a teaser page to emphasize the novel's relevance to the madness in Washington today. "What would happen if the President of the U.S.A. went stark-raving mad?" the teaser reads. The implication is that this novel...
Cover image of "Four Treasures of the Sky," which is among the best popular fiction of 2022

The best popular fiction of 2022

For the record, what follows is not a list of the best popular fiction published during the past year. Instead, I’ve rejected the practice of those reviewers who imply they've read and reviewed the many thousands of popular (or trade) novels published in any given year. (I...
Deacon King Kong is full of unforgettable characters.

Unforgettable characters in this delightful new novel

Why did Sportcoat, a deacon in the Five Ends Baptist Church, shoot Deems Clemens in broad daylight, right in front of his crew and the church ladies? Where does all that white-people's cheese come from like clockwork every year for Hot Sausage to deal it out to all the folks of the Causeway...
Spies of No Country is about Israeli spies in the 1940s.

An amazing true story of Israeli spies in the country’s War of Independence

When Americans think of Israeli history, we fasten on a handful of names: Chaim Weizmann. David ben Gurion. Golda Meir. We think of kibbutzim, the Israeli Defense Force, the country's great universities, and its legal system. All these people, and many others whose names are prominent in the...
The Quest is about energy issues.

Daniel Yergin’s superb new book: a brilliant survey of energy issues

A review of The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World, by Daniel Yergin. @@@@@ (5 out of 5). A survey of virtually every significant aspect of energy in today’s world, touching on every energy source, every significant energy-related technological development of recent decades, and every major location of energy resources, including a short history of each element.

My Most Popular Reviews

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Mal Warwick - Book Reviews

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Mal Warwick

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