Hm...if WWII history interests you but dry facts put you to sleep,
something like "Berlin Diary : The Journal of a Foreign Correspondent,
1934-1941" by William Shirer might be good. It's a first-hand account
of the rise of Hitler and Germany's aggression. It's told in in a very
direct way, from the perspective of an American journalist in Germany
at the time. Not unbiased, but it's not an academic study.

I might be able to come up with something accessbile for anthropology
too. Let me think about it.

On 8/10/05, Tony Weeg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> i love history, i love civil war history, i love anthropology, i love 
> artifacts
> and their history, so i might try some history non-fiction... any suggestions?
> 
> tw

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