SUGGESTED READINGS
People who want to get a basic understanding on a particular subject, or who simply want to educate themselves more generally, often ask for a list of suggested readings. There are innumerable outstanding writings on many subjects but plainly written books that can take the reader from square one — little or no previous knowledge of the subject — to a fundamental understanding of the issues involved are all too rare. Here are some that I would recommend. |
BOOKS |
COMMENTS |
The Americans by Daniel Boorstin
|
A very readable history of the social and economic evolution of the American people, from colonial times to the twentieth century. |
Basic Economics by Thomas Sowell |
An easy to read introduction to economics without graphs, equations or jargon. |
Black Rednecks and White Liberals by Thomas
Sowell |
A collection of long essays challenging prevailing beliefs about blacks, Jews, slavery, Germans, and education. |
Choosing the Right College by the Intercollegiate
Studies Institute |
By far the best guide to colleges, including the presence or absence of political correctness. Shows little-known colleges with outstanding education and big-name institutions with little or no curriculum. |
City Economics by Brendan O'Flaherty |
An excellent and very readable introduction to the use of economic analysis in general, with urban problems as the focus. A few graphs and a few technical terms may bother some people with no knowledge of economics but even they can get something from this book. |
Conservative Comebacks to Liberal Lies by Gregory
Jackson |
Devastating facts contradicting popular liberal notions. Ideal for de-programming students who have been indoctrinated in schools and colleges. |
Equality, Delusion, and the Third World by Peter
Bauer |
One of the best debunkings of fashionable beliefs about Third World countries and foreign aid by an economist with both sharp insights and personal experience. |
FDR's Folly by Jim Powell |
A factual study of the actual consequences of New Deal welfare state programs, in painful contrast to their rhetoric. |
The Federalist by James Madison, Alexander Hamilton
and John Jay |
Essays explaining in plain English the reasons for the various provisions in the Constitution of the United States by three men who helped write the Constitution. A rare combination of wisdom, knowledge and common sense. |
The Gathering Storm by Winston Churchill |
A history of the events and misconceptions that led to World War II. Very relevant to the misconceptions of our own time, which are remarkably similar. |
History of the American People by Paul Johnson |
A complete history of the United States, political and economic, foreign and domestic by one of the best writers and best minds of our time. |
Life at the Bottom by Theodore Dalrymple |
An incisive and brutally honest eye-witness account of the social degeneracy created by the welfare state among the white underclass in Britain-- remarkably similar to the social pathology in American ghettoes but without such supposed causes as slavery or racism. |
Mexifornia by Victor Davis Hanson |
A must-read book for anyone who wants to understand the actual consequences of our policies toward Mexican immigration and toward people of Mexican ancestry in the United States. A gem for its combination of knowledge, insight, compassion, and utter frankness on a subject too often discussed elsewhere in political spin and media cant. |
Modern Times by Paul Johnson |
A wise and knowledgeable international history of the past two centuries by one of the most readable and accomplished writers of our time. |
The Rise of the West by William H. McNeill |
A scholarly but readable history of the rise of both Western and non-Western civilizations from ancient times to the present. |
They Made America by Harold Evans |
An illustrated coffee-table book with the inspiring story of the American inventions that revolutionized life in the United States and beyond. |
Underdevelopment Is a State of Mind by Lawrence
E. Harrison |
An account of the reasons for Latin America's economic lags far behind the United States, Western Europe or Japan. Written by a man who once believed conventional explanations before he went to live in Latin America as an official trying to help its economic development. |
What Went Wrong by Bernard Lewis |
A small book presenting a top scholar's very readable account of the history that led the Islamic world from its pinnacles of achievement in the past to its present pathology and poisonous and dangerous hatreds. |