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Well written and interesting non- fiction books

161 replies

BeverleyCleverley · 28/06/2025 20:20

I've got a decent pile of fiction books to work through but I like to have some non fiction books on the go too and I'd love some recommendations! Particularly stuff about current affairs/politics etc but I also love geography/history/science books and open to wider suggestions

OP posts:
Westfacing · 29/06/2025 09:34

BeverleyCleverley · 29/06/2025 09:12

I live fairly near a big container port and sail a lot, this is definitely going on my list!

The author writes very movingly, and wittily, about the life of the mainly Filipino crew when they are in dock at Felixstowe and various seafarers' charities. And there's a great section on when they are going through the Suez Canal.

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 29/06/2025 09:36

The Only Plane In The Sky by Garrett Graff is one of the best non fiction books I’ve read (9/11)

A Woman Of No Importance by Sonia Purnell

The story of overlooked female spy Virginia Hall and her exploits in WW2

Say Nothing by Patrick Radden Keefe

Fascinating look at the IRA and in particular two of its female soldiers

Night by Elie Wiesel

Extraordinary Holocaust Memoir

VerbenaGirl · 29/06/2025 09:38

Anything Bill Bryson and East West Street by Philippe Sands. Definitely going to be reading some of the recommendations above.

squashyhat · 29/06/2025 09:38

Westfacing · 29/06/2025 07:18

I chose this book about container ships for my book club, to the initial bemusement of the other members! It really was an interesting read

www.waterstones.com/book/deep-sea-and-foreign-going/rose-george/9781846272998

An award-winning investigation into the strange and secretive world of international shipping.

I have just come back from Istanbul and watching the huge numbers of cargo ships from across the world entering and leaving the Bosphorous made me think about this (Shiptracker is an excellent app for details of each vessel) I'm glad someone has written about it and I'm definitely buying the book!

Dolamroth · 29/06/2025 09:39

I enjoyed Wedlock: How Georgian Britain's Worst Husband Met His Match by Wendy Moore

NevilleBigBottom · 29/06/2025 09:51

Ian Dunt - How to be a Liberal:

"The authoritarian right is taking control. From Viktor Orban in Hungary, to Brexit in Britain, to Donald Trump in America, nationalists are launching an all-out assault on liberal values. In this groundbreaking new book, political journalist Ian Dunt tells the story of liberalism, from its birth in the fight against absolute monarchy to the modern-day resistance against the new populism. In a soaring narrative that stretches from the battlefields of the English Civil War to the 2008 financial crash and beyond, this vivid, page-turning book explains the political ideas which underpin the modern world. But it is also something much more than that – it is a rallying cry for those who still believe in freedom and reason."

Ian Dunt - How Westminster Works... and Why it Doesn't:

"Why do some prime ministers manage to get things done, while others miserably fail? What is a 'special adviser' and how did they take over British political life? And why is the House of Lords more functional than most people think?

Most of us have a sense that our political system doesn't seem to work, but struggle to articulate exactly why. And for good reason: our political and financial institutions are cloaked in secrecy, archaic terminology, ancient custom and impenetrable jargon. Now, expert political journalist Ian Dunt is lifting the lid on British politics to expose every aspect of the setup in a way that can be understood and challenged. From Downing Street to Whitehall, the Commons to the Lords, this book is an indispensable guide to our political system - and how we might begin to fix it."

Dorian Lynskey - Everything Must Go:

"We have always told ourselves stories about the end of the world. Long before we watched superintelligent AI wage war on humanity in The Terminator, or read about a catastrophic deluge in J. G. Ballard’s The Drowned World, art, literature and politics were all haunted by recurring visions of apocalypse.

In Everything Must Go – a colourful, witty and stirring cultural history of the modern world that weaves in politics, history and science – Dorian Lynskey explores the endings that we have read, listened to, or watched with morbid fascination, from the sci-fi terrors of H. G. Wells and John Wyndham to the apocalyptic ballads of Bob Dylan and planet-shattering movie blockbusters.

Whether we’re fantasizing about nuclear holocaust or a collision with an asteroid, a devastating pandemic or a robot revolution, why do we like to scare ourselves, and why do we keep coming back for more? And how do fictional premonitions of the end play into real-life responses to existential threats?

Deeply illuminating about our past and our present, and surprisingly hopeful about our future, Everything Must Gowill grip you from beginning to, well, end."

John Sweeney - Killer in the Kremlin
John Sweeney - The Church of Fear: Inside the Weird World of Scientology

Eliot Higgins - We are Bellingcat:

"How did a collective of self-taught internet sleuths end up solving some of the biggest crimes of our time?

Bellingcat, the home-grown investigative unit, is redefining the way we think about news, politics and the digital future. Here, their founder - a high-school dropout on a kitchen laptop - tells the story of how they created a whole new category of information-gathering, galvanising citizen journalists across the globe to expose war crimes and pick apart disinformation, using just their computers.

From the downing of Malaysia Flight 17 over the Ukraine to the sourcing of weapons in the Syrian Civil War and the identification of the Salisbury poisoners, We Are Bellingcat digs deep into some of Bellingcat's most successful investigations. It explores the most cutting-edge tools for analysing data, from virtual-reality software that can build photorealistic 3D models of a crime scene, to apps that can identify exactly what time of day a photograph was taken.

In our age of uncertain truths, Bellingcat is what the world needs right now - an intelligence agency by the people, for the people."

Bill Browder - Red Notice:

"This is a story about an accidental activist. Bill Browder started out his adult life as the Wall Street maverick whose instincts led him to Russia just after the breakup of the Soviet Union, where he made his fortune.

Along the way he exposed corruption, and when he did, he barely escaped with his life. His Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky wasn’t so lucky: he ended up in jail, where he was tortured to death. That changed Browder forever. He saw the murderous heart of the Putin regime and has spent the last half decade on a campaign to expose it. Because of that, he became Putin’s number one enemy, especially after Browder succeeded in having a law passed in the United States—The Magnitsky Act—that punishes a list of Russians implicated in the lawyer’s murder. Putin famously retaliated with a law that bans Americans from adopting Russian orphans.

A financial caper, a crime thriller, and a political crusade, Red Notice is the story of one man taking on overpowering odds to change the world, and also the story of how, without intending to, he found meaning in his life."

BuffysBigSister · 29/06/2025 10:23

I second both the Patrick Radden Keefe books - Say Nothing and Empire of Pain. He writes in so much detail but his books are incredibly readable.

I also suggest Ghosts of the Tsunami by Richard Lloyd Parry, a very moving book about the impact of the 2011 tsunami on Japan.

If you're interested in German history / literature I really recommend Andrea Wulf's Magnificent Rebels which covers 10 years in a small German town called Jena where both Goethe and Schiller and other leading lights of Romanticism were all living. Its very, very readable

insomniaclife · 29/06/2025 10:33

PeonyPanda · 28/06/2025 21:07

Victor Klemperer’s diaries - a non practising Jew (son of a rabbi but baptised Protestant), professor of German literature in Dresden in 1930s. It’s utterly utterly gripping. Goes all the way through rise of nazism, 2WW, and into communist East Germany. So well written, but so shocking. It’s vast, and I’ve literally been carving out hours to sit and read it - because it’s so gripping.

This. In 20 odd years on MN I have never seen anyone other than me mention this amazing trilogy. Absolutely mesmerising and moving.

HollyGolightly4 · 29/06/2025 10:40

CurlewKate · 29/06/2025 07:47

Killing Thatcher-Rory Carroll’s book about the 1984 Brighton bombing is a spectacular non fiction book.

Came to recommend this.

Also, anything by Jon Ronson- particularly The Psychopath Test though.

Doppelganger - Naomi Klein

HollyGolightly4 · 29/06/2025 10:41

Oh We are Bellingcat is superb!

buymeaboaanddrivemetoreno · 29/06/2025 14:45

A Woman Of No Importance. The incredible true story of one of the most successful spies in WWII. You couldn't make up the trials this woman survived and what she achieved.

Tootingbec · 29/06/2025 15:12

Such great recommendations- have taken note of a few of them!

I would also recommend Bad Blood by John Carryou (not sure of the surname spelling!) which is about Elizabeth Holmes and Theranos and how she duped everyone into thinking she had discovered a revolutionary way of doing blood tests.

Control by Jane Monkton Smith - not the most cheerful of topics but will make you look very differently at the way people and the media talk about and respond to domestic violence. She is an ex copper and now criminology professor who has studied the 10 stages that (99% men) go through until they murder their partners. Chilling stuff but vitally important

And as others have said, anything by Jon Ronson is great

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 29/06/2025 15:57

buymeaboaanddrivemetoreno · 29/06/2025 14:45

A Woman Of No Importance. The incredible true story of one of the most successful spies in WWII. You couldn't make up the trials this woman survived and what she achieved.

It was great wasn’t it? I heard a film was coming but there’s been no sign.

PeonyPanda · 29/06/2025 18:33

insomniaclife · 29/06/2025 10:33

This. In 20 odd years on MN I have never seen anyone other than me mention this amazing trilogy. Absolutely mesmerising and moving.

I’m so glad other people have read them. I was reading thinking - this should be the go to text for all history / politics students , and yet for me it was a random audible recommendation, and I’d never even heard of it. Should be compulsory - so relevant and I’ve got such a different appreciation now.

Jetsmummy123 · 29/06/2025 19:05

Another vote for Bad blood, and Immortal life of Henrietta Lacks. If you like science Kat Arney’s Rebel Cell also good.
Would recommend A night to remember by Walter Lord - ( Titanic). Erik Larson’s Dead Wake (Lusitania.)

impressivelycunty · 29/06/2025 19:12

Invisible Child - eight years in the making, the story of Dasani, a black child living in poverty in New York - mindblowingly brilliant.

SingleAHF · 29/06/2025 19:54

The best book I've read for years is the biography of a famous militant suffragette called Mary Raleigh Richardson. It came out this year. Quite an eye-opener.

Gasp0deTheW0nderD0g · 29/06/2025 20:59

Guns, Germs and Steel, Jared Diamond. I thought this was fascinating.

Hitler, Stalin, Mum and Dad, Danny Finkelstein. I was mesmerised reading this. It's a family memoir. The fact that both his parents survived what their families were put through defies belief.

GasperyJacquesRoberts · 29/06/2025 21:08

I enjoyed Guns, Germs and Steel but I there's a fair amount of criticism of its conclusions from anthropologists and historians. It's still worth reading but I think it should be viewed as one person's interpretation rather than widely accepted theory.

SingleAHF · 30/06/2025 00:14

SydneyCarton · 28/06/2025 21:04

The Five by Hallie Rubenhold, about the lives of the five victims of Jack the Ripper. Fascinating for details of the lives of working class women in Victorian London and goes against all the received wisdom about who they were and how they ended up as victims.

I have this on audio book. Utterly brilliant.

powershowerforanhour · 30/06/2025 17:12

I haven't read any of Atul Gawande's books but they sound interesting- has anyone on this thread read any and what did you think of them?

Terpsichore · 30/06/2025 18:39

BeverleyCleverley · 29/06/2025 09:12

I live fairly near a big container port and sail a lot, this is definitely going on my list!

Rose George is great - that's a really excellent book, and I can also heartily recommend her Nine Pints - all about blood - and The Big Necessity, which is a genuinely fascinating book about how cultures around the world tackle sanitation.

I read a lot of non-fiction and one of my unexpected hits of last year was Entanglement by Emma Tarlo - a history of hair. An amazing read.

For history, Anna Funder's Stasiland is great. Bart Van Es's The Cut-Out Girl, about a young Jewish girl in wartime Holland, was a moving read too.

SheilaFentiman · 30/06/2025 18:58

The Spy and the Traitor - Ben McIntyre

The story of one of the last KGB agents working for the west and what happened when - after years of double agency - he needed to escape.

Tiddlywinkly · 30/06/2025 20:50

I really enjoyed The Five, Radium Girls and Singled Out (can you tell I'm interested in feminism?!).

I've been loving The Story of a Heart and I'm looking forward to reading Raising Hare.

I love a good biography or autobiography. I've finished one on a street photographer who worked as a nanny, Vivian Maier Developed

Tiddlywinkly · 30/06/2025 20:53

Oh, also The Wager (not my typical read at all, but excellent).

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