What is everyone reading??
Thread Starter
Swamp Donkey Man Cans




Joined: August 20, 2007
Posts: 4,367
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From: Massachusetts
What is everyone reading??
So here is the deal. I'm not a very big reader when it comes to books, I spend the majority of the time with my nose stuffed in automotive magazines. This past week my Girlfriend and I booked our first all inclusive trip and will be spending the week by the pool/beach in Punta Cana. I would like to have some great reading material to take with me. I'm not big into fiction, so I was looking for maybe a biography or anything non-fiction.
I started looking for something on/about/by Henry Ford but have become overwhelmed by the number of books written on that subject. So I figured what better place to ask but the Mustang community. Even though I would like a book about Henry Ford, or the automotive industry I will consider all suggestions. So, let me know what your reading and why you liked it.
I started looking for something on/about/by Henry Ford but have become overwhelmed by the number of books written on that subject. So I figured what better place to ask but the Mustang community. Even though I would like a book about Henry Ford, or the automotive industry I will consider all suggestions. So, let me know what your reading and why you liked it.
Like Father...
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I ♥ Sausage





Joined: April 4, 2007
Posts: 20,164
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From: Just outside the middle of nowhere
So here is the deal. I'm not a very big reader when it comes to books, I spend the majority of the time with my nose stuffed in automotive magazines. This past week my Girlfriend and I booked our first all inclusive trip and will be spending the week by the pool/beach in Punta Cana. I would like to have some great reading material to take with me. I'm not big into fiction, so I was looking for maybe a biography or anything non-fiction.
I started looking for something on/about/by Henry Ford but have become overwhelmed by the number of books written on that subject. So I figured what better place to ask but the Mustang community. Even though I would like a book about Henry Ford, or the automotive industry I will consider all suggestions. So, let me know what your reading and why you liked it.
I started looking for something on/about/by Henry Ford but have become overwhelmed by the number of books written on that subject. So I figured what better place to ask but the Mustang community. Even though I would like a book about Henry Ford, or the automotive industry I will consider all suggestions. So, let me know what your reading and why you liked it.
http://golikehellthebook.com/
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Thread Starter
Swamp Donkey Man Cans




Joined: August 20, 2007
Posts: 4,367
Likes: 2
From: Massachusetts
Yeah it is a great book, that was one of two books I have read that were made into movies. I also loved reading The Perfect Storm. If anyone hasn't read it you should, it doesn't matter if you have seen the movie or not the book draws you right in and you can't put it down.
Yeah that does look like a great book, I now remember someone talking about it at some point (I forget who). This one is going right to the top of my list.
Last edited by 07S197; Feb 21, 2010 at 08:15 PM.
Thread Starter
Swamp Donkey Man Cans




Joined: August 20, 2007
Posts: 4,367
Likes: 2
From: Massachusetts
Last edited by 07S197; Feb 21, 2010 at 08:15 PM.
This one is a quick, easy read. A Child Called It, by Dave Pelzer. A true story about his courage to survive the abuse and neglect by his mother. It amazes me the things his mother did to him. It is actually a trilogy, so if you enjoy it, there are 2 more that follow the next stages of his life.
I don't do trannies
or rear-ends anymore!
or rear-ends anymore!


Joined: September 23, 2008
Posts: 995
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From: Memphis
I'm a huge fan of anything Cormac MacCarthy, although The Road may give you some nightmares depending on your level of tolerance, it's a pretty graphic and disturbing book. I can say No Country for Old Men is a million times better than the movie
Just started reading . . .
The Search for God and Guinness: A Biography of the Beer that Changed the World
Stephen Mansfield

from amazon.com
Other books I enjoy to name a few . . . . (And I also recommend Go Like Hell.)
Also from amazon.com
What would Machiavelli Do? The Ends Justify the Meanness
Stanley Bing
Life of Pi
Yann Martel
The Driver: My Dangerous Pursuit of Speed and Truth in the Outlaw Racing World
Alexander Roy
from Barnesandnoble.com
Truth Stranger Than Fiction: Father Henson's Story of his Own Life
Josiah Henson
The Search for God and Guinness: A Biography of the Beer that Changed the World
Stephen Mansfield

from amazon.com
"Frothy, delicious, intoxicating and nutritious! No, I'm not talking about Guinness Stout-I'm talking about Stephen Mansfield's fabulous new book...The amazing and true story of how the Guinness family used its wealth and influence to touch millions is an absolute inspiration." - Eric Metaxas, New York Times best-selling author
"It's a rare brew that takes faith, philanthropy and the frothy head of freshly-poured Guinness and combines them into such an inspiriting narrative. Cheers to brewmaster Stephen Mansfield! And cheers to you, the reader! You're in for a treat." - R. Emmett Tyrrell Jr., Founder and editor-in-chief of The American Spectator
"It's a rare brew that takes faith, philanthropy and the frothy head of freshly-poured Guinness and combines them into such an inspiriting narrative. Cheers to brewmaster Stephen Mansfield! And cheers to you, the reader! You're in for a treat." - R. Emmett Tyrrell Jr., Founder and editor-in-chief of The American Spectator
Also from amazon.com
What would Machiavelli Do? The Ends Justify the Meanness
Stanley Bing
Machiavelli would feel at home in industry today. You don't need a birthright to be a modern prince--just an impulsive ruthlessness such as he described four centuries ago while trying to get back into the good graces of a Medici nobleman. A clever guy like him could really go places. Stanley Bing, a columnist for Fortune, is also a clever guy. In real life he has another name and works for a media company (a very, very clever person could probably patch together the clues he offers and figure out the company, if not the actual person), and as such he's been our spy behind corporate lines since he first started writing for Esquire back in 1984. In What Would Machiavelli Do? Bing gleefully offers hard-boiled Machiavellian advice about whom to fire in a downsizing (consultants first, secretaries last), how to make employees love you ("Give them perks.... When they're spending your money, you own them"), and why it's important that you also kick *** (one of the ways: "cutting them off curtly when they speak") and take names (so people know you'll not only hurt them, you'll also go after their friends). The overriding lesson of this book is always to love yourself, never apologize for anything you do, and when all else fails, recognize that the truth is flexible, and so can be bent any way you want. What makes all this amorality funny is that Bing plays it straight, putting his ruthless advice into an easily digestible how-to format. Sometimes the only way you can tell it's satire is when he mixes the musings of Adolf Hitler and Pol Pot in with those of modern business figures such as former Sunbeam CEO "Chainsaw" Al Dunlap. Firing people, killing people--same rules, different game. --Lou Schuler
Yann Martel
Yann Martel's imaginative and unforgettable Life of Pi is a magical reading experience, an endless blue expanse of storytelling about adventure, survival, and ultimately, faith. The precocious son of a zookeeper, 16-year-old Pi Patel is raised in Pondicherry, India, where he tries on various faiths for size, attracting "religions the way a dog attracts fleas." Planning a move to Canada, his father packs up the family and their menagerie and they hitch a ride on an enormous freighter. After a harrowing shipwreck, Pi finds himself adrift in the Pacific Ocean, trapped on a 26-foot lifeboat with a wounded zebra, a spotted hyena, a seasick orangutan, and a 450-pound Bengal tiger named Richard Parker ("His head was the size and color of the lifebuoy, with teeth"). It sounds like a colorful setup, but these wild beasts don't burst into song as if co-starring in an anthropomorphized Disney feature. After much gore and infighting, Pi and Richard Parker remain the boat's sole passengers, drifting for 227 days through shark-infested waters while fighting hunger, the elements, and an overactive imagination.
Alexander Roy
Alex Roy's father, while on his deathbed, hints about the notorious, utterly illegal cross-country drive from Los Angeles to New York of the 1970s, which then inspired his young son to enter the mysterious world of underground road rallies. Tantalized by the legend of the Driver—the anonymous, possibly nonexistent organizer of the world's ultimate secret race—Roy set out to become a force to be reckoned with. At speeds approaching 200 mph, he sped from London to Morocco, from Budapest to Rome, from San Francisco to Miami, in his highly modified BMW M5, culminating in a new record for the infamous Los Angeles to New York run: 32:07.
Sexy, funny, and shocking, The Driver is a never-before-told insider's look at an unbelievably fast and dangerous society that has long been off-limits to ordinary mortals.
Sexy, funny, and shocking, The Driver is a never-before-told insider's look at an unbelievably fast and dangerous society that has long been off-limits to ordinary mortals.
Truth Stranger Than Fiction: Father Henson's Story of his Own Life
Josiah Henson
Truth Stranger Than Fiction: Father Henson’s Story of His Own Life stands as a remarkable narrative on its own merits, but even more significant is its relationship to Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin. It is strange that the inspiration for a character whose name is a contemporary curse is based on an escaped slave, one-time soldier, preacher, founder of an independent black settlement, and slave-narrative writer. Unlike Stowe’s derivative character, Henson seized his freedom, made a life for himself in Canada, and freed fellow slaves before publishing his life story and taking the cause of the slaves and fugitives to England and before Queen Victoria herself.
Last edited by Evil_Capri; Feb 23, 2010 at 02:34 PM.
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Joined: January 30, 2004
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The most recent books that I read was "Awesome Bill from Dawsonville" (Bill Elliott's autobiography) and "Miracle" (Bobby Allison's autobiography).
Right now I'm reading "A Savage Factory" which is a true story about former supervisor at one of Ford's factories that built transmissions in the late 1980s. Considering everything that went on in Ford's factories, I'm shocked to see Ford still in the business.
Right now I'm reading "A Savage Factory" which is a true story about former supervisor at one of Ford's factories that built transmissions in the late 1980s. Considering everything that went on in Ford's factories, I'm shocked to see Ford still in the business.
Thread Starter
Swamp Donkey Man Cans




Joined: August 20, 2007
Posts: 4,367
Likes: 2
From: Massachusetts
Hey everyone, thanks for the suggestions. Some great ones I have written down and already bought a few.
Keep the list going if you like. I hope to do a lot more reading in the future and maybe some others would like the suggestions too.
Keep the list going if you like. I hope to do a lot more reading in the future and maybe some others would like the suggestions too.
NTTAWWT





Joined: January 27, 2007
Posts: 14,456
Likes: 35
From: That town you drive through to get to Myrtle Beach
driver by alex roy is next on my list
and as always, anything by john grisham



