Where have all the good nonfiction books gone?

Well it happened; my greatest fear about participating in a TBR challenge has come true. I have two shelves of books waiting to be read and not one of them seems appealing right now. For the last four days I have picked up and discarded several books. The nonfiction books I thought would be interesting have turned out to be dull. Now, I know what you are thinking; “all nonfiction books are dull and boring”. Oh but you are wrong! A good nonfiction reads like a novel, full of interesting characters and engaging plots. Take these titles for example:
In the Heart of the Sea, the Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex by Nathaniel Philbrick. This is the true story that inspired Moby Dick. I could not put this book down. It was artfully written and kept me reading long into the night.  Even if you are not into adventure books this is not to be missed. The human drama is played out better than most novels.
The Greatest Show on Earth, the Evidence for Evolution by Richard Dawkins is by far one of the most engaging science books I have read. This is the book Darwin would have written had he had the knowledge modern science now holds. If you want to learn about evolution this is the book to pick up.
A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson is my favorite science read. Bryson has written the definitive layman’s science book. It is funny, includes fascinating characters and is easy to understand. If you feel your high school science was just not enough this is the book for you.
Then there is A J Jacobs, who writes about a year in his life of experiments. The Year of Living Biblically is my favorite, but The Know it All is laugh out loud funny.
Ian Mortimer’s The Time Traveler’s Guide to Medieval England made me beg for more. He concentrates on the 14th century; I am hoping he writes more on other centuries.
For a good bio no one can beat Walter Isaacson. Benjamin Franklin is my favorite. I think this should be read by all high school students.
So far I have tossed four books I bought this summer, all have good titles but wow are they dry and dull:
Proust and the Squid by Maryanne Wolf, God’s Secretaries, the making of the King James’s Bible by Adam Nicolson, My Jesus Year by Benyamin Cohen and A Brief History of the Anglo-Saxons (though this one is written well enough I will finish it).  I wish I would have borrowed these from the library, I would have felt better about tossing them.
So dear Readers, I am not sure what to do, part of me would like to toss all of my TBRs and start again while another part of me really wants to finish the challenge. I guess I will keep trying, after all not all challenges are easy, but this is one I really wish would be.
Happy Reading
Sari

My new iPhone and why I am not reading right now

Well I finally did it. I now feel as if I am up to 21st Century phone standards as I gave up my antiquated (which means it is at least three years old) boring ol’ cell phone for a new smart phone. I am now the owner of a iPhone 3GS (whatever the hell 3GS means).  I can now text, tweet and access Facebook anytime I want. Good grief, did I just say that?
My old cell phone, an LG Shine, was okay, as long as I did not try to talk, text, or share photos; in other words it was awful! For about a year I hardly used it, never kept it charged and quite frankly quit giving out my number. I half jokingly told my family, it was for emergencies only, though in reality it was never charged, and no good to me.  I thought about giving up my cell plan all together but could not quite bring myself to do it, you know, because of the emergency aspect of the phone. After all, when is the last time you saw a phone both around your town?
On Thursday my beau mentioned to me that AT&T had iPhones on sale so Saturday I found myself at the local AT&T store signing up for two more years. Now I have a phone that so far, sounds clear, is easy to operate and has some entertaining apps to play with. Don’t laugh but my beau and I spent far too much time Saturday night attempting to master the physics behind Angry Birds. Far more time than two grownups should. For those of you, who are unfamiliar with Angry Birds, be glad. It just means you are not pulled into the latest goofy fad.
As far as reading goes, I have yet to find something that pulls me in. I have picked up several books from my TBR pile only to find each dull and not at all what I expected. I tried My Jesus Year by Beyamin Cohen, Life Ascending, ten great inventions of evolution by Nick Lane and one other that I cannot even recall. I managed to finish The invention of air by Steven Johnson but event that one became dull and repetitive.  
 Now you can see why I had no problem going out and buying a new toy.
Tonight I am going to read some blogs, Watch BBC America’s Being Human and look for apps to add to my phone. The two feet of snow we got over the weekend is melting but I am still going to stay in tomorrow, hoping to find a book that grabs me. Wish me luck!
Amazing Waste

Repurposing Food and Reducing Waste

measurestillformeasure

Shakespeare, Classics, Theatre, Thoughts

Nerd Cactus

Quirky Intellect for the Discerning Nerd

Sillyverse

Stories of magic and mystery

Commonplace Fun Facts

Mind-Blowing Facts You Didn’t Know

Fictionophile

Fiction reviews, Bookblogger, Fiction book reviews, books, crime fiction, author interviews, mystery series, cover, love, bookish thoughts...

Patrick W. Marsh

monsters, monsters, everywhere

Shakespeare for Kids Books

Opening the door for kids to love Shakespeare and the classics

desperatelyseekingcymbeline

The 10-year Shakespeare New Year Resolution

Katzenworld

Welcome to the world of cats!

booksandopinions.com

The Book Reviews You Can Trust!

The Book Review Directory

For Readers and Writers

thelitcritguy

screams from the void

Author Adrienne Morris

Step Into the Past—Lose Yourself in the Story.

crafty theatre

ideas inspired by crafty characters

Critical Dispatches

Reports from my somewhat unusual life

The Nerd Nebula

The Nucleus of the Universe for all Nerd Hacks!