Recommend a good biography

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SierraWhiskey

Original Poster:

397 posts

200 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
I'm going on holiday soon. A holiday where I might actually get chance to read a book.

It's been a while since I last read a book (for various reasons) and I feel completely out of touch with what's out there. I've had a look through a few well known sites to try and find something I like, but there seems to be an impossible number to trawl through. So, I'm hoping to shortcut this by asking for some recommendations

I used to read a lot of fiction, but gravitated towards autobiographies & biographies over the years, and I've tended to go for either something funny - usually by a comedian (I might try Bob Mortimer), or motor/motorsport related. I really enjoyed Adrian Newey's book, and I've read a few of Clarkson's books in the past - don't shoot me, I think he's a lot better on paper.

However, I'm totally open to something new I hadn't thought of before, so would you be so kind as to let me know what you've enjoyed, and why please?

jeff666

2,352 posts

198 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
Niki Lauda's biography was good IMO,

Likewise "the two of us" by Sheila Hancock about her life with John Shaw.


PlywoodPascal

5,370 posts

28 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
ok, so not strictly a biography, though it contains many of several people, but I would really reeccomend the book

"Age of wonder" about the enlightenment period and the changes in science and society through it. a biography of the age of englightenment, perhaps.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Age-Wonder-Richard-Holmes...

I loved the combination of the scientific process with the passion and romance of the, er, romantic period. When you look at what people managed to discover and understand and the technology they had to do it with (e.g. there is a lot about Herschel - the astronomer who mastered making telescopes and saw the first galaxies), it's really quite amazing.

Closely related, 'the invention of nature' by Andrea wulfl is a great biography of Humboldt, the scientist-explorer, who had great adventures exploring South America. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Invention-Nature-Adventur...

and if you want a proper biography, .I really enjoyed this one of Benjamin Franklin (obvious choice, sorry. but really such a fascinating life, it's a proper adventure story. a remarkable man definitely, even more definitely a remarkable self publicist).
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Benjamin-Franklin-America...


Edited by PlywoodPascal on Thursday 8th August 15:12


Edited by PlywoodPascal on Thursday 8th August 15:14

James-gbg1e

386 posts

87 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
Richard Branson's book is very interesting. Shoe Dog was also a decent holiday read (the formation of what became Nike).

SierraWhiskey

Original Poster:

397 posts

200 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
Thanks both. I'll look them up.

Nikki Lauda was always an interesting character.

Gixer968CS

703 posts

95 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
Leathered by John Hopkins. Rarely read biographies as I tend to get bored and don't finish them. This one is a cracking read though.

ChevronB19

6,371 posts

170 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
Motorsport: Life at the Limit by Sid Watkins was excellent and available secondhand.

Comedy: Adrian Edmondson’s autobiography ‘Beserker’ is meant to be good, but I haven’t read it (yet)

Martin315

331 posts

16 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
Not a biography but I can recommend this

https://www.amazon.co.uk/High-Performance-Britain-...

Edited to explain why I enjoyed it - I knew quite a lot of this but it’s very well written, reads almost like a novel. Not one if you want to get bogged down in historical detail but a great holiday read.

Edited by Martin315 on Thursday 8th August 16:22


Edited by Martin315 on Thursday 8th August 16:22

Richard-390a0

2,572 posts

98 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
Moby - Porcelain & Bez - Buzzin' are two good music related ones, Eddie Jordan - An Independent Man & Bob Mortimer - And Away is good although not laugh a minute. On the books thread someone said the Ade Edmondson - Berserker book was too focused on his abusive childhood memories & not enough on the comedy years.

toasty

7,777 posts

227 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
The Moon's a Balloon - David Niven.

Fabulous life well lived in a time almost forgotten.They simply don't do them like this any more.

zbc

899 posts

158 months

Thursday 8th August
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Patrick Stewart, not much trekkie but a fascinating life

cartart

238 posts

237 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
I learnt that the Christopher Lee one is supposed to be epic.

But I have yet to find a copy.

Brian Blessed - 2 of them, are just brill, especially as a talking book in the car!!!

shirt

23,467 posts

208 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
how about snapshots of biography mixed with history, and a properly WTF narrative?

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/mar/04/east...

william dalrymple is an excellent writer, i find his books take in massively complex threads and puts them into prose that is akin to an adventure novel. easy to read, exciting and with a great sense of pace. unputdownable in my case.

this one is about the history of the east india company and how it came, half by design and half by accident, to be the de facto ruler of india. i find it amazing that this simply staggering episode of our history isn't widely known.


LimmerickLad

2,126 posts

22 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
Peter Ustinov.........Deary Me....very interesting man but that may just be me wink

PlywoodPascal

5,370 posts

28 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
shirt said:
how about snapshots of biography mixed with history, and a properly WTF narrative?

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/mar/04/east...

william dalrymple is an excellent writer, i find his books take in massively complex threads and puts them into prose that is akin to an adventure novel. easy to read, exciting and with a great sense of pace. unputdownable in my case.

this one is about the history of the east india company and how it came, half by design and half by accident, to be the de facto ruler of india. i find it amazing that this simply staggering episode of our history isn't widely known.
yeah, this is excellent, and I learnt so much.
especially the life/rule of Shah Alam II, totally crazy.

shirt

23,467 posts

208 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
Yes, poor bloke.

The one about the koh i noor is equally good. His latest is due out soon, can’t wait. Love his writing and have done tours of old Delhi based upon them.

snuffy

10,464 posts

291 months

Thursday 8th August
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I read Sue Pollard's autobiography a goodly number of years ago and it was really good and very amusing.

Yes, Peggy from Hi-De-Hi!

Wafu7

138 posts

37 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
Andrew Lycett’s biography of Ian Fleming: https://amzn.eu/d/8GMGB5s

2 GKC

2,059 posts

112 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
ChevronB19 said:
Motorsport: Life at the Limit by Sid Watkins was excellent and available secondhand.

Comedy: Adrian Edmondson’s autobiography ‘Beserker’ is meant to be good, but I haven’t read it (yet)
I’d skip Beserker. It was mostly self indulgent, self congratulatory humourless guff. A big disappointment.

i4got

5,733 posts

85 months

Thursday 8th August
quotequote all
What about a biographical novel? Agony and the ecstacy - irving stone.