@deezdeez

@deezdeez

Dan

218 Reads

Followers3

Following2

Joined 5 months ago

Dan's Books by Status

54 Books

See all
The Executioners
Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln
A Fire Upon the Deep
The Gate of the Feral Gods
The Shadow of What Was Lost
How to Defeat a Demon King in Ten Easy Steps
Operation Bounce House

Dan's Reading Goals

Goal

10/12 books
83%

2026 Reading Goal

Read 12 books by . They're 4 books ahead of schedule. 🙌

Dan's Pinned Prompts

Featured Prompt

5,996 books

What are your favorite books of all time?

When you think back on every book you've ever read, what are some of your favorites? These can be from any time of your life – books that resonated with you as a kid, ones that shaped your personal...

hardcover
Hardcover
Team
Carl's Doomsday Scenario
The Kaiju Preservation Society
Old Man's War
The Wise Man's Fear
The Name of the Wind

Dan's Most Popular Reviews

Provides a great look at some of the driving forces of poverty. I kinda wish it went into more detail, but it is otherwise a very powerful book.

great info. Now if I could just get my 13 yr old to read it.

Too complicated. Hard to follow along.

This was an extremely thorough and entertaining look at Meriweather Lewis and his adventure to the Pacific with William Clark. Ambrose provides an extensive look at the events leading to the famous Westward trek and leads the reader through a variety of different actors that contributed to the expedition becoming reality.

While I don't have any quibbles with the narrative or facts presented, I was disappointed at the editing in this book. I found at least a few typos or misplaced words and the placement of the maps and imagery did not match up with the action of the narrative, requiring me to try and find the map that corresponds with the timeline.

There was also a mention of a person that had not previously been introduced but was written about as if they had, which was very confusing and required multiple re-reads of the paragraph.

Overall, I genuinely enjoyed this book and would recommend it to anyone interested in this time period, or in historic exploration & explorers.

He’s got a lot of very interesting stories but he’s not a great storyteller. It felt like bits were missing that hurt the flow from one tale to the next. Bragging about some of his sexual exploits and abilities seemed unnecessary to the stories he was telling, too.