Best products from r/TheGrittyPast
We found 10 comments on r/TheGrittyPast discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 10 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.
4. The Night Battles: Witchcraft and Agrarian Cults in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
- Compact robot floor cleaner runs up to 3 hours on a single charge using microfiber cloths or most brands of disposable cloths
- Guided by North Star Navigation System to methodically clean open areas, around furniture and rugs, and along a room perimeter
- Whisper-quiet operation; turns itself off when finished
- Low maintenance with no bins to empty of filters to change
- Cleans all hard wood surfaces including vinyl, hardwood and laminate
Features:
5. Between Mutiny and Obedience: The Case of the French Fifth Infantry Division during World War I (Princeton Legacy Library (225))
- 1 unpainted, unassembled 25mm heroic scale miniature. 25mm heroic scale is compatible with 28mm scale.
- Models and games are supplied unpainted and may require assembly or preparation before play. Miniatures is, however, durable and ready to paint or play right out of the package.
- Reaper Miniatures are perfect for RPG and tabletop games including Pathfinder, Dungeons and Dragons (any edition), Dragon Age, Castles and Crusades, Hackmaster, Frostgrave, and even Savage World.
Features:
6. Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West
- Type: E-ATX Mid Tower
- Motherboard Compatibility: Micro ATX, ATX, E-ATX, SSI CEB, SSI EEB
- Internal 3.5" Drive Bays: 7
- Expansion Slots: 7
- Dual Front 120mm fans are equipped with LED on/off switch
- Top mounted IO ports- 2x USB 3.0,2x USB 2.0,Audio out,MIC in
- Screw-less design for 5.25" Devices
- Easy to remove/install front 5.25" bay covers
Features:
7. Survival in Auschwitz
- For an extra-long, extra-smooth tip
- Four separate precision profile holes
- Automatic Stop feature
- Dynamic Torsion Action to reduce pencil tip breakage
- Also has two lead pointers for 2mm and 3.2mm lead holders
Features:
Fantastic recommendation, I got to read Junger's memoir last year and thoroughly enjoyed it. Absolutely horrifying and enlightening.
One of my favorite WWI books is A World Undone, by G. J. Meyer. Which is ironic since I don't think I've ever posted a single anecdote from it (an error I need to severely correct).
It's super dense, but probably one of the best overviews of the war, encapsulating a deep amount of academic research, primary sources from soldiers, civilians, leaders- all the while providing important historical context and background for the many many actors/nations involved, their motives, and goals.
I recommend this book to ANYONE interested in WWI besides a passing understanding. At 816 pages it can be daunting to most readers, but if you have the interest, absolutely check out this book.
Another great book is Max Hastings's Inferno, which is one of the best "social histories" of the war IMO. The wide-range of intimate, tragic, surprising, and sometimes funny testimonies collected in the book, along with Hastings's excellent prose, is one of the most "human" retellings of WWII, I've ever read and is a must for anyone who is interested in the war beyond just the military and political aspects.
Edit: I also want to include Hastings's Retribution which covers the Pacific campaign (1944-45) in equally masterful prose and heartwrenching testimony. Learned not only a lot about the Japanese perspective but also of people's lives under Japanese occupation.
Also Rick Atkinson's Liberation Trilogy, which is a fantastic (American POV) of the war and incredibly well written.
You're going to be in for a tough time! Finding good sources that are non-academic on witch trials and Sabbats is like finding Bigfoot. Part of it is because of the high amount of folklorists who believe they were real witches and treat it with a nonhistorical tint. Often they add facts that are blatantly false. The rest are academics who do good microhistories on witch trials.
My number one suggestion would be to either try out this book (mostly primary sources, but in good English and readable) or read some Carlo Ginzburg. He's the authoritarian on Sabbats and one of the best historians in history. His Night Battles and Ecstasies are both on Sabbats and are the premier work on them.
Sorry I can't be of more help there! If you do stumble upon something better let me know, because it's a problem I'm encountering as well.
I would most recommend Richard Pipes' The Russian Revolution, but Orlando Figes' A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution: 1891-1924 is a very close second. I have both and would almost recommend them equally.
Hope that helps!