Book shelf recommendations

Mogador

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Some suggestions please for the ideal bookshelf for the platonic ideal of the eclectic author that lives in our heads. Research and reference focused please, but that doesn't exclude fiction, so long as it has a looking-something-up quality.

My starters, in no order, are:

- The Book of Imaginary Beings, Borges
- Outline of History, HG Wells
- Some collection of Lord Dunsany's shorter short stories
- Histories, Herodotus
- 1001 Nights
- Aesop
- OED and all that
- Rogets
- KJV Bible, your preferred supplementary translations, Bagavad Gita, etc

Go on, surprise me.
 
I don't read an awful lot of non-fiction these days. I do recall:
Heroes, by John Pilger. The flyleaf said any history teacher should start by chucking a copy of Heroes to every member of the class and it weren't lying. Pilger got around and it's still a good source of info on numerous modern, though becoming recently modern, then probably modern again, conflicts.
 
A good atlas, preferably a historical one that shows not only contemporary geographic labels but the extent of empires like Greek, Roman, British, Mongol, and the like.
 
I have a bookcase with just history books, probably half of them about Nazism and the Holocaust, a shelf of Latin America, a smattering of Roman, and the rest mostly about the Cold War. If any of that tickles your fancy, I can recommend something.
 
A good atlas, preferably a historical one that shows not only contemporary geographic labels but the extent of empires like Greek, Roman, British, Mongol, and the like.

There's an ORBIS for that. (And another one too). ;) It's only the Roman Empire ... but then the Greeks didn't have an empire in the sense that we know the word, and I haven't found a similar resource for the British and Mongol Empires. (Wikipedia and YouTube are fine, within reason, but they don't usually delve into the same detail).

For Roman and Greek history and mythology, I'd recommend at least the books of Dr Philip Matyszak. :) Thoroughly researched but written in a lively style, easy to follow, and with the more-than-occasional joke as well. (We shouldn't forget the ancients had a sense of humour). Thoroughly recommended.

(And no, I am not Philip Matyszak or one of his students. ;) I just enjoy his books).
 
the Greeks didn't have an empire in the sense that we know the word
I was thinking of Alexander, although strictly speaking, he was Macedonian. His "empire" is usually considered a cultural one rather than a political one. After his death, the empire fractured, but he spread the use of Greek language and arts into areas where it persisted for centuries.
 
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