Steve Middendorf
http://amerdilly.tumblr.com/tagged/Reverse/chrono
https://www.goodreads.com/stevemid
progress:
(35%)
"I had the idea to compare this to 3 Who Made A Revolution. However, the latter is more like a paean to Bolívar than a scholarly study of ejecting Spain from South America. Such an achievement deserves to be fully documented and interlaced with other events in the Americas and Europe" — Dec 30, 2025 12:39AM
"I had the idea to compare this to 3 Who Made A Revolution. However, the latter is more like a paean to Bolívar than a scholarly study of ejecting Spain from South America. Such an achievement deserves to be fully documented and interlaced with other events in the Americas and Europe" — Dec 30, 2025 12:39AM
Steve Middendorf
is currently reading
Reading for the 2nd time
Steve Middendorf said:
"
This book is like going to the zoo on LSD. You don't know what's what, who's talking, where are you are, or where you've been. But the scenery is intense. If I had it to do over again I would reread the Border Series instead.
...more
"
No, no, it was impossible not to give this figure his due—this instigator of countless inhuman crimes was also the leader, the merciless builder of a great and terrible state.
“Sometimes I think that I haven’t loved Michele for many years now, that I continue to repeat that phrase out of habit, not noticing that loving feelings no longer exist between us, and have been replaced by others, perhaps equally valid, but completely different. I think again of the anxiety with which I waited for Michele as a fiancé, of the desire we had to be alone, to talk, of the time that went by rapidly, on the thread of looks and words, and of the tedium that now descends when we’re alone together, and no outside distraction, not the radio or the movies, comes to save us.”
― Forbidden Notebook
― Forbidden Notebook
“If [the Allies] open a second frontline, Germany will definitely lose.” Zhou was prescient: the battle was indeed the turning point, when the Soviet Union began to turn back the Nazi invasion. Yet Zhou still believed that there might be a place for a Japanese-dominated sphere in the postwar world. Rightly suspecting that the Americans and British did not really trust the USSR, he thought they might try and prop up Japanese power to contain the Soviets: “They’ll still allow Germany a certain level of power so as to contain the USSR. Otherwise the whole of Europe and Asia will all be controlled by the Soviet Union . . . so the US, Britain, Germany, and Japan will all have to compromise to face the USSR.”4”
― Forgotten Ally: China's World War II, 1937-1945
― Forgotten Ally: China's World War II, 1937-1945
“Since 1945, the United States has supported a liberal international order underpinned by a variety of international institutions intended to strengthen military and economic security. The United States has violated the liberal values underlying that order on frequent occasions, most notably in Asia and Latin America, but these same values did become norms that could then be used to criticize such behavior.”
― China’s Good War: How World War II Is Shaping a New Nationalism
― China’s Good War: How World War II Is Shaping a New Nationalism
“EVEN HERE, IN THESE FIRST glimmers of liberty, we begin to see the character of a continent. The American-born were hungry for liberties, yet unaccustomed to freedom; resourceful, yet unacquainted with self-rule; racially mixed, yet mistrustful of whatever race they were not. For three hundred years of authoritarian reign, Spain had carefully instilled these qualities. “Divide and subjugate” had been the rule. Education had been discouraged, in many cases outlawed, and so ignorance was endemic. Colonies were forbidden from communicating with each other, and so—like spokes of a wheel—they were capable only of reporting directly to a king. There was no collaborative spirit, no model for organization, no notion of hierarchy. It was why the people of Coro or Maracaibo or Guayana refused to obey their newly independent brothers in Caracas; given the choice, they preferred the crown. And even though Americans had been inclined to mix across racial lines from the beginning, Spain had worked hard to keep the races apart, feed their suspicions. Add to this a church that was thoroughly opposed to independence, and a picture emerges unlike any other in that age of revolutions. If Spanish America now found itself strong enough to rise up against Spain, it would never quite rid itself of the divisions that the Council of the Indies had carefully installed in the first place.”
― Bolivar: American Liberator
― Bolivar: American Liberator
“China is the major Allied belligerent whose position on the meaning of the war has shifted most thoroughly during the postwar era.”
― China’s Good War: How World War II Is Shaping a New Nationalism
― China’s Good War: How World War II Is Shaping a New Nationalism
Middle East/North African Lit
— 2405 members
— last activity Jan 16, 2026 02:42PM
Current banner photo : Gaza at Palestine #Land day https://altahrir.wordpress.com/2020/02/04/land-in-eastern-gaza-declared-a-disaster-zone-due-to-isr ...more
#BookTwitter- A Literary Salon
— 81 members
— last activity Apr 09, 2023 10:05AM
#BookTwitter group reads- a multilingual reading community
Odysseus to Ulysses
— 63 members
— last activity Jun 22, 2024 05:04PM
This group will be reading first Homer's The Odyssey, for which we plan to take around two months, and then James Joyce's Ulysses, which may take abou ...more
The Thomas Mann Group
— 247 members
— last activity Jan 17, 2026 05:34AM
Members of Kindred Spirits and other interested GR members read the works of Thomas Mann. Our next scheduled read is The Magic Mountain, taking plac ...more
Steve’s 2025 Year in Books
Take a look at Steve’s Year in Books, including some fun facts about their reading.
More friends…
Polls voted on by Steve
Lists liked by Steve













































