

Historically Thinking
Al Zambone
We believe that when people think historically, they are engaging in a disciplined way of thinking about the world and its past. We believe it gives thinkers a knack for recognizing nonsense; and that it cultivates not only intellectual curiosity and rigor, but also intellectual humility. Join Al Zambone, author of Daniel Morgan: A Revolutionary Life, as he talks with historians and other professionals who cultivate the craft of historical thinking.
Top mentioned books
Here are the most frequently recommended books on the Historically Thinking podcast:

#1 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Jane Austen
A Life
#2 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Capitalism, Politics, and Railroads in Jacksonian New England
#3 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The Battle for the Classics
How a 19th Century Debate Can Save the Humanities Today

#4 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The Minutemen and Their World
#5 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Faces of Muhammad

#6 Mentioned in 1 episodes
U.S.A. Trilogy
#7 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Matriona’s House

#8 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Death rode the rails
#9 Mentioned in 1 episodes
My Father's Glory

#10 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Utopia

#11 Mentioned in 1 episodes
They Knew They Were Pilgrims
Plymouth Colony and the Contest for American Liberty
#12 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Saracens

#13 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The intellectual life of the British working classes

#14 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Wild Problems
A Guide to the Decisions That Define Us

#15 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Memoirs of a British Agent
Being an account of the author's early life in many lands and of his official mission to Moscow in 1918
#16 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Jane Austen in Boca

#17 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Ninth Street women
#18 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Dixie Bohemia
#19 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The History Manifesto

#20 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Dominion
The Power of Man, the Suffering of Animals, and the Call to Mercy