Paper:
Just finished:
Kearney's March, a misleading title indeed, although the subtitle: The epic creation of the American West, 1846-1847, is more accurate. The author, Winston Groom, is according to the dust jacket, "the author of fifteen previous books." I had never heard of him. He chronicles not only Kearney's march, but Fremont's travels and subsequent history, Doniphan's march toward Chihuahua, Santa Anna's various treacheries, President Polk's problems with Fremont's father-in-law, etc. And also the Donner tragedy.
One minor gripe with his book: His bibliograpy is extensive, but he quotes people without attribution. This is actually a strange complaint for me, because I don't like flipping to endnotes constantly when they're only page references, but I want the references when I want 'em.
Another aside: One of the books in the bibliography is Robert Leckie's Sea to Shining Sea. Leckie was mentioned earlier in this thread.
Waiting:
The Secret Life of Pronouns by James Pennybaker, Chair of the Department of Psychology at U Texas Austin.
A More Perfect Heaven (Dava Sobel), about Copernicus. Sobel is a fine writer.
The Man who Found the Missing Link: Eugene Dubois and his lifelong quest to prove Darwin right, by Pat(tricia) Shipman.
A science-fiction book by Spider Robinson
Several mysteries.
On my new tablet, for reading in waiting rooms, etc.:
Two Little Savages by (Ernest Thompson Seton.
Mansfield Park and Emma, both by Jane Austen. The latter is a most amusing book.
The Jungle Bookby Rudyard Kipling, which I somehow missed reading when I was a kid.