I started really reading in fourth grade. By the sixth grade I was put into suspension because I did not leave the class room for recess since I was reading this really cool book on the Civil War. It was a huge book with these great painting showing the lines of march and lines of battle.


Much more interesting than playing on the monkey bars.
From sixth grade until well into high school I was reading a book every day or two. There is alot of wasted time in school where one can read. Course maybe I should have been doing school work and not reading history books or Big Red.
I used to read quite a bit of Science Fiction but history is stranger than fiction so I just stopped reading SciFi.
Heisenberg of the Heisenberg Uncertainly Principal was major figure in Physics in during the 20's-30's. When WWII started an obvious concern was would Germany build an atomic bomb before the Allies. With Heisenberg still in Germany this was a big problem. The OSS had a agent who was sent to Switzerland to either persuade Heisenberg to leave Germany and if that failed to kill him. The agent was a Jewish professional baseball player fluent in six or more languages. There is more to the story than this but if I wrote novel whose hero was a Jewish professional baseball player sent to assassinate or kidnap a **** scientist would it be believable? It was reality!
But the agent never did get Heisenberg. And what was Heisenberg up to during the **** era is still a mystery. Heisenberg had several opportunities to escape Germany but he did not do so. He said he stayed to save German Science and he did manage to keep many of his students from being sent to fight. And it appears that he gave realistic but gloomy estimates on the time and resources required to build a fission weapon which may have slowed down the German drive to build a device However I just watched a documentary where they seemed to have uncovered evidence that in late 1944 or early 1945 the Germans did set off a fission device of some type.
Long way of saying truth is stranger than fiction.
I still read when I can but I do not have as much time as I would like. And the Internet is a fabulous source of information.
Later,
Dan