To better understand the present, we must look to the past.

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Editor’s note: The end of the year is approaching, and it is another year of inventory. What good books are there this year? Whose book deserves our most attention? Time magazine has selected its top ten books of the year, divided into fictional and non-fictional. This is the top ten books for non-fiction. The original article was published on the “Time” website by Lucy Feldman and the title is: The 10 Best Nonfiction Books of 2019

To better understand the present, the best non-fiction books published in 2019 look to the past. Some re-examine the conflicts that have shaped the modern world. Just like Patrick Radden Keefe’s investigation into a murder in Northern Ireland during a sectarian conflict. Others refute the old ideas, just as the Boa writer David Treuer did about the harmful misunderstanding of the indigenous civilization and culture that ended with the Knee River Massacre. Others protested against the unpleasant narrative, as Chanel Miller did in her memoirs of sexual assault and subsequent court cases (during which she changed her name to Emily Doe).

Here are the ten best non-fiction books of 2019.
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10 “this land belongs to us: A Declaration of Immigration” (This Land Is Our Land: An Immigrant’s Manifesto), Author: Suketu Mehta

Fighting over immigration issues across the political spectrumThis year, Suketu Mehta, a journalism professor (who immigrated from India to the United States at a young age) examined immigration issues from a bird’s-eye view. In this sturdy, clear-cut literary work, Mehta, a 2005 Pulitzer Prize finalist, appealed to us to reconsider the roots and impact of immigration. After studying colonialism for a long time, he thought that people who were once displaced by others should have the natural right to settle elsewhere. He provided encouraging reasons for a society that supported immigration, and asserted that prejudice against immigration was a real threat.

9. “Midnight Chernobyl: the world’s biggest nuclear disaster behind Untold Story” (Midnight in Chernobyl: The Untold Story of the World’s Greatest Nuclear Disaster), Author: Adam Heekin Adam Higginbotham

Reporter Adam Higginbotham spent years researching and reporting on that history: the April 1986 disaster at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine. That disaster was man-made in history, making actors from mechanical engineers to leaders one of the most notorious disasters in history. And this fascinating work shows a real-time panorama of the disaster. Higginbotham’s informative book describes the great disaster embedded in the tensions and dramatic context of the Soviet Union in the 1980s, and highlights the factors that led to the demise of the Soviet Union-including severe inequality, arrogance, and The image is higher than life.

8 “schizophrenic group”. (The Collected Schizophrenias: Essays), Author: Wang Wei Jun (Esmé Weijun Wang)