I've taken a very keen interest in reading lately. I finished "The Golden Condom" by Jeanne Safer in three days, a new reading record for me given how long I'm prone to hemming and hawing. It was about the psychological states of unrequited lovers, cheaters, the cheater's victims, and both fulfilling and unfulfilling relationships, and more. It was very interesting and enlightening.
Before that I read "It's All About The Bike" by Robert Penn, about a man's worldwide journey, collection parts from the greatest manufacturers to build his perfect bicycle, interlaced with a biography of himself and his bicycling journeys, an informative documentary on the invention and development of the bicycle since it's invention, and interesting bicycling and bike facts. That was a great read.
I'm going to be picking back up 'Adventures of a Bystander', Peter Drucker's Autobiography. Also, Drucker's "Managing for Results" which I have on loan from the library. Just so much by him is so enchantingly pragmatic.
I grew up loving fiction, but now it seems that nonfiction has arrested my interest almost entirely, especially by worldly and wise authors. I'm actively searching for more books that fall under this distinction to gobble up.