"To compensate a little for the treachery and weakness of my memory, so extreme that it has happened to me more than once to pick up again, as recent and unknown to me, books which I had read carefully a few years before . . . I have adopted the habit for some time now of adding at the end of each book . . . the time I finished reading it and the judgment I have derived of it as a whole, so that this may represent to me at least the sense and general idea I had conceived of the author in reading it." (Montaigne, Book II, Essay 10 (publ. 1580))

Thursday, January 30, 2020

The Second Sleep (Robert Harris, 2019)

(298 pages)

I like this author's writing style quite a bit (this one, for example).

Here, a young priest travels into a somewhat remote area west of London to attend to the burial of the local priest.  The setting is a world reminiscent of the Middle Ages, but the time is hundreds of years after an unspecified apocalyptic event that caused devastation starting in early 21st century.

Knowledge of pre-deluge events is prohibited; technology is feared.  But of course there are a few folks who insist on digging around, and get in trouble with the authorities (some of whom also are interested in digging around).

Young priest encounters impoverished noble lady; wealthy local interested in improving weaving technology; various others.

I liked the book; somewhat overlapped with (but didn't run nearly as interesting) as this one (which is among my very favorites).

Friday, January 17, 2020

The Complete Works of Isaac Babel (compilation 2002; mostly written early 1920s)

(1,051 pages) (though I skipped the screenplays)

I keep seeing favorable references to Babel, but never read him before this.  His biography is compelling - war correspondent (reminded me of Vasily Grossman) so lots of access - then he becomes disillusioned and out of favor.  Rare, at least for me, reporting on the Red v. White (and other splinter groups) immediately following WWI.  Early 1920s Russia hadn't yet implemented systematic censorship so his war reporting was more open, I think, than what Grossman could have done (Grossman had to do it via his smuggled-out book).

Babel eventually executed by Soviet regime.

I'll just mention a few of the categories in this quite-wonderful collection.

***

1920 Diary - perhaps my favorite war writing (and I've read lots of this)?  Can't-miss content, and not even prep'd for publication (though this was basis for much of the Red Cavalry tales)

dense.  highly effective . . . at least at the level of battles, skirmishes, movement between towns (cart transports. horses).  towns taken and lost.  confusion, exhaustion, merely finding food or forage.  billets.

constant movement, constant commandeering of horses, provisions, shelter - locals get expert at hiding things

airplanes new - being used by the Poles - terrifying though not all that effective

just being tired, and depressed

interspersed with descriptions of age-old interactions - Poles and Jews, Cossacks, the borderlands, Galicia, shtetls, centuries of getting along and then sudden butchery.  like forever.

Babel as "more like me" - bookish, not cut out for soldiering - but somehow finds himself right smack in the middle of everything - reminds of Vasily Grossman (Red Star writer)

little context is provided (as to what was going on in the larger political/military sphere, who was backing Poles - etc) - I think this heightens the immediacy of the war reporting, limits the distractions

running throughout - author as Jew - don't know if he tried to hide it, but he couldn't in any event.  he feels connectedness to Jewish communities that he encounters.   most in dire circumstances

the excitement around communism fading for Babel . . . he eventually characterizes as "fairy tales" the grand stories he tells locals as part of his job.  as in all these settings, others are true believers and/or opportunists; discussing the International, worldwide uprisings, free everything (modern US politics might buy it, however)

***

Odessa stories - mostly about Jewish gangsters

***

Red Cavalry stories - genuinely excellent - but not quite as compelling to me as the raw notes in the 1920 Diary (though I read Red Cavalry first).  One aspect here:  Babel made the mistake of being too honest, naming commanders who were ineffective - several became leading figures in Soviet army, and they didn't forget.

**

Stories from Leningrad 1918 - just a few, great, raw

**

Stories from [Georgia?] - propaganda feel, I didn't like these very much.

Monday, January 13, 2020

Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind (Yuval Noah Harari, 2015)

(464 pages)

Book club selection (via Rose; session held 12 January 2020). (PJ and I missed - colds.)

in general I very much like this type of book

not nec new, but a useful way of discussing man's rapid ascent - competitors had no time to adjust (see e.g. large animals in North America)

slower - more deeply wired - is the group-affinity, or tribalism - need to recognize how strong this is, not fear it; at the moment it's co-opted by politicians, community organizers, grant-seekers

hadn't thought about how cooking simplified digestion, or why humans went after marrow

my twitter feed is full of controversies about genetics - this gets into it but I don't understand

idea of the Cognitive Revolution - 70-30,000 years ago - use of language to rise up.  the idea of myths and abstractions for groups >150

the ridiculousness of characterizing Peugot as a myth.  it's a nexus of contracts.  limited liability as something awesome . . . a simple way to encourage investment

similar for trade characterized as "fiction" = yes credit comes from credo

ridiculousness of forager societies as an ideal - the original affluent societies - come on "wholesome and varied diet"

faculty lounge discussion of ecological issues, capitalism in particular - yuck - bogeyman of economic growth; Adam Smith cliches

whining about how tough jobs are, how much work is required - come on

equality - look around your high school - nothing could be less natural (or more "myth")

trying to cover too much

but yes this is worth reading notwithstanding the above complaints