"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 28, 2021

Lamy of Santa Fe (Paul Horgan, 1975)

(354 pages) 

(Amazon sent me some sort of special edition - high school yearbook size - printed a few years back by the Southwest Indian Foundation (whatever that is).  This permitted the photos to be much larger and of course way more compelling than normal.)

This book is a delight.

Willa Cather of course used Lamy's life as the source material for "Death Comes to the Archbishop," a book I very much enjoy (and occasionally re-read).  This actual biography might even be better.  I first read it in the 1990s (before keeping notes on stuff I read). Horgan won a Pulitzer for this.  It's remarkable how much the novel tracks the history.

PJ and I visited this area in the 1990s and can't wait to go back.  Historically unique, geographically blessed.

Lamy as the first archbishop in Santa Fe - appointed shortly after New Mexico is acquired via conquest from Mexico.  It's 1851 when Lamy arrives in Santa Fe - relatively "modern" in so many parts of the US - yet Santa Fe as so backward in those days.  Long isolated even from its former bishop way down in Durango; much more Mexican than American, but distinct from both.

The scenes prior to reaching New Mexico are compelling.  Lamy (with lifelong companion Machebeuf) in France.  Working in "forest parishes" in Ohio - mid-19th century yet primitive in many ways.  His passage down the Mississippi enroute to Santa Fe - slaves.

Gives a feel for the challenges of travel - to Santa Fe - but even moreso as he goes to Mexico, back to Europe, and through his huge diocese.   

The state of the local clergy upon his arrival - so few, so unsupervised - Cather not exaggerating those stories.

I'd guess this kind of book is out of fashion these days - centered around US imperialism, white conquest, etc. - not sure - I'd also wager that it remains highly useful as a way of learning about, thinking about the Southwest.  

Highly recommended.

Thursday, January 14, 2021

The Great Influenza - The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague in History (John M. Barry, 2004)

(546 pages)

Book club selection (via PJ; session held (via Zoom) January 10, 2021).

Timely re-read of a very good book first read in 2013, here's what I wrote then.

Notes from this time:

  • Consistently states that masks do not work.  2018 updated afterword misses the mark on work from home. Feels there is a last mile problem. Otherwise, seems pretty accurate.
  • Interesting that no one can come up with a cure for influenza.
  • We run into Jon Snow on page 27.
  • Woodrow Wilson, propaganda, getting the country into war, and then total war.
  • The press as an accomplice of government.
  • Armies and plagues; the extent to which World War I drove the outcome here. Troop movements within the US and around the world. The need to suppress information. Spanish flu!
  • India with 20 million deaths, yet barely a ripple of notice.