Something to think on …

It is impossible to communicate to people who have not experienced it the undefinable menace of total rationalism
— Czeslaw Milosz, born on this date in 1911

Something to think on …

True love is inexhaustible; the more you give, the more you have.
— Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, born on this date in 1900

Friday, June 28, 2024

 I have never been a fan of Joe Biden. But I am dismayed at the commentary I have seen regarding his unfortunate performance at last night’s debate. How about we put away the politics? This is a fellow human suffering from a condition any of us could fall victim to. Why can’t we just pray for him?

P


Something to think on …

Prayer is the most powerful form of energy one can generate....It supplies us with a flow of sustaining power in our daily lives.
— Alexis Carrel, born on this dare in 1873

In case you wondered …

 … How Solzhenitsyn Found Himself—and God. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Soviet conditions, Solzhenitsyn came to understand, followed directly from materialism and atheism. If people are nothing but material objects, if there is nothing resembling what we call the soul, then concepts like “the sacredness of human life,” “human dignity” and “the inviolability of the person” are merely bourgeois mystification.

Something to think on …

A great many things which in times of lesser knowledge we imagined to be superstitious or useless, prove today on examination to have been of immense value to mankind.
— Lafcadio Hearn, born on this date in 1850

There’s a simpler explanation …

De Niro, Charlamagne Highlight Trump Derangement Syndrome.

These are people who enjoy celebrity, but have no more political expertise than the average citizen. I don’t care what they think and wish they would keep their opinions to themselves.

Something to think on …

To find joy in work is to discover the fountain of youth.
— Pearl S. Buck — born on this in  1892

Something to think on …

There is no swifter route to the corruption of thought than through the corruption of language
— George Orwell, born on this date in 1994

Something to think on …

A person without a sense of humor is like a wagon without springs. It's jolted by every pebble on the road.
— Henry Ward Beecher, born on this date in 1813

Something to think on …

Beauty is one of the rare things that do not lead to doubt of God.
— Jean Anouilh, born on this date in 1910

Something to think on …

Never do anything complicated when something simple will serve as well. It's one of the most important secrets of living.
— Erich Maria Remarque, born on this date in 1898

Claire Keegan

 

Because I'd recently read Kairos, winner of this year's International Booker Prize, the Internet suggested that I read the work another acclaimed contemporary European author, Claire Keegan. And so I obliged: this time having picked up Small Things Like These

Let me start by saying that this novel is more of a novella, and that it's been very well received. In many ways, this praise is deserved: I agree that the book is spare, but exacting; it's beautiful without being precious. Every word is measured, and the result, if this is the sort of literary style you enjoy, is a novella that is almost perfectly constructed. Everything that needs to be said is included, and what's not made explicit lurks just below the surface. 

But then, Small Things Like These felt to me like an unfinished work: just at the moment of conflict, the novel ends, leaving us to wonder what comes next. And to a certain extent, this can be envisaged. It's just that it would be have been satisfying if the plot had continued, and if the characters had been compelled to confront this conflict. As I say, they are not, and the result is a convincing ascent toward tension -- but one which ends without resolution. (To argue that the remainder can be left unspoken is not fully convincing to me.)

I won't be negative, though, because Keegan does pack a serious punch: this is a novella which functions on a number of levels: political, religious, cultural. There's identity and gender there, too. Ultimately, this is a book about Ireland: its history, its unspoken trauma. It is a book which can be read in a single sitting -- which is a relief of sorts because there is a lot here to unpack and process.

Lionel pegs these days …

… Social Justice Against Smarts | Peter J. Leithart | First Things. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

The Mental Parity (MP) movement begins its blitzkrieg through the institutions, inspired by the best-selling The Calumny of IQ: Why Discrimination Against “Dum People” is the Last Great Civil Rights Fight. It’s no longer permissible to speak about, or even to acknowledge, differences of intelligence. “Smart,” “stupid,” “dumb,” and all the related assemblage of evaluative terms are placed on the MP Index. CPS visits Pearson because her youngest child, Lucy, reports to a teacher that her mother uses these insulting words at home.

Something to think on …

Humor is a prelude to faith and laughter is the beginning of prayer.
— Reinhold Niebuhr, born on this date in 1892

Thursday, June 20, 2024

The former newspaper of record …

(18) NYC sees Trump was right - Don Surber

Once upon a time I wrote pretty regularly for the Times book section

I’m on his side …

Archbishop Vigan� says he faces schism charges from Vatican's doctrinal office | National Catholic Reporter.
  
I’m no big fan of Pope Francis either, even though I’m Jesuit-trained and he8s a Jesuit. The Church seems in a bad way these days. Too woke.

Something to think on …

Since when do you have to agree with people to defend them from injustice?
— Lillian Hellman, born on this date in 1905

Something to think on …

What a vast difference there is between knowing God and loving Him.
— Blaise Pascal, born on this date in 1623

Something to think on …

Public toilets have a duty to be accessible, poetry does not.
— Geoffrey Hill, born on this date in 1933

Something to think on …

Journalism allows its readers to witness history; fiction gives its readers an opportunity to live it.
— John Hersey, born on this date in 1914

Something to think on …

Loneliness is dangerous ... because if aloneness does not lead to God, it leads to the devil. It leads to the self.
— Joyce Carol Oates, born on this date in 1938

Haiku …

 It's a life lesson:

The rose, lovely as it seems,

Might hurt you with thorns.

Jennifer Knox

Jenny Erpenbeck

 


It was not until recently that I became acquainted with the work of Jenny Erpenbeck, winner of this year's International Booker Prize. But these prizes, of course, drive attention. And this in case, for good reason: Erpenbeck's Kairos is a moving, dire, complete novel. 

Part of what I most admired about the book is its symmetry: this is a love story that emerges under the shadow of two distinct German nations and which, perhaps not surprisingly, unravels as those nations become one. And more, it's a story about generations: about a young woman and an older man, and their attempts to bridge the history between them: the Second World War and the transition -- nearly immediate -- to a divided Germany. 

Kairos, the god of "fortunate moments," is just that: the serendipity of social interaction: the random quality of love. For the first part of the novel, Kairos is everywhere: a love born of a fortunate moment becomes a web of fortunate moments, each more poignant and charged than the next. But then, these moments become something else: they represent the weight of time, of promises broken and partnership betrayed. There's considerable pain, loathing, and abuse in the second part of the novel: it's the unraveling of something fueled by passion but also by discretion, infidelity, and secrecy. The emotional pain uncovered by Erpenbeck is pointed, indeed. 

And then, cast over it all, is the geopolitical maelstrom that was the collapse of the Berlin Wall and the eventual unification of the German states. This tectonic moment would test any relationship. But its significance tests this one -- between Katharina and Hans -- more than most because, in East Germany, collaboration was rampant. The result is that no one was truly who they were supposed to be, or who they were understood to be. And thus, when the state collapsed, so did its many unassuming agents, its small army of men and women as brittle, in the end, as the political body they served. Lovers were lovers, but they played many other roles, too. That division is what separates the novel in half. 

This is a sharp, multi-layered, seductive novel: one of history, of love, and longing. I highly recommend Kairos as an entry into the work of Erpenbeck. 

Hero and saint …

…  Review: 'Cabrini' Depicts the Patron Saint of Immigrants.

The bad guys in this movie are the bureaucrats. And they’re pretty bad.

Something to think on…

I look back into past history, the stored experiences or products of the imagination. I look no further forward than the evening.
—Jerzy Kosinski, born on this date in 1933

Dawn …

Daybreak


Now is the time 

When darkness fades

And sparrows arrive

In the silence. Before

Things get going again

Hmm …

… Jesuit Plots - The American Conservative. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)
 
I am myself Jesuit-trained, but i often find Pope Francis underwhelming.

Something to think on …

A man is whole only when he takes into account his shadow.
-— Djuna Barnes, born on this date in 1892

Something to think on …

The media ignores what is really going on.
— Nat Hentoff, born on this date in 1925

Something to think on …

Historians are to nationalism what poppy-growers in Pakistan are to heroin-addicts: we supply the essential raw material for the market.
— Etic Hobsbaum, born on this date in 1917

Something to think on …

I believe in God, only I spell it Nature.
— Frank Lloyd Wright, born on this date in 1867

Something to think on …

We are each other's harvest; we are each other's business; we are each other's magnitude and bond.
Gwendolyn Brooks, born on this date in 1917

Sure seems that way …

 … It’s Time to Make a Strategic PR Pivot in Dealing with the Climate Change Issue.

Unless we incorporate sophisticated communication techniques and effective PR strategies, we will lose the AGW war — and that’s the direction we are heading

How sad …

 … The Philadelphia Free Library’s whole Author Events staff has resigned over workplace conditions. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.) 

I know Andy Kahan. He used to ask me to introduce authors. Great guy.

Scholarly satire …

 …. ‘Loud-mouthed bully’: CS Lewis satirised Oxford peer in secret poems. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

“Lewis took an immediate and intense dislike to Wyld, partly because he considered the content of the lectures to be elementary and self-evident. But he also objected to Wyld’s manner: his snobbery and tendency to harangue his audience for coming in late, not concentrating and not knowing the answers to the questions he fired at them.”

Something to think on …

Laughter is a sunbeam of the soul.
— Thomas Mann, born on this date in 1875

Something to think onn …

  • As regards plots I find real life no help at all. Real life seems to have no plots.
Ivy Compton-Burnett, born on this date in 1884

Monday, June 03, 2024

Blogging note

 I won’t be blogging for a few days.

My iPad only works in my new apartment, and I’m not moving in there until later in the week

Something to think on …

I had a moment of clarity, saw the feeling in the heart of things, walked out to the garden crying.
— Allen Ginsberg, born on this date in 1926

Something to think on …

To dwellers in a wood, almost every species of tree has its voice as well as its feature.
— Thomas Hardy, born on this date in 1840

Please bear with me …

 I am in the process of moving out ofbmy house and into a firstfloor apartment on the next block. Blogging must again take a back seat.

Something to think on …

God warms his hands at man's heart when he prays.
— John Masefield, born on this date in 1878