Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Okay, It's Official
337 days, 47 novels, 48 books of non-fiction to go.
Saturday, September 26, 2009
"Let us cross over the river, and rest under the shade of the trees."
Judge Val L. McGee is the father of my best friend from school in Alabama; like many brilliant and successful Southern gentlemen of a certain generation, he is a vastly erudite amateur scholar of the War Between the States (Yankees of the same social class and economic level tend to gravitate toward World War II, for some reason; perhaps one must be European to appreciate the sacrifices of Flanders). Be that as it may, Judge McGee's historical novel Selma, set in the small city of that name in 1860 and ongoing, is less an American novel than an exercise in history as a novel. The operant parallel here is, of course, War and Peace, although Judge McGee would be the first to decry any casual comparisons with Tolstoy, and, less obviously, Mikhail Sholokhov's And Quiet Flows the Don and The Don Flows Home to the Sea and, more obscurely, Israel Joshua Singer's The Brothers Ashkenazi. In all four cases, a gifted writer weaves a similar tale of similar lives in dissimilar settings: Alexandrine St. Petersburg, the Don basin, shtetl Poland, ante-bellum Alabama.
At this point I should confess to an ineradicable penchant for the roman fleuve and the dynastic biography a la Buddenbrooks and the Palliser novels of Trollope. I am not so concerned with WHAT will happen to characters so much as why, when, how, and what everything looked like at the time. I am the only person I have ever heard of who thinks reading all twenty-seven volumes of Jules Romains' Les Hommes de Bonnes Volonte would be a hell of a good way to spend a summer vacation. I pray for a broken leg so that I can spend six weeks in traction in order to finally get past the "Ouverture" of A la Recherche du Temps Perdu. Thus, vast historiographical romps like Selma are very far from earning my enmity.
Do I need to know the in's and out's of Alabama's slave codes of the 1850's? Do I need to follow the tug of war between secessionists and Unionists in quite the amount of detail which Judge McGee provides? As I tell millionaires at my place of employment on a daily basis: "This isn't about need; it's about want." And I want to know as much as possible about the truth of slavery, because only with the truth of slavery THEN can I have the barest hope of understanding the reality of racism in America NOW.
339 days, 47 novels, 48 books of non-fiction to go.
The Voyage of the Hero
This brings us to a consideration of who and what goes toward making up a hero. Obviously, Theseus and Heracles are very different from Ronald Reagan and Joe Dimaggio. Is a supernatural or fanciful element required for a hero to achieve mythic stature? If so, then St. George and Siegfried and Joan of Arc are heroes in a way in which George Washington and Winston Churchill and Otto von Bismarck are not. Is heroism a function of courage (Achilles) or wisdom (Solomon) or faith (St. Francis of Assisi) or is it a combination of other qualities entirely? Is the hero chosen by the gods, or does he choose himself?
It seems to me that the call to adventure is something which virtually everyone on earth experiences, usually in youth, and which virtually everyone on earth likewise ignores or rejects deliberately. The hero, I think, must break out of the shackles of whatever narrowly circumscribed society in which he finds himself because he finds it irremediably inconsistent with the element of the divine within himself. The drudgery of adhering to societal mores and sequences--"Birth! School! Work! Death!"--is not his way, and he recognizes this early on and fights with every fiber of his being to seek another path. This voyage of discovery takes him to strange and unfamiliar terrain which, like Marco Polo, will cause those who stayed behind to accuse him of falsehood and error; only the hero will realize that the journey was essential because of what he brings back with him.
So how does the survivor of the epic journey communicate with those for whom no epic journey is possible, who are so entirely blinded by the triviality of daily routine and money-grubbing and materialism and sex that other modes of organizing awareness can only seem like an episode of dementia?
Mathematics will not work, and this is why science has largely failed modern man. The experience beyond all experience is irreducible to number, contrary to the hopes of the Pythagoreans. But poetry, and even the poetry of music, may fare no better; Keats, a profound hero in my eyes, was rejected by his contemporaries and remains rejected still. The poetry of Jesus, second-rate as it no doubt was, has been so utterly twisted by twenty centuries of vested interests that it is hollowed of all value: witness the fact that the teachings of Jesus, entirely anti-materialistic in their tendency, are diametrically opposed by the national culture of the United States, which, by staggering paradox, claims to be the most Christian of modern nations while at the same time is unquestionably the most money-oriented and least spiritual nation in the history of Western Civilization. (Matt. 19:21 is the pertinent citation here)
Campbell is less effective when he mimics Fraser in his marshalling of evidence, and one wonders which of the two great arguments which he apppears to be making occupies the central place in his intellectual affections. I suspect that in 1949 when this book first appeared he was more the scholar and therefore inclined to emphasize the first truth which, while hardly original, would still come as news to most humans living today. The second, more profoundly Jungian reading of the mythic material, was one he probably came to embrace more and more as he aged and his wisdom, like Chateau Ausone 1846, mellowed.
339 days, 47 novels, 48 books of non-fiction to go.
Friday, September 25, 2009
Camilla: (Terrified, aside to Cassilda.) No mask? No mask!
To begin with, however, I've already commenced my delving into Joseph Campbell's four-volume masterpiece, The Masks of God, by reading his 1949 work The Hero with a Thousand Faces, which is both brilliant and fascinating. Wish me luck!
341 days, 47 novels, 48 books of non-fiction to go.
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Thank You, Barney's New York!
Barney's New York at Northpark in Dallas is considerably more stylish than my addiction to books and the gym permits me to experience on anything like a regular basis, so wandering into the party on the second floor tonight was very much like the scene in Alain-Fournier's Le Grand Meaulnes, where the title character stumbles into the engrossing and enigmatic Lost Demesne, where grace and beauty and bafflement go hand in hand. (Don't you just love the French?) The music was on my wavelength, especially when the danseuse of a DJ played Bonnie Tyler's "Total Eclipse of the Heart", which I will always remember because of its vaguely millenarian music video of the early 80's (Remember that she taught at an English boy's school at which the Anti-Christ was a star pupil?) The pink martinis were exceptionally handsome in performing their duty as Faulknerian "imagination lubricant".
Most alarmingly, the effortlessly attractive Jan Strimple, so comfortably at the centre of the Dallas fashionista universe, made a special effort to approach me and ensconce me in the warm glow of her inimitable supermodel flame, the embers of which will remain with me through the weekend, at the very least. No doubt she mistook me for someone far more important, as Jahweh no doubt mistook the Israelites in the wilderness of Sinai. No matter. The Decalogue persists! And I glow in the Jane Austen warmth of her convo.
341 days, 47 novels, 48 books of non-fiction to go.
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
I bless God for my life
The Rector of Justin has been on my list for decades; I suppose I must have stumbled across it while at Dartmouth and was intrigued enough by the first few pages to have mentally consigned it to some future quiet afternoon. While the past septet of afternoons have been anything but tranquil, I can say without qualification that my initial instinct was not misguided: this is an unquestionably great book. But, of course, I find A Separate Peace and The Last Convertible and even The Rule of Four likewise memorable and worthy, so it is possibly that the setting and the subject comprise a lure to which my peculiar curriculum vitae leaves me unusually susceptible.
The fictional biography of a great man must have precedents in literature; it seems like the device a Balzac must have employed more than once. But unlike Eugenie Grandet or James' Washington Square, the life of Francis Prescott is a whole rather than an incident plus its corollary aftermath. It is a bildungsroman, but one which values every phase of a man's life on the same par as the halcyon days of his youth. Along the way, it asks all the big questions about God, faith, love, family, a life's calling, the nature of education, and the true and proper appraisal of one's achievement. It seems to me a hopeful book, although I can see how other readers might deem it otherwise. Auchincloss seems to all but declare in his denoument that his purpose in writing is to inspire, but to inspire who? And with what?
342 days, 47 novels, 48 books of non-fiction to go.
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Alexandria, au revoir!
Nessim's descent into madness is the only element of dramatic suspense in the novel. Minor characters like Pombal, Scobie, the furrier Cohen, are interesting but essentially unnecessary; like much of the novel, they might have been edited out with hardly any loss.
It is difficult to finish a novel when neither of the main characters seem to possess enough character that we care whether they are run over by a streetcar or kidnapped by Bedouins. Durrell may have shot his bolt with me, occasional lines of great poetic beauty notwithstanding.
349 days, 48 novels, 48 books of non-fiction to go.
Ecce Homo!
First, the baffling paucity of information about the physical circumstances of his life have led some to deny his historicity altogether. I shall take the Romans at their word, especially Flavius Josephus and Lucian of Samosata, and grant Jesus historical reality (besides, I should hate to have to give up Lao-tse).
Second, the fact that such a curious congeries of apocryphal words and legendary acts should have inspired the most universal and enduring mass of interlocking religious faiths yet to arise. For this, I have no explanation.
Third, far beyond the mysteries of biography and propagation, is the theological mystagogia of incarnation, atonement, and trinity. As any Sunni imam will tell you, this is very strange stuff.
So where does this leave us? Obviously, with a plan of action, although I will dispense with Huston Smith's recommended works, as they are more than a little dated. I propose to read one more book in the following year on each of the major religions, and at least three on Catholicism (Protestantism and Eastern Orthodoxy appear less attractive to me, intellectually, from Smith's summary). Only in the course of this study will I attempt to frame a critique of Christian belief.
349 days, 49 novels, 48 books of non-fiction to go.
Monday, September 14, 2009
"We use each other like axes to cut down the ones we really love"
"A camel has collapsed from exhaustion in the street outside the house. It is too heavy to transport to the slaughter-house so a couple of men come with axes and cut it up there and then in the open street, alive. They hack through the white flesh--the poor creature looking ever more pained, more aristocratic, more puzzled as its legs are hacked off. Finally there is the head still alive, the eyes open, looking round. Not a scream of protest, not a struggle. The animal submits like a palm-tree. But for days afterwards the mud street is soaked in its blood and our bare feet are printed by the moisture." (p. 62)
Not until page 112, when Justine makes the observation quoted above, does the purpose of Durrell's rather depressing art manifest itself. He intends to portray, across the broad canvas of four interrelated novels, human love as inextricably akin to vivisection (Balthazar is gay, Clea is a lesbian, so even homosexual love will not be spared), and reading Justine certainly takes on more than a tinge of masochism. The narrative follows its obsessional psychometry in a confused stream of conciousness which is explicated by the nameless protagonist (?) as follows:
"What I most need to do is to record experiences, not in the order in which they took place--for that is history--but in the order in which they first became significant for me." (p. 115)
Unquestionably there is art here, but it is concealed and turbid in a manner that is thoroughly unlike Faulkner's, where every word is guaranteed to coalesce into a seamless whole, eventually. Here, the reader harbors no illusion that such closure is possible, given the cosmic dilemmas which Durrell has posed. Unlike the cast of Paul Bowles' wretched The Sheltering Sky, it is impossible to doubt that Durrell's characters are real people, but one does wonder whether all the philosophy about love, life, civilization and its malcontents, is actually leading anywhere.
But, as I said, I am only at the half-way mark, and perhaps by being premature in my judgements I am also being somewhat unfair, like critiquing a Sibelius symphony after the adagio, which my colleague Jim would certainly regard as the mark of a boor.
351 days, 49 novels, 49 books of non-fiction to go.
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Adventures in Dog-Sitting
356 days, 49 novels, 49 books of non-fiction to go.
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Ye Be Gleg Aneuch with the Claymore, Laddie
But Scott's greatest achievement, it seems to me, is to call into question the morality of the English victors, by exhibiting in counterpoint a vanished way of life founded upon honour, generosity, hospitality to strangers, and loyalty to Clan and Laird. Ultimately, the destruction of the Highland clans after the catastrophe at Culloden was the twilight of a way of freedom through belonging to an extended family, the downfall of a system of obligations to a Laird who was immanent and personal and involved; against a modern state, with its alien ruling house, which is distant and impersonal and ultimately uncaring about the fate of the individual.
Waverley is not merely Scott's lament for the loss of a Scottish past aristocratic, romantic, worthy, and noble, to a British present increasingly crass, commercial, polluted, wage-driven, materialistic, anonymous, ignoble, and inglorious. It is also the substitution of one kind of God for another or, perhaps, as the modern age has amply demonstrated, for none at all.
357 days, 49 novels, 49 books of non-fiction to go.
Monday, September 7, 2009
If I Forget Thee, O Jerusalem
And yet, my own exposure to Jewish traditions and Jewish thought has been massively conflicted. Whereas Huston Smith reveals himself to be an unapologetic enthusiast, political events in the Middle East since his book first appeared in 1958 have inevitably served to temper any incipient adoration on my own part. The Palestinian people appear to languish in a condition which some would say parallels that of the Hebrews at the beginning of the Book of Exodus: downtrodden, economically subservient, a forgotten people without hope of redemption. I will address three objections to Smith's essentially triumphalist description of Judaism in the paragraphs that follow.
First, the efficacy of the notion that God acts on behalf of Israel in historical time, and reveals his wishes for his chosen people through historical events, obviously must stand or fall based upon the demonstrable historicity of the Biblical accounts, but especially on the twin stories of the Covenant with Abraham and the epic of the Exodus, up to the revelation of the Pentateuch and the conquest of the Promised Land. The first is an essentially private experience, no more provable or disprovable than the Buddha's awakening or the revelation of the Koran to Mohammed, so I will concentrate on the second. While Biblical archaeology is a vast subject, my preliminary look at the question reveals that there is anything but concensus among the experts as to whether the event is or is not purely mythical; even among those who believe that the evidence supports it, dating of the Exodus varies from the Sixth Dynasty all the way forward to the Nineteenth, a span of some thirteen hundred years. Since the deciphering of the Rosetta stone by Champollion, Egyptologists have largely dispelled the clouds of mystery that had heretofore hung over the Pyramids and the Sphinx, and there seems to be no evidence from any of the hieroglyphic inscriptions to assist in narrowing down this inexplicably vague answer to what should be, in a culture as literate as the Egyptian has turned out to be, a relatively simple question of dating what is described in the Old Testament as a vastly significant, even civilization-altering series of paranormal events.
Second, the ethical primacy of the Jews among the peoples of the Mediterranean world is called into doubt by the disturbing litany of conquests and massacres detailed in the Book of Joshua. It seems irrelevant to me whether Jahweh authorized the extermination of the Canaanites or not; if the Sixth Commandment applies only to the Jews, while allowing them unfettered license to murder non-Jews, then the universality of Jewish ethical theory is irremediably compromised.
Finally, the question of Jewish exceptionalism, which Smith attempts to dismiss, I regard as a serious obstacle. Any objective reading of the Tanakh leaves no doubt that Jahweh holds the Jews in a condition of especial esteem and that this esteem makes them superior to all other peoples on earth, none else of whom having been dignified with a covenant: the Jews are to regard themselves as absolutely unique, and deservedly so. As I mentioned in my entry of 1SEP09, a narrowly circumscribed religious dictum cannot, almost by definition, be held to possess an all-encompassing truth.
All of which leads me to remark, like the surfers of the Pumphouse Gang, very mysterioso.
358 days, 50 novels, 49 books of non-fiction to go.
From the Pen of the Twelfth Imam
Muslims regard their religion as superior to all others, from the inarguable standpoint that it is unquestionably monotheistic and eschews even the barest trappings of polytheism, in history or practice. Orthodox Jews may resent imputations of polytheism stemming from the Worship of the Golden Calf, but Muslims harbor an unconquerable belief that only their own faith is absolutely monotheistic and therefore righteous. Unless one wishes to seem to argue for polytheism, it is difficult to fault their logic, at least so far as the Christian Trinity, the Community of the Saints, or the Adoration of the Virgin are concerned. Whether this quasi-polytheism is mirrored by the reverence of the Jews for the Torah, as Huston Smith implies, seems less obvious.
I must say that I was surprised and pleased at the Koranic injunction for all believers to donate a fortieth of their net worth to the eligible poor on an annualized basis. Except for the mandatory taxes on wealth enacted by the Roman Senate after the debacle of Cannae in 218 BCE, I am unaware of any similar exactions against wealth, as opposed to income. This is, socially speaking, an extremely progressive notion which would be regarded as utterly poisonous by most conservative Americans today, and one can only admire the fact that it has been an integral part of Muslim society for nearly fourteen centuries.
I must confess that I have always harbored a deeply-rooted prejudice against Islam which will be very difficult for me to overcome. This prejudice derives exclusively from its strict, even Calvinistic and Puritanical tendencies, as is amply demonstrated by what is for me its single most problematic dictum; namely, the absolute prohibition against figurative art. Although far from universally adhered to (one remembers the glories of Rajput painting, e.g.), the proscription served to prevent the Islamic world from experiencing the glorification of the human form which was such a huge and positive element in the Italian Renaissance, the which served to strip Western Civilization of much of the morbid and moribund asceticism which had prevailed during the late Medieval period. (The draperies of the columnar sculptures at Chrtres, for example, bear an astonishing resemblance to the draperies in early Buddhist sculpture, particularly the now destroyed Buddhas of Bamiyan. This is a remarkable similarity in art forms expressing congruent world-denying belief-systems despite having had no possible artistic interactions.)
358 days, 50 novels, 49 books of non-fiction to go.
Sunday, September 6, 2009
The Soft Overcoming the Hard
359 days, 50 novels, 49 books of non-fiction to go.
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Dragging Myself Through the Negro Streets at Dawn Looking for an Angry Fix
And so, Professor Herbert J. Muller's Freedom in the Western World ($4) and Swami Prabhavananda's The Spiritual Heritage of India ($1.60) and The Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreuz ($5.60) and Chretien de Troyes' Arthurian Romances ($3.20) and The Evolution of Medieval Thought (eighty cents) and Eight Elizabethan Plays (a buck) and Thomas Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge (forty cents) will all take their places in the line-up, waiting their turn, until someday, when I find that I have read nothing in their field for some time, I reach for them, pour myself a glass of shiraz, and turn the first page.
362 days, 50 novels, 49 books of non-fiction to go.
Bishop Berkeley: a Re-Appraisal
In the words of Gerald Ford (in his Chevy Chase avatar), "I was told there would be no math."
362 days, 50 novels, 49 books of non-fiction to go.
Confucius Say: Man who jump off cliff, jump to conclusion!
I've read the Analects at least twice, in the James Legge traslation, and found it enormously wise, even if occasionally opaque due to its extraordinary pithiness and unavoidable grounding in alien Chinese societal norms vastly remote in space, culture, and time. With the Dhammapada, the Tao-te-Ching, the Bhagavad-Gita, and The Art of War, it's one of the classic works of Eastern wisdom I hope to re-read every few years until I die; I find that I derive new benefit with each re-reading as a result of my personal growth and the elapsed time in between visits.
I use that word "visits" decidedly. Re-reading Confucius is like returning to the home of an old teacher, one who, although older, has not lost any shred of the mental acuity which first attracted you to him and caused you, in after years, to regard him as one of the formative influences upon your intellect, character, and life. The Analects is a perfect example of the way in which a thinking person can have a genuine relationship with another mind: two hands touching across the chasm of the centuries because of a shared love of thought and a respect for the undiminished power of ideas.
362 days, 50 novels, 49 books of non-fiction to go.
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
"I Refute It Thus!" (Kicking a Stone)
Berkeley prefaces the main body of his work with an Introduction of 25 sections which disputes the existence of abstract ideas. So far, so good. Then, in sections 1-33 of his treatise, he advances his main argument: that as we have no direct experience of external reality, but only sense-impressions or ideas within the mind, it is entirely impossible to state with any certainty that any such externally existing material universe actually exists. Realizing how counter-intuitive this seems, he addresses twelve obvious objections in sections 34-81 and some religious quibbles in 82-84. Then, he examines the ramifications of his Principles, first looking at IDEAS (85-100) and how they relate to Science (101-117), in which the 25-year-old Berkeley presumes to correct the mistakes in Newton's Principia, and Mathematics (118-132), in which he stumbles badly. Finally, examining SPIRITS, he develops from his Principles closely related arguments for the Immortality of the Soul (133-144) and the existence of the God of the Christian scriptures (145-156) ending with a ringing condemnation of philosophy:
" . . .having shewn the falseness or vanity of those barren speculations which make the chief employment of learned men, [my treatise seeks] the better [to] dispose them to reverence and embrace the salutary truths of the Gospel, which to know and to practice is the highest perfection of human nature."
(As noted above, Berkeley's most flagrant error comes when he denies the infinite divisibility of line segments in geometry, an odd mistake to commit but perhaps inevitable given his orientation towards metaphysical pragmatism.)
While Berkeley was included in "The Great Books of the Western World", I can't see the value of this other than as a historical curiosity, and as a pretext for Dr. Johnson's amusing foray into the stone-kicking alluded to above.
363 days, 50 novels, 49 books of non-fiction to go.
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
The Most Annoying Thing About Books
Well, I've just had that immeasurably unpleasant experience again, while reading Huston Smith's chapter on Buddhism: the inescapable fact that, due to the profundity of the ideas under discussion and the brilliance of the scholar's exposition of them, I will be obligated to read his book again in the not very distant future. I might have anticipated this, having only just this evening learned that Professor Smith was far more than merely an instructor in religion and philosophy for a prior generation of MIT undergraduates. The fact that PBS and Bill Moyers would single him out for a five-part series (http://www.shoppbs.org/product/index.jsp?productId=1402988) moves him into that select fraternity which includes Joseph Campbell, Niall Ferguson, Jacob Bronowski, Sir Kenneth Clarke, and Mortimer J. Adler: the public intellectual of scholarly weight, as opposed to the 500-word newspaper and magazine pundits forever mired in the transient political tempests of the moment.
Of course, despite Prof. Smith's newly-established stature, I reserve the right to disagree with him on certain points. His insistence that Buddhism was a reform movement directed against Brahmanism, while probably true, scarcely justifies his extended analogy between the Buddha and Martin Luther: describing Buddhism as "an Indian protestantism" (p. 101) seems to go wide of the mark, no matter how pharisaical orthodox Hinduism had become. And Luther's translation of the Vulgate into German does not brook comparison with the Buddha's teaching in the vernacular: the Buddha had no particular interest in liberating the Vedas and Upanishads from their Sanskrit obscurity, because his was a path of innovation, not a Lutheran battle for a Pauline primitivism that prefigured the administrative dominance of the Roman curia. While Luther was nothing if not prolific, the Buddha consigned nothing to writing, despite having received a princely education. And the Buddha was infinitely compassionate; Luther, in his "Against the Murderous, Thieving Hordes of Peasants", went so far as to justify violence on the part of princely rulers to suppress peasant insurrection; this resulted in the killing of 100,000 German peasants in 1525 in the aftermath of the battle of Frankenhausen.
The two men could not have been more different, both in their lives and in the religions they founded.
364 days, 50 novels, 50 books of non-fiction to go.
Does My Sunburn Add or Subtract from My Karma?
By way of preliminary I have to admit that intellectual Hinduism (vedanta) has always held a very powerful appeal to me; it seems scientific in a way which none of the Western so-called "Peoples of the Book"-oriented religions have ever done. Largely this is because I harbor an invincible attachment to an essentially empirical premise: the reproducibility of experimental results derived from within the context of the scientific method. Truth cannot be handicapped by narrow limitations in space or time: experimental results which are valid only in the thirteenth century, or only on the western coast of Greenland, cannot, by definition, be true.
Hinduism, like Buddhism, Zen, and probably Taoism, are not rooted in historical transactions: there are no necessarily prerequisite historical events toward achieving enlightenment. It does not matter, in the cosmic sense, whether one man enacted a covenant with God, whether another received a book from God, whether a third died on a cross. The scientific religions remain equally true, and equally apprehensible, even if none of the merely historical events associated with their transmission ever in fact occurred. This is summed up, in the case of Buddhism, by the well-known advice to those seeking enlightenment: "If you meet the Buddha on the road, kill him!"
Just as we might expect that all current science and mathematics could be rediscovered after a global cataclysm in which absolutely all knowledge was lost but humanity survived, it is safe to say that most of the four religious systems I have enumerated above, certainly their more significant elements, would all be rediscovered and replicated, eventually. The jargon might differ, just as sacred words in English translation sometimes differ from the Sanskrit, Pali, Chinese, or Japanese originals, but the essential ideational structure and psychological exercises would, I am convinced, eventually be replicated practically whole.
This is why I find the Upanishads so very much more impressive than the Old or New Testament (I can't speak for the Koran): the sense of being on the right track toward real progress, in an extremely scientific sense, rather than getting bogged down in a congeries of historiographical myth-making. The Tanakh, in particular, is of a piece with the Norse sagas like Burnt Njal or the Nibelungenlied or the Volsunga saga, and, objectively considered, far less impressive as literature than these. (But perhaps I have an uncommonly low threshold for jeremiads and lamentations; I don't care overmuch for the Vedic hymns, either.)
364 days, 50 novels, 50 books of non-fiction to go.
Burning the Topless Towers of Ilium, Anyone?
In addition to the pair of previously mentioned works, I'll also embark on yet another attempt to make it all the way through Homer's Iliad read aloud. I've tried it with both Chapman and Pope (the Chapman version purely as an homage to Keats) but I've never manged to get too far past the catalogue of ships before indiscipline or laryngitis sent me hurrying down to Hades. (Perhaps I could manage more vocal stamina if I didn't try quite so hard to sound like a young Larry Olivier?)
Anyway, it's a glorious day out by the pool, I have the highly aural Robert Fagles translation of 1990, and I don't intend to do more than three or four books in one lazy sunny afternoon, taking rests in between books to swim laps, pump out some bicep curls, and meditate on whether the guiding passion of the Iliad is wrath, pride, jealousy, or something else. The legendary beauty of Helen notwithstanding, it sure as heck ain't love (unless the marriage of Zeus and Hera is a paradigm of marital bliss with which I am entirely unfamiliar).
364 days, 50 novels, 50 books of non-fiction to go.
This Week's Books: Scott and Huston Smith
I've finally decided that Sir Walter Scott's Waverley will be my first novel, while Huston Smith's The Religions of Man will be the first work of non-fiction, appropriately since this project will be an attempt to achieve some measure of personal redemption through books.
364 days, 50 novels, 50 books of non-fiction to go.