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Freewheeling Andy

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Posts posted by Freewheeling Andy

  1. Fragrant Harbour is very different, but I loved it. It's a bunch of intertwined stories, fragmented in time, set largely around Hong Kong. Excellent, but less dark. Mr Phillips was a bit pants.

     

    I've not read Pale Fire. I was generally advised (by usually reliable people) that whilst Lolita was great, Nabokov's other books are pretty hard work. I'll keep an eye open for it.

  2. The Vikings reached Greenland near the end of the first millennium. They didn't reach a "green land", and they didn't find massively fertile valleys. This is how the Greenland of the Vikings is sometimes depicted, because they arrived and lived for several centuries during the climatic "Mediaeval Warm Period". It is often simply characterised that the change to a colder "little Ice Age" around 1350 led to their demise.

     

    Although this is partially true, Jared Diamond thoughtfully assesses a more accurate view of the Greenland Norse, how they arrived in an already fragile environment, imported cultural mores from Europe that weren't appropriate, damaged their own environment as a result, and didn't learn from the Inuit. The decisions made by the Greenland Norse led to their initial survival in a fragile environment, and then the failure of the society.

     

    Assessing not just Greenland, but a number of other civilisations such as the Maya, Anasazi, those on Easter Island and Pitcairn Island, Diamond traces the causes of failure, and looks for connecting patterns. He also looks at societies which have succeeded against the odds, such as the Vikings in Iceland (whoever thought it was the world's most environmentally damaged country?), the Japanese under Tokugawa and others.

     

    He then tries to thread the history with the present, looking at the damage we are doing to the planet now, and how we are pushing the limits of sustainability, and the risks we are now under, and he tries to point us to the lessons from the past that we can learn, to prevent repeats of disaster.

     

    The prominent piece of all this is damage to the environment, largely through deforestation and soil damage. Do not, though, mistake this book for something like Silent Spring. It's not an eco-warrior's polemic. It's a serious assessment of where we are in terms of previous societal collapses.

     

    The book is chunky, at 525 pages of small font. It's full of history, of archaeology, of science. But that doesn't make it hard to read. It took me a while to get through because it's inevitably fragmented into various narratives of different societies (and you know the ending). Diamond's writing is easy, fluid, and he gets serious information across in a very readable way.

     

    If I have any criticisms, it's the self-referential way he writes, always talking about the book's own framework and structure, making it sometimes feel like an academic paper, or a lecture course (and it was based on a lecture course). I also found the way he repeatedly defended ancient cultures with the "They didn't have the technology to know the mistakes they were making, so we can't blame them" line. The line is correct, and reasonable, but in the introduction he already made it implicit, and even (correctly) had a bit of a go at the new-age nutters who claim that, say, native Americans know how to tend the land so how can you say the Anasazi ruined their own environment. So it didn't need rehashing repeatedly, making the first half of the book on ancient cultures seem defensive at times.

     

    The second half of the book, about the modern world and the damage we're doing is more judgemental, and better for it, although to me it becomes a very depressing read, where Diamond feels like he clutches at straws to give us optimism for the future.

     

    A fascinating and enlightening book, though, which offers strange pointers to the future, and challenges your preconceptions on what is right and wrong, good and bad, for the future of mankind.

  3. Titus Andronicus is nasty.

     

    My favourite of his, I think, is Troilus and Cressida, which is wonderfully dark and nasty - it has such a bad ending.

     

    I'm not a big fan of the comedies, but the histories are fantastic. And Hamlet is great.

  4. I would argue that non-brainy people would have a lot of difficulty with Foucault's Pendulum, Michelle. It's a chewy, heavy book. Very hard work.

     

    Perhaps the word brainy is wrong, but people with wide knowledge and long attention span can read pretty much any kind of book. Those without are going to struggle with some books. Foucault definitely falls into that category.

     

    IMHO, having a wide knowledge and long attention span does not necessarily equate with intelligence. Part of it, yes, but there's alot more to being brainy or intelligent.

     

    Plus, do brainy people only enjoy heavy books, that are hard work? Why not a good thriller / horror / sci-fi etc?

     

    Not at all. You're mischaracterising what I said, I think. For one thing there are many aspects to intelligence.

     

    But some books are very cerebral, and I think those books are limited in terms of who can read them. I specifically didn't say that "intelligent" people, however that's defined, don't enjoy reading other stuff, but some people are going to struggle with, say, Umberto Eco or Thomas Pynchon.

     

    I don't know anyone who only reads cerebral novels, though. There's nothing precluding anyone reading Sci-Fi or thrillers or whatever, although there are better and worse, and trashier and less trashy, in any group of books. Some of the most intelligent people I know only read SF when reading fiction, but that's because they read for the ideas, rather than plot or characterisation, for example.

     

    Interestingly, the SF I most enjoy is exactly the same as Stewart's. JG Ballard and Philip K Dick.

  5. I would argue that non-brainy people would have a lot of difficulty with Foucault's Pendulum, Michelle. It's a chewy, heavy book. Very hard work.

     

    Perhaps the word brainy is wrong, but people with wide knowledge and long attention span can read pretty much any kind of book. Those without are going to struggle with some books. Foucault definitely falls into that category.

  6. I find the focus on food in the books (and for some reason it's normally spaghetti and beer) is part of the fun. But I can see how it would grate (like parmesan, perhaps?).

     

    He's definitely a love-hate author. Many people I know are completely obsessed by Murukami and reading all his stuff at the moment. But others are left utterly bemused by the attention.

  7. In The Shape Of A Boar was dreadful. I really enjoyed both Lempriere's Dictionary and The Pope's Rhinocerous (although I can see where you come from about their impenetrability - it took a while for me to click into both books, and the same was true of the one Pynchon I've read - Mason & Dixon). But Shape Of A Boar was all of the pretension without any of the fun, none of the entertainment and worthwhile stuff. It was a slog of first 1/3 fake(ish) epic poem, 2/3 story of author in 1960s Paris. It really did very little for me. There were moments when it felt like it was going to become a good story but it just failed miserably. And it was utterly dominated by pointless footnotes.

     

    If you want a book full of irritating footnotes, you're better off, far better off, with Paul Auster's Oracle Nights, which is a deeply interesting book (although I don't actually know whether I enjoyed it, still).

  8. Actually, Stewart, I've still not read Dance, Dance, Dance. Have you read Wild Sheep Chase yet? I reckon Wild Sheep Chase is a fantastic book. But then I love Murukami. Wild Sheep Chase and Wind-Up Bird Chronicle are my two favourites. You might struggle with them, given your reviews, because of the way he treats his characters. He's really really cold, particularly about sex, but it works with the rest of the treatment, to me. All of the books I've read of his (apart from Norwegian Wood) have this weird feeling of being something close to cyberpunk novels, except they're set in middle class, quiet respectable modern Japan suburbs, rather than a strange discordant high tech future.

  9. I've refused to read this precisely because of the two previously mentioned books. I read Holy Blood & Holy Grail, which is worth reading just for the spectacular comedy value - I read it first as a 14 year old with no critical faculties and took it at face value. I then re-read it about 5 years ago and could hardly stop myself laughing. It's up there with von Danicken.

     

    And then Foucault's Pendulum, which I enjoyed but is perhaps a bit too over-wrought largely rehashed the same stuff. I think I was disappointed by Foucault's Pendulum because it wasn't as good as Name Of The Rose, but it satisfied my need for novels about rosicrucians, templars, cathars, secret societies, the elders of zion, and so on.

     

    I will say, though, that people who've read the Dan Brown say that the religius conspiracy nonsense really just acts as a backdrop for the thriller. So really, you're just reading a thriller with a backdrop of rosicrucians rather than with a backdrop of nazis or aircraft, or whatever.

     

    On that basis, apparently, it works perfectly well. It's "just" a thriller.

  10. This seems to be a love/hate book. I've not dared try it yet, but I would say by a 4:1 majority my (reliable) friends think it's incredibly dull where nothing of nore happens and too much time is spent creating lovely sentences. The others think it's just about the best book they've read in years.

  11. Ah. It's a great book. Although his best is Cats Cradle, and if you want a better anti war satire, you're almost certainly better off with Catch-22.

     

    I'm not sure a book like Slaughterhouse 5, which is all about the ideas and the concept of death and how life becomes trivialised really wants to build the characters too far.

  12. Ooh! Some interesting stuff in there. Particularly intrigued by the Kite Runner, and by The Oxford Murders.

     

    Jonathon Livingston Seagull I loved, but I think you need to read it when you're in a particularly hippy state of mind.

  13. The books are fantastic. The TV series caught the mood very well, but you acn't quite get Wodehouse's writing style onto the screen. I've only read 3 or 4 of them but they're such good fun.

  14. Since I last wrote on this I have at least read The Age Of Kali, by William Dalrymple. It's a lovely book of essays about his 10 years in India from 1990 to 2000 (give or take). Sometimes there's perhaps too much obsession about details of temples, and or architecture (which I've spotted in his writing before, and which probably ties to the person he's most closely following in terms of obsessions, Robert Byron), but when he gets the human stories, or the big political stories, his writing is fantastic.

     

    I'm now reading Jared Diamond's Collapse, which is quite dark, really. It's an assessment of how a variety of different societies and civilisations have collapsed, whether it's due to environmental change, or due to trading failures, or whatever. fascinating and dark. So far I've only read the chapters on Montana and Easter Island, and started on the one on Pitcairn and Henderson.

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