"The book I'm looking for,' says the blurred figure, who holds out a volume similar to yours, 'is the one that gives the sense of the world after the end of the world, the sense that the world is the end of everything that there is in the world, that the only thing there is in the world is the end of the world."
- Italo Calvino, If on a winter's night a traveler

Thursday, December 30, 2010

No Man Is An Island by Thomas Merton

You may have guessed from my review of Sam Harris' most recent book that I don't really believe in God. This is basically true! I say "basically" not because I haven't really thought about it, or because I don't care about the implications of that decision. Rather, I just think telling someone you are "an Atheist"--or worse, "an Agnostic"--may suggest some things that aren't necessarily so. As an example, I suspect some people associate Atheism with only having coldly rational interests, with a lack of capacity to appreciate beauty. That's obviously stupid!

Perhaps more fairly, though, I'm pretty sure most people don't think of Atheists as having particularly sophisticated Spiritual Lives.

But as a Non-Believer I still experience the numinous and the spiritual. Focusing your attention, singing hymns, belonging to strong communities, feeling genuine love, appreciating art and nature, humbling yourself in the presence of something greater than yourself, meditation, going to church... these things that have that particular and strange transcendental quality, that are powerful and personal and lasting are, as far as my money goes, basically the things that really make life worth living.

And that doesn't require a belief in anything truly supernatural.

It's a simple point, but something I don't hear many people talk about. So I'll say it one more time. My spiritual life and health are daily important to me despite the fact that I don't believe in the existence of any literal God. I've continued to read the writers from the Mystical and Contemplative traditions--Rumi, Meister Ekhart--long after deciding that God doesn't exist in any meaningful sense, and their work is as powerful and informative as it ever was when I thought a man in the sky cared about me.

That's right. Like a jerk, I decided that I get all the cool, rewarding parts of religious experience without all the weird non-factual baggage. I can do it. I can have it all!

Now: No Man is and Island.

This was my first dip into T-Mert. Having gone to a Jesuit college and having worked at a bookstore in a predominantly Catholic city, I've long been aware of his reputation, and some people who I respect a lot speak really highly of his writing. If you don't know: Thomas Merton was an American Trappist monk in the 1940s-1960s. He entered the priesthood late-ish in life. He wrote extensively on pacifism and social justice and the monastic life, and developed a particular interest in Zen Buddhism. He was a pretty cool guy.

Although I skimmed several sections for which I decided I was not the intended audience, I wasn't at all disappointed with the book.

He had me at: "A happiness that is diminished by being shared is not big enough to make us happy," which is the first sentence. The book spans several topics, some of which I found more relevant than others. Of particular interest to me were the sections and sentences about community/love for others and those about the need for individual actualization. The clash of independence and interdependence is (for me) one of the most interesting, most important struggles of life. While Merton doesn't quite talk about this issue specifically, his observations and insights into each of those aspects of life were really illuminating.

The truth is that I stopped taking notes after the first thirty pages or so. There's just too much there. It's a book that I'll need to buy, to store on a shelf and refer to when the right times come along the way I do a couple books of poetry. It's not meant to be digested in a week the way I did.

Anyway, here's a nice quote I wrote down:  "we must make choices that enable us to fulfill the deepest capacities of our real selves. [...] when in fact our acts of free choices are largely dictated by psychological compulsions, flowing from inordinate ideas of our own importance. Our choices are too often dictated by our false selves."

Happy New Year!

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Mini Reviews December 2010

The Planets by Dava Sobel [link]

I've grown to love science for the same reasons I've always loved art and literature: because it has the capacity to grab you by the collar and shake you up and expose you to beauty and truth and make you seriously rethink your place in the universe. This is a very different sort of appreciation than the technological, practical, engineering kind--the idea that science is great because it gives us cool and useful stuff, because it gives us fMRI machines and toaster ovens. Don't get me wrong, I like pharmaceutical antibiotics as much as the next guy, but I'm much more enamored by The Symphony of Science than I am by nonstick frying pans.


The Planets is a book in which Sobel explores each planet of our solar system through a mix of poetry, science history, and bits of cocktail-party astronomy-trivia ("Did you know there's a gigantic hexagonal storm at the pole of Saturn!"). For example, the chapter on Venus, titled simple "Beauty," contains a line or two from a Great Writer every few pages and focuses thematically on the planet's aesthetic achievements. You would think that this book would be exactly my kind of thing. You would think that I would eat this up about a fast as I would kiss Carl Sagan on the mouth. But, for some reason... I thought it was throughly OK. It was just nothing special. Conceptually it was admirable, and Sobel is a very good writer. I don't know. Maybe it was just too meandering. It wasn't bad by any stretch of the imagination, and I'm happy to have read it. But I think the chapters might have worked better on their own, generously trimmed, as essays in the New Yorker or something. As a book the thing just wasn't cohesive enough. Sorry Dava Sobel! Good try, though!

Outliers: The Story of Success by Malcolm Gladwell [link]

Now that I've read this, I've read every book by Gladwell. And he is great. I totes <3 him. It's weird that no one has ever heard of him or his books. (HA.) The aim of this particular book is to explore the science surrounding the Outliers of the social system, to answer the question "Why are some people successful far above and beyond all normal standards or expectations of achievement?" It's a book about people like Bill Gates, The Beatles, and Malcolm Gladwell. As I've understood it, the general thesis is this: Success comes from 1) lots and lots of hard work, 2) a threshold of natural ability or talent, 3) being born at an opportune place/time in history, and 4) having a good family.

Some problems with this. First, DUH. Everyone knows this! Only very dumb people seriously, consciously think that success is a function of talent or hard work only. Also, some of his implicit claims don't always seem to follow from (at least the presented) evidence. And also also, he explores each aspect of success one at a time, and it begins to feel weird to talk about, say, hard work for dozens of pages in a row, knowing that each example must have had innumerable lucky breaks in order to put that hard work to use.

Nevertheless, the stories and examples are all crazy fascinating. And while I said that only stupid people think that success is a function of only hard work or talent, a lot of people are stupid! That this book attempts to dispel the Horatio Alger, rags-to-riches myth is admirable. Good book!

Right Ho, Jeeves! by P. G. Wodehouse [link]

My first Wodehouse!

First, consider this: P. G. Wodehouse was a contemporary (that is he was publishing at the same time as) both Thomas Hardy and William S. Burroughs. Wow.

Anyway, I went into this whole thing with some baggage. First, know that I don't usually like funny novels. That's Douglas Adams, Christopher Moore, Terry Pratchett (though he's a little gentler). The whole business just seems to me like sitting there while the author conspicuously winks at you over the course of a few hundred pages. Snore. ALSO know that my only knowledge of the Jeeves series was that Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie had once played the principal characters on a TV show. And know that I have a particularly strong affection for a certain OTHER instance where Laurie took on the role of the hapless, foppish aristocrat with an unusually intelligent servant.

The book took some getting used to! Bertie is nothing like Prince George and Jeeves nothing like Blackadder.  I thought that I would be expected to "root" for Jeeves, but I found myself much more interested in and sympathetic to Bertie, though that may just be because I am silly and foppish and idle and drunk. And the book isn't really funny. It's... light, refreshing, genial. But not "funny." It's something to make you smile, but nothing to make you laugh. And once you settle down into the pace and the benign risks of Wodehouse's world, the whole thing is about as pleasant as a book can be.

The Black Dahlia by James Ellroy [link]

Do you remember the movie L.A. Confidential? A slick noir throwback with Kevin Spacey and Guy Pierce and Russell Crowe and Kim Bassinger? If you haven't seen that movie stop what you are doing and Netflix the shit out of it right now. It's one of my all-time favs, and it is the reason I read this book.

That movie, you see, is based on a novel that is part of a saga of hardboiled mysteries by James Ellroy, the first of which is The Black Dahlia. The book is good! I don't know what to say. I've typed too much already. This post is so long! Listen: if you like noir stuff, go read this book. Or better yet, go watch L.A. Confidential. That's mostly what reading the book made me want to do.

In fact, forget all the other stuff I said in this whole post. The movie L.A. Confidential is better than all of these books. What are you even doing? Go watch it!

Monday, December 6, 2010

The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen

Hoo boy.

There is not much consensus among either writers or readers about what good literature is supposed to do. If you are feeling masochistic, dig up the forums on any amateur writing website and browse the clumsy threads about craft, about the difference between "entertainment" and "art," about "genre" and "emotional ressonance" and "style." You'll soon realise that people often want different things from their books, and that even when they want the same thing they are insistent about the language in which those things are framed.

I have my own specific, cranky, silly opinions, but the real answer to these butterfingered debates is a book called The Corrections by a guy named Jonathan Franzen. Whatever you want to call what happens over the course of those 530ish pages, that is what great literature does. And with the exception of the dream I had last night where Rashida Jones became my Facebook friend (Hi Rashida Jones!), picking up The Corrections is the best thing to happen to me in the last month.

The book is about a family, The Lamberts. It's about Enid, a Midwestern housewife, and Alfred, her emotionally-distant, retired-engineer husband, and their three adult children: 1) Chip, an ex-professor of "cultural criticism" who lost his academic position after seducing a student 2) Gary, a banker and mild alcoholic whose fragile, beautiful wife and three children are increasingly estranged from him and 3) Denise, a top-tier chef with a penchant for married men (and women).

There's not much of a story to go around. Much of the novel is, incredibly, told through long, expositional, summarizing flashbacks. One by one, the reader explores the life of each member of the family, watches them make mistakes, and the whole thing culminates at "one last" family Christmas back in the fictional fly-over-country suburb of St. Jude.

Things happen, make no mistake. You'll experience autumn cruise-liners, Lithuanian crime lords, investment fraud, and experimental psychotropic therapies. Also a scene involving a talking piece of human excrament (Whatever, Franzen. I guess you can do what you want!). But the real meat of the story comes from the observations of the human condition. Every one of the five characters is simultaneously repugnant and sympathetic, and it is painful to bear witness to their commitment to self-sabatoge and catastrophe. You could turn to any single page and come quickly to an uncomfortable truth about either yourself or someone you know well. Reading Gary's story, in particular, was almost too heartbreaking for me.

I'm learning that it's hard to write a long review of a piece of fiction. I can't discuss the details of the book because they would be nonsense, and the events would lose their emotional impact in summary. There's no thesis whose implications can be dissected like a non-fiction review might try to do.

So let's just be clear about one thing: This is one of the best books I've ever read. I mean that both in terms of its technical execution, and in terms of its poignancy. A piece of writing has never made me cry, but the end of this book sure made me choke up a bit on my tequila-and-Hawaiian-punch.



P.S. Oh, you can read a really exceptional essay by Franzen at (of all places!) Oprah.com, since his newest book is her BookClub book currently. The essay is called "My Bird Problem."