The Solemnity of the Night Sky

June 20 is Space Exploration Day. Since we’re (oh so sadly) in something of a post-Space Age here in the United States, we’ll have to explore it using the rocketry of literature. The title of today’s post comes courtesy of Victor Hugo. Where in Hugo, I cannot say, because the Internet is peopled with crusading anti-academics, but I salute them for having curated this quote:

It seemed to be a necessary ritual that he should prepare himself for sleep by meditating under the solemnity of the night sky… a mysterious transaction between the infinity of the soul and the infinity of the universe.

At this time in the sweltering Midwest, getting outside in the evening is a necessary ritual for even the soulless, but it is generally always a good idea. Here are a few thoughts to keep you company on your nocturnal sojourns:

1. Everyone is a moon, and has a dark side which he never shows to anybody.

220px-LettersFromTheEarthIf you know Mark Twain, you likely know him for his folksy, gentle humor. If you stopped at Huck Finn or Tom Sawyer, this quote might seem like the darkest thing Twain has ever written. It’s not.

I invite you, with some trepidation, to take a tour of the dark side of Twain with Letters from the Earth. Following the death of his wife and daughter, Twain turned his pen against the author of his miseries, God. The result is a diatribe in the voice of Satan, fairly effectively damning adherents of all faiths, especially Christians. It is theologically dark, but also a sad reflection of the state of Twain’s mind just before his death. Apparently much of his grief was not the result of bereavement but of the inconveniences of age and infirmity, particularly as they affect the recreational habits of gentlemen. Some things are better left in the dark.

2. The contemplation of celestial things will make a man both speak and think more sublimely and magnificently when he descends to human affairs.

cicero

Indulge me while I relate the jubilance [here resisting the urge to insert a .wav of a giggle of delight] resulting from a recent acquisition: Some sixty volumes from the Loeb Classical Library, including this tasty bit of Cicero. Having been subjected to many years of the Latin (Ah! The perfect passive!), I can now look upon it with a joy largely absent from my first encounter. Cicero, especially, is a fondly remembered friend.

Oratory, the subject of this letter (hardly the only time Cicero treated the topic), has three aims: docere, delectare,  movere—To document your thesis, to delight your audience, and to move your listeners.

Rhetoric was once an essential staple of any proper education. Along with grammar and logic, it formed the foundation for all other knowledge. Today, the collective term for these three is a derision: trivia.

Fallen, too, from so great a height is astronomy. Once the parent of all the natural sciences, it is now a hobby for those who can afford telescopes and don’t have to be at work in the morning. With the extent of urban light pollution, we’d not know there were stars at all, were it not for Neil DeGrasse Tyson (gratuitous shout-out).

Having thus documented the importance of astronomy, delighted you with the prospect of staying up well past your bedtime, we’re on to the movement: This week, I urge you to free your inner astronomer. Grab some binoculars (yes, you can see heaven with them) and a starter guide and look up. The stars have something to say to you.

3. We ran as if to meet the moon…

frostThere is no good reason not to have a bit of Robert Frost ready to hand. Amazon will let you pick up used copies of his work for a penny. A penny, people!

This line is from “Going for Water,” from Frost’s first collection, A Boy’s Will. It conveys the excitement of childhood, that idea that you really  could catch the moon if you just ran fast enough. Far enough. Long enough.

On one long car journey in my childhood, I stared out the back window for hours on end, watching the moon. It must have followed me for hundreds of miles, sometimes ducking behind a hill or peeking from a stand of trees. Shakespeare being still many years in my future, I felt there could be nothing in the universe more certain, more dependable than the moon.

My parents, in the front seat, were too busy with driving, navigating, and planning to turn around and look at me. But the moon—the grand, important moon—had all the time in the world. It watched me all the way home, never fading, never blinking. Robert_Frost,_1913

I found this photo of our young poet, taken in the year he first published A Boy’s Will. It’s hard to see the grizzled old Yankee we’ve come to love in this jaunty boy.

But that old man is in this young boy, just as the full moon is in the new, and the sunset in the sunrise.

 

 

 

 

I hope you’ll explore some space of your own today. If time and liberty are insufficient this evening, at least recite Goodnight, Moon on your way to dreamland. The moon and stars will still be there tomorrow, and forever from now. Happy reading!

 

La Fête Nationale (aka Bastille Day)

Congratulations, France! You are well entitled to the high esteem in which many of the world’s denizens hold you. I always start this day with the first few lines of La Marseillaise. Then we get to the bit about letting impure blood soak our fields and the enthusiasm ebbs ever so slightly. Lest my efforts to promote your culture succeed only in insulting you (which, alas, can be too easy to do), today we will feature books about…prison.

1. Darkness at Noon

darknessDue to the haphazard way in which my childhood library was formed (i.e., books that came with the house), selections were few and disparate. I, being of few years and desperate, picked this up when I was 10 or so. Someone really ought to have been supervising me.

The exciting adventures of Rubashov are informed by Arthur Koestler‘s own experience of arrest and imprisonment under Franco. Impending death seems to impart a great clarity (though that’s a steep price), and Koestler presents this story with a gray sense of the powerlessness of the individual and the inevitability of the state’s agenda. It is not a good book for young people, nor for those condemned. It is good for the vapid or self-absorbed, and I’m sure you know someone like that. (Don’t bother, I already have a copy.)

 

2. One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich

onedayNot usually remembered with nostalgia, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn‘s first book left two lasting impressions on my life:

  1. I named my eldest after Solzhenitsyn (the first name, not the last). I wanted him to grow up to be thoughtful, politically informed, and courageous. He did.
  2. Despite hailing from a long line of smokers, I never got the habit. You may have to spend ten years in a Siberian labor camp, thought I, and tobacco will be really hard to get and that will be the single worst part of the experience. Best not to start. Eternal gratitude, Solzhenitsyn.

These were likely not among the goals the author had in mind when setting pen to paper, but good books, I contend, have a way of creating their own good in the world. This one is great for getting out of your own skin and seeing the world from another perspective. It’s also a terrific way to put a chill on a hot summer day.

Bobby Sands reprised it, to powerful effect, during the Blanket Rebellion at Long Kesh in the ’80s. He wrote his version on toilet paper (hey, he wasn’t using it) and stored it well out of the guards’ reach. His book is just brutal. I can’t recommend you read it yourself (just to avoid damage to your soul), but it would be a thoughtful gift for that Irish Republican or Ancient Hibernian in your life. Or someone British you really dislike.

3. Different Seasons

seasons

Tucked in this Stephen King collection of three excellent short stories (and one vile tale/literary virus that should be contained and used only in the event of alien invasion) is “Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption.”

As prison stories go, this one is a charmer, featuring an unjustly convicted man who uses his talents to improve the lives of everyone in the prison and manages some fairly astonishing feats. If you need a prison story that’s short (maybe you’re just waiting to plead guilty to that speeding charge) and has a happy ending, here’s your ticket.

Do not, under any circumstances, read “Apt Pupil.” Do not. Also, make sure your basement floor is properly paved and sealed.

 

4. Native Son

native

This might be the best time to read Richard Wright‘s masterpiece about crime and race. It is always encouraging to see gifted writers tackling difficult subjects. It is less encouraging to recognize that, with very few revisions, this story could take place today.

I read a host of reviews before posting this and the conflict there tells its own tale. Those who like the book tend to be literary types, social activist types, and students. Those who don’t? I can’t be sure, but they seem to be some angry, privileged people.

“This book would be OK if Wright didn’t have such an agenda.”
“Maybe good for understanding a time when black people were not treated the same as white people.”
“The school board needs to rethink what students should read.”

I can agree with that last comment, both on general principles and on the basis that rape and murder are not easy to read about. But when should our children find out about crime, or inequality, or addiction, or genocide? When is someone old enough to read Night? (NB: No one is ever old enough to read Night.)

I’ll absolve you if you choose to read the abridged version and by all means feel free to skip the author’s long intro if it doesn’t work for you. But give the 250 or so pages in the middle a try. Whatever your race or politics, you’ll learn something.

For those of you who have found this just too depressing, here’s a cheery note: Today is also the birthday of British comedian David Mitchell. If you don’t know him, allow me to make an introduction: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6vLp07ZePY. He has written books, too (not those books, that’s another David Mitchell), about which more in a future installment.

 

It’s “Cheer Up the Lonely” Day!

Caveat: Not all who are alone are lonely. So all you extroverts who somehow stumbled on a book blog, just take a deep breath before you sneak up on some “poor” loner with his nose in a book. However, if you see a forlorn face behind the pages of one of these, maybe smile and say hello.

1. The Bell Jar

belljarSylvia Plath seems like a person with a truckload of problems unless you learn something about Ted Hughes. It’s easy to point the finger at mental illness, but when both your wives opt out? There’s a dark, dark Sesame Street jingle waiting to be composed.

A person carrying this book is likely an English major. This is OK, because the life of an English major is riddled with disappointments, but he can always fall back on “At least I’m not Sylvia Plath” and feel pretty good about things.

An otherwise happy person who picks this up (due to an interest in the French intensive method, let’s say) will face one of two results: Either the book will be put down or the reader will wish he were.

Sad people, people going through breakups, people dating people named Ted, and all teenagers should avoid this book.

 

2. The Remains of the Day

remainsThis Ishiguro fellow is going to get a post all his own one day. He does loneliness like Phelps does water—effortless, smooth, and really fast. He wrote this one in four weeks. If you’ve seen the film, you may be thinking this is one where the book can’t possibly be better. Oh, but it is.

“I try to write unfilmable novels,” Ishiguro told the Economist. I would swear he succeeds, but there are filmmakers afoot who seem equal to the challenge.

If you don’t know the book or the film, imagine what it’s like to live a life of such structure and rigor that you never reveal your feelings, even to yourself.

Then you’re old.

Bam.

 

3. White Nights

whitenightsIf you ever see a non-Russian person under the age of 80 reading Dostoevsky, you should do your best to separate the two of them. I was working on a Russian minor (as in secondary course of study, not as in underaged Belarusian) when the Russian realists drew into my crosshairs. “Do your worst!” I spat at the spectre of their chill threat. I powered through Karamazov. I held firm through Karenina. Dead Souls was just a bit of bureaucratic fluff. Rounding third and heading for home, I dusted off some of Fyodor’s short stories. “The Dream of a Ridiculous Man” hurt. It hurt bad, I won’t lie. Then this. I thought our man was tackling the same project, with a gentler hand. I thought I heard the distant strains of human resilience. Was that…hope?

No. It wasn’t.

Still today, I react to every disappointment—traumatic or trivial—with this line in my head:

“My God, a whole moment of happiness! Is that too little for the whole of a man’s life?”

Extra tip for world leaders: Need to get the upper hand on Putin? Whip this line out on him. There’s no way he can stand the army of regrets that will rise to defeat him on that day. It’s his own personal Polonium-210.

4. The Dead

dead

Feeling uncontrollably chipper? Need to take that spring out of your step before you hurt your back? Is your day just too dang sunny and there are no Russians about? James Joyce to the rescue!

This, too, is a short story because it is, apparently, too easy to depress humans. Take Victorian Dublin, a snowy feast of the Epiphany, a man named Gabriel, and his wife Regretta…er, Gretta, that is. Blend thoroughly, decant into a shotglass, and then plunge the whole thing into a foamy pint of “September 1913” and you get an exploding car bomb named the Death of Romantic Ireland.

Joyce plucks your innards out so beautifully, you’ll think you hear angels singing to the airs of a harp strung with your own catgut. Yes, Furey is buried, but the snow is never very deep on the old sod, is it?

 

Canon Fodder

Today is the birthday of Nobel Prize–winning poet Pablo Neruda. In addition to his Nobel, Neruda also won the Lenin Peace Prize, which sounds oxymoronic to Western ears but its string of winners is no less noble than the Nobel. His death may have been a side-effect of the US-backed coup that brought Augustin Pinochet to power and deposed Salvador Allende. (NB: Salvador Allende is the father of Isabel Allende, but not that Isabel Allende, which was news to me. Here I’d been swayed to buy books I otherwise might not have out of a sense of making reparations to Chile. If you have made the same error, maybe send a few pence to Global Giving, currently serving those affected by last year’s earthquake in Chile.)

I tend not to make a lot of time for poets. The bad ones are soul-destroying (Stanyan Street, anyone?) and the good ones are, well, soul-destroying (I’m looking at you, William Butler). But Neruda gets a nod for what I think are two very good reasons:

1. Harold Bloom has ensconced him in the Western Canon. This is a dazzling achievement. Bloom is one of those people who strikes you as terribly conceited and utterly entitled to his conceit. If he says your work is good, you have long since exceeded good. I encourage everyone to just do whatever he says.

canon

2. Someone has made a sock pattern with a Neruda verse in them. Stephanie Pearl-McPhee (aka the Yarn Harlot) could likely knit up anything for any reason that crossed her brilliant mind, but she chose Neruda. As a result, I spent many months (and quite a few dollars) trying to learn to knit, just so I could have a pair of these. I am not entirely sorry to report that I failed to learn to knit (at least with any skill). The experience left me with an appreciation for Neruda and cold feet.

neruda

Here are a few delightful snippets of Neruda to brighten your day:

neruda1neruda2

neruda4neruda3

And, in its entirety, the poem about the socks:

Mara Mori brought me
a pair of socks
which she knitted herself
with her sheepherder’s hands,
two socks as soft as rabbits.
I slipped my feet into them
as if they were two cases
knitted with threads of twilight and goatskin,
Violent socks,
my feet were two fish made of wool,
two long sharks
sea blue, shot through
by one golden thread,
two immense blackbirds,
two cannons,
my feet were honored in this way
by these heavenly socks.
They were so handsome for the first time
my feet seemed to me unacceptable
like two decrepit firemen,
firemen unworthy of that woven fire,
of those glowing socks.

Nevertheless, I resisted the sharp temptation
to save them somewhere as schoolboys
keep fireflies,
as learned men collect
sacred texts,
I resisted the mad impulse to put them
in a golden cage and each day give them
birdseed and pieces of pink melon.
Like explorers in the jungle
who hand over the very rare green deer
to the spit and eat it with remorse,
I stretched out my feet and pulled on
the magnificent socks and then my shoes.

The moral of my ode is this:
beauty is twice beauty
and what is good is doubly good
when it is a matter of two socks
made of wool in winter.

And, lastly, the “More You Know” segment of our post: Neruda’s poetry teacher was Chile’s other Nobel laureate, Gabriela Mistral. So, if you plan to be blindingly brilliant, you’ll need to snuggle up to other bright types. I tried to find a Nobelist for you to stalk, but those are are still living are reclusive at best (Coetzee) or agoraphobic (Jelinek). You’re best shot is probably Alice Munro  (because she is Canadian, she will probably offer you tea while you wait for the police to arrive and arrest you), but she is 85 and you want to be famous for writing, not for causing palpitations among the literati. In a future installment, we’ll find some Pulitzers or Man Bookers on whom to set your sights.

Alien Invasion

On July 8, 1947, the Associated Press picked up and broadcast a line from a press release issued by the Roswell Army Air Field:

“The Army Air Forces here today announced a flying disk had been found.”

Within a week, the military issued an official explanation that a weather balloon was responsible for the strange sightings in the area. Rumors persist, but generally at the fringe of things.

But, if you think you’ve not been visited by aliens, I say ye nay. Here are some close literary encounters of the best kind.

1. The Time Machine

timemachinePurists may argue that the Eloi and Morlocks are not aliens, but simply humans (d)evolved over eons. I will concede the technicality.

But most critics will draw their best conclusions from finding the familiar (typically the extremes of capitalism) in these very alien races. So there’s a least a soupcon of alienism afoot. And certainly an amokery of alienism in Wells’s War of the Worlds.

H.G. Wells, Victorian par excellence, writer, philanthropist, founder, and unwitting father of Steampunk, had a talent for pointing out what is most human (hosting a dinner party to discuss your adventures in time traveling) and what is most alien (hunting a weaker people for sustenance and sport). In times when we’re looking for the best in humanity, it’s good to have some wise guides along the way.

 

2. The Martian Chronicles

martian

Ray Bradbury spooked me early on with his tales of book burning, but there are some gems in here. The idea of humanity in diaspora suffering from a soul sickness, The Great Loneliness, when realizing how separated they are from Earth is especially poignant.

Of very timely note is his story “Way in the Middle of the Air.” I can imagine that Mars is looking pretty attractive to some segments of the population right about now.

 

 

 

 

 

 

3. Gulliver’s Travels

GulliverNo aliens here, you say? And those horses obsessed with truth-telling were denizens of where, exactly?

Once again, a social commentator takes for his task the improvement of his race. That seems to have been a hobby at one time, like cribbage or stick-and-hoop. Alas, no more. Quel dommage!

Jonathan Swift has an especially acerbic tongue (his recipe for Irish stew a notable example). He reduces his human caricatures to absurd extremes, helping us to see that the Houyhnhmns have a point: “Saying the thing that is not” is poor policy. Foisting this work on adolescent girls, most of whom already have a thing for horses (what is the deal with that, anyway?) is a favorite pastime of teachers, so you must have stumbled upon at least the Lilliputians at some point.

I’m holding in reserve the bulk of the science fiction genre. There are too may easy targets there, in more ways than one.

Good literature can use a lot of tricks to get us to see things in a new way. Sometimes it takes an alien to teach us what it means to be human, and sometimes human behavior is so alien we wonder what we have in common with others of our kind. Dear Reader, I submit that our books, our stories, help us limn the edges of what humanity is, and what it can become. When we choose what to publish or what to read, we are helping to forge those limits and craft those possibilities. Our best books help us become our best selves. What will you read next?

 

 

A Great Escape

I don’t know what the news is like in your corner of the world, but the headlines in my area are pretty bleak—violence, hatred, and little too much reality TV creeping into my reality. While Plan A for today was to celebrate National Chocolate Day, I’m going with Plan B: Books so engrossing that you can momentarily forget whatever is currently on your mind. I hope one of your old favorites (or, even better, a new one) is in the mix.

1.  My Man Jeeves

jeevesWondering how a story of a privileged dimwit and his personal gentleman can possibly be relevant to today’s world? It may not be, and that may be what I like best about it.

I thought P.G. Wodehouse would be too stiff for even my starchy taste, but when a surfeit of Audible credits, a penchant for English inflection, and a severe bout of insomnia conspired against me, I feel into the sweet trap of these delightful stories.

Wodehouse is laugh-out-loud funny and can turn a phrase so fresh that a lingering scent of salt sea air caresses your permanent smile. Even as disaster falls, which it inevitably must when a certain Bertie Wooster is about, Wodehouse discusses it with a dab hand, making you feel a sense of recognition, perhaps even nostalgia, for the perpetual shadow of impending mayhem:

“Unseen in the background, Fate was quietly slipping lead into the boxing-glove.”

Ah, P.G.! Even thoughtful enough to craft your nom de plume after the world’s best teabags.

These are books which I can heartily recommend in audio as well as print. There’s also a delightful BBC version starring a very young Stephen Fry (Jeeves, of course) and an impossibly young Hugh Laurie, available on Acorn.

2. Les Miserables

lesmis

I will stipulate that, rip-roaring as his jingles are, a certain Broadway type makes it quite difficult to see the number 9430 and not wonder what happened to 24601. C’est la vie.

This is a masterwork of a caliber that helps you understand where the word masterwork came from. It is utterly great. Leo Tolstoy described it as among the greatest—if not the greatest—work in literature. That’s a heck of a blurb even if he did not have the foresight to anticipate the work of Stephanie Meyer. (No hate here; I read them.)

Victor Hugo‘s works are not satisfied with merely describing the best of humanity; they elevate the reader. You are a better person after you read this. They ought to have prisoners read this instead of making license plates. (Although, given Valjean’s talent for avoiding capture, I can see why that idea might have been nixed.)

Personal story: When taking my vast gaggle to the library (But Mom, there’s nothing to read in our house [Criminey!]), my oldest, then in his early teens, plucked this off the shelf, walked up to my harried self and said, “Can I get this one?” “My son!” I cried, through misty eyes, spooking the browsers. He did, in fact, read it and does not currently lead a life of crime. My eternal gratitude, M. Hugo.

3. The Beekeeper’s Apprentice

beekeeper

I used to look upon genre fiction with the same sort of disdain that most American women have for my housekeeping. “Sure it’s fine for all and sundry, but I have a degree in reading. I should set my sights higher,” thought ignorant I.

Predictably, like all those who forget why they do a thing in the first place, I began to [true confesh alert] lose my passion for reading. I would dutifully plod through the “suitable” bestsellers and try to get interested in Silas Marner (I’m sorry, Mary Ann). But that flickering box in the corner was starting to catch my eye. “Maybe if I watched Dynasty, I’d be able to keep up with the office chit-chat,” thought criminally ignorant I.

Smart Friend to the rescue. (If you don’t have one, get a Smart Friend. Get as many as you can find. They are just amazingly useful and delightful ways to populate those parts of your life that cannot hold books or are not amenable to dusting.) She must have tried to sell me on Laurie R. King (and Dorothy Sayers! Yes, I thought myself too highbrow for Sayers!) a half-dozen times before I relented.

“It’s Sherlock Holmes.” (Meh. [NB: Mr. Cumberbatch was in nappies.])

“There’s a young woman.” (Whatevs. Not waving the feminist flag in my imaginary worlds.)

“She’s really smart.” (Mild interest, smart people having recently become an interest of mine.)

“She’s Jewish and she studies theology at Oxford.” (Hello.)

“In the Victorian era?”

“Yep.”

“And the writing?”

“Really good.”

Thus did my Smart Friend set me on a course of devouring the twenty or so books in the series (I have a signed copy of the latest, The Murder of Mary Russell) and, by encouraging me to read things just because they were interesting (an entirely new idea to me), may well have saved me as a reader. Eternal gratitude, Smart Friend.

Beekeeper is the first book in the series, and this is one where it’s best to go in order.

4. Still Life

still life

Another Audible discovery, this series by Louise Penny is utterly delicious. Most of the audios were voiced by the incomparable Ralph Cosham and get this listener’s highest praise.

Still Life (again, take this series in order) is the perfect cozy: Small community (you will fall in love with this town), well-crafted characters (ditto), classic detective (double ditto). It is gentle. There are pine breezes and fresh-baked croissants and homespun people who, as Canadians, are not so rural as to offend.

Penny spoke at BEA in May and she was as charming, as deep, and as human as her work. A person could cry listening to her talk about the reason she writes. A person may, in fact, have done so.

Penny is also wickedly smart and drops in plenty of wit. A favorite line comes later in the series when a woman is searching for her son who, for reasons not briefly related, is named Havoc.

“‘Havoc!’ his mother cried, letting the dogs slip out as she called into the woods.”

Yes, please. More of this. Whenever this old world starts getting you down, make a cup of tea and settle down for a braincation in Three Pines.

When you’re wondering what to read next, here’s wishing you many breaks from reality of the non-psychotic kind.