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Books 2012

This year (2012)

Previous years: 2011; 2010; 2009; 2008; 2007; 2006; 2005


Jan Assmann:
     Moses the Egyptian
William Boyd:
     Stars and Bars
Mark Twain:
     The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
Thomas Hardy:
     Jude the Obscure
John Steinbeck:
     The Grapes of Wrath
Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner:
     The Gilded Age
W. Somerset Maugham:
     Of Human Bondage
Régis-Evariste Huc:
     Lamas of the Western Heavens
Anonymous:
     The Bhagavad Gita
G.E.R. LLoyd:
     Greek Science
H.E. Bates:
     The Darling Buds of May
Neil MacGregor:
     A History of the World in 100 Objects
W. Somerset Maugham:
     Rain and Other South Sea Stories
William Faulkner:
     As I Lay Dying

Moses the Egyptian, by Jan Assmann

     This was a Christmas present from an Egyptologist relative in Heidelberg. The great figure there is the author, Professor Jan Assmann. The book, with the subtitle "The Memory of Egypt in Western Monotheism", is extremely learned, with 48 pages of notes and references at the end. A difficult, academic book to read.
    But as anyone who has visited a modern-day bookshop can plainly see, the bookshelves of the world, particularly those marked esoteric, are filled with countless volumes concerned with the religion of ancient Egypt; its relationship to modern religions, to esoteric theories, to secret societies, and all sorts of other things which are of little interest to me. Thus it is surely a brave step for a respected professor of Egyptology to add another volume to this overflowing fountain of religious speculation.
    Perhaps also for this reason, the text is filled with even more complicated words and difficult sentence constructions than is normally the case to be found in an academic work. This book is not a translation from Assmann's native German. Instead he wrote it in English, thanking a colleague who is a native speaker of English for correcting his text. As an illustration of the problems which might arise, I noticed that towards the beginning, when dealing with the concept of "cultural memory", it is said that somebody named Siegfried Morenz "spoke of the "Lebenszusammenhang" of Egypt-Antiquity-Occident. Then in parenthesis, the German word is translated by Assmann into the English "vital coherence", an expression which, if having any meaning at all for a native English speaker, would certainly be very much at variance with the meaning of the German word. But I suppose it is silly to quibble too much about such things.
    The subject of the book is something which has been the subject of many investigations starting in the ancient world (such authors as Strabo are extensively quoted), through countless renaissance authors such as John Spencer, and ending with Sigmund Freud, with his last published book "Moses and Monotheism". The idea is that in the Bible, the character Moses leads his people out of Egypt through various travails, then gets up onto his Mount, and proclaims huge numbers of commandments, many of which seem to be quite strange. Upon closer examination, one finds that most of these commandments (there are of course many more than 10, as anybody who is actually prepared to read the Bible can easily verify) - and especially the first one - are simply concerned with prohibiting what was usual in Egypt and encouraging what was prohibited in Egypt. That is to say, according to the Bible, everything Egyptian is forbidden, taboo, impure. And on the other hand, the Children of the God of the Bible are instructed to do things which within the ancient Egyptian culture would themselves be forbidden, impure. From the Egyptian point of view, we have the writings of Manetho, writing a history for Ptolemy II in the third century B.C.E. There he explains that Egypt wanted to cleanse itself of the lepers, who were expelled to Israel, and they were led there by a priest of Helios, namely Osarsiph, who, for some reason is our Moses of Biblical fame.
    So was Moses really an Israelite, or was he an Egyptian priest (and the one place in the Bible where this is asserted is in 7:22 of the Acts of the Apostles in the New Testament), or is all of this just a lot of mystical nonsense designed to get people to start fighting with one another?
    Of course the name "Moses" is obviously Egyptian. For example we have the various kings named "Tuthmosis", and so forth. According to Assmann, the word moses means "son" or "son of".
    Then there is the interesting case of Akhenaten (ca. 1350 B.C.E.), the husband of Nefertiti and father of Tutankhamen. He shocked his people by declaring that all of their religion was illegal, and instead it must be replaced by his new, monotheistic religion of Aten. No more of this absurd afterlife nonsense. Instead we have the reality of Nature, the real world. All these horrible priests should be driven out of their temples.
    Yes, a very good idea!
    So do we have the equation Akhenaten = Moses? Or at least (The High Priest of Akhenaten) = Moses? You can go into lots of bookshops, or examine the archives of amazon.com, and find countless books "proving" such hypotheses. But of course Jan Assmann is above such things. In reality, the memory of Akhenaten was quickly stamped out of Egypt, perhaps only living on in a kind of "cultural subconscious". In any case, this is the basis of the idea that the high priests of Egypt guarded a "secret" knowledge about the oneness of Nature, and that Moses belonged to such a caste.
    The most interesting theory was that of Freud, working on the idea that all of religion is nothing but a mass hysteria, or neurosis. It was all part of a cultural Oedipus complex. Namely, in the primitive world, the tribes of those simple creatures were dominated by the prime male - the "father" - who had the mating rights with all the females of the tribe. But then, as this father figure aged and his sons grew in strength, they killed the father so that they could also mate with the females. In this interpretation, Moses was the father who was killed by the Children of Israel. Thus the hysteria of religion is a symptom of the suppressed cultural guilt of this original murder. Freud published his book in 1937, perhaps with the hope of doing something to make people understand the hysteria which was about to lead to the catastrophe of the concentration camps. How sad and helpless all of this seems today.

    But what is the true origin of religion? Why are there so many books on the subject, and why is it the cause of so much human conflict and misery?
    While a book such as this is interesting as a history of many of the myths which people have been telling one another down through the ages, it is not concerned with the basic cause of the illness. And that has nothing to do with the details of all of these myths. Assmann says that before Akhenaten, the various gods were common to all people. You had a god of thunder, of the winds, of the sun, and so forth. And while one tribe had one name for them, and another tribe had a different name, the people could simply agree that it was sensible to translate one name into another to denote the same thing. And so people lived happily ever after in peace with one another up until the unfortunate time that Akhenaten brought in this monotheistic thing. Such may be the view of the historian, with all his texts in ancient learned languages.
    But by studying such texts we only learn of the folly of mankind, not its cause. Years ago I read a most interesting book named "Games of Life", by Karl Sigmund. There he shows how the behavior of interacting organisms can be modeled using computer simulations. And the question is, what is the most successful strategy for survival? The answer is quite interesting. Basically speaking, the best strategy is "tit for tat", or to use the Biblical term "an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth" (see Moses on the Mount for this). Going beyond this, the strategies become more refined, and we find that the optimal strategy for survival incorporates most of what we think of as "moral" behavior.
    It is also a very successful strategy to form groups, or cliques within the whole population, mutually defending one another and aggressively competing with other groups. Religion is one method - perhaps the primary method amongst human beings - of defining such groups. Thus religion is not some sort of neurosis which can be cured by means of a cultural psychoanalysis. Instead it is a means of expressing a basic property of life. In the jungle, or wherever primitive people lived, such mutually aggressive cliques could live their lives in continuous conflict, such as they were. But in the civilized world, the myths of religion obscure the catastrophe to which they lead.

Stars and Bars, by William Boyd

     A funny book about a character named Henderson Dores, an Englishman in the U.S.A. He is an expert on impressionist paintings for an English auction house. An eccentric person in the Deep South - Georgia - has some paintings he would like to sell. It is hoped that by selling them, the New York branch of the auction house will become firmly established in the New York art scene. Thus Henderson is sent down south.
    It's a complicated story. Many laughs, but often a bit drastic. I couldn't put the book down. These books by William Boyd are always enjoyable. In the end, things become rather chaotic, and the whole situation remains unresolved, up in the air. Like a Hollywood movie.
    Indeed, looking at William Boyd's Internet site, I see that there was a movie made of the book. Unfortunately it only seems to be available as a VHS tape, not a DVD. But we threw our defective VHS player into the garbage years ago. A shame, since I would have enjoyed seeing the movie.

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, by Mark Twain

     This Christmas we were given a Kindle ebook reader. I wouldn't have taken such a step by myself, but now we do have it. According to the hype, reading such "electronic ink" is just as pleasant and easy on the eyes as is reading printed words on real paper. Well, the letters on the screen are not as sharp as printed letters, and also there are only two basic fonts (together with the italic versions). Also the screen is grayish, not like the nice clear white of paper. And light reflects from the glass of the screen, so you sometimes have to hold it at an angle to avoid the glare. On the other hand, since the screen is passive it uses very little electricity, so that the battery holds its charge for a long time. And of course by avoiding paper, fewer trees are chopped down in comparison with the situation if people buy the paper book. Another good thing is that it has dictionaries in various languages integrated into the device, so that if a word is unclear, you simply move the cursor over to that word, and the dictionary entry is immediately shown. And then it is possible to change the size of the type, so that for people with weak eyes, a very large typeface can be chosen.
    We were also given a 100 euro gift certificate for amazon.com, with the recommendation that we immediately download a certain humorous Swedish novel in its translation into German. Thus our credit with amazon was decreased to 90 euros or so, and I started reading that book. But I must admit that after a couple of chapters, I rather got bored with it. So then I decided to have a look at the Project Gutenberg collection of books. These are older books whose copyright has expired so that they can be freely transmitted. And I see that many of them are offered in the Kindle format. Having no real idea about where to look, I saw that they list the 100 most popular books in the last 24 hours, or last 30 days, or whatever.
    The most popularly downloaded book in Gutenberg.org is the Kama Sutra. Having a quick look at the html version for normal computers, just now, as I write this, I see that it does not appear to include illustrations. It has a very modest size of only 418 kilobytes. Yet the Kindle versions are smaller: 255 kilobytes, and for the version with illustrations it is 259 kilobytes. Thus I suspect that eager Gutenberg.org downloaders, looking for titillating pictures to accompany the text, might be disappointed by the fact that they add a mere 4 kilobytes to the volume of the book.
    The second most popular book is The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, which I listened to as an audio-book a year or two ago. The third most popular one is Dickens' Christmas Carol, which we read out to one another in our reading circle recently. And the fourth book is Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Downloading it into the Kindle, it starts off by saying that it continues the story which was started in the earlier book about Tom Sawyer. (Which is Gutenberg's 14th most popular book.) Thus I downloaded that, and started to read.
    If anybody does happen to read this and then happen to think it would be a nice idea to read the Gutenberg Tom Sawyer, then let me tell you that you should download the version with illustrations. In fact, the normal html version does have the illustrations, and they are much clearer on the computer screen in comparison with the Kindle screen. The Kindle is really rather weak when trying to reproduce illustrations.

    But the book itself was an enjoyable read. Having read it now, I am sure that I didn't read it as a child. Mark Twain begins by telling the reader that it is for children, but he hopes that grown-ups might enjoy it too. He tells us that the characters of the children in the story are taken from his observations of the children he knew, growing up on the banks of the upper reaches of Mississippi, north of the Deep South. The one point which raised a question in my mind was at the end, where Tom and Huck discover the treasure which was hidden away in the cave by Injun Joe. Obviously it was stolen property and was thus not lawfully theirs. Nevertheless, the story ends with them openly displaying their riches to the authorities in the town, and nobody objects to them keeping the treasure. If it were a grown-up story, the end would not be quite so sanguine.
    The greatest thing about the book is the illustrations. I didn't count them. There must have been at least 50, all very beautifully executed. I would recommend that you have a quick look at the first few illustrations by following the link I have given above. The first is a portrait of Tom Sawyer. How different this picture is in comparison with the Walt Disney - Hollywood version! How America has changed in the 150 years between the publication of this book and today. The illustrations transport us back into a world of bygone times. Was it a better world?

Jude the Obscure, by Thomas Hardy

     Looking further in Gutenberg.org, I thought I'd try a slightly more "grown-up" book, and so downloaded this one. Long ago, as a student, I did read Far from the Madding Crowd, but I can hardly remember what it was about. Jude the Obscure was the last book Hardy wrote. It was published in 1895 (yet Hardy lived on until 1928). According to the Wikipedia article on Thomas Hardy, this book has some relationship to the life of the author. Hardy was born into modest circumstances, and thus he was denied the education he desired, never achieving a university education. Also his wife became increasingly carried away with morbid religious superstition. And in his early life, he was an architect.
    The Jude of this book was born into very much more straightened circumstances. Everything takes place in Wessex, which of course no longer exists in England. In medieval times, much of the south-west portion of England was the Kingdom of the West Saxons, or Wessex. (Essex was the Kingdom of the East Saxons, but apparently that was a rather obscure kingdom in old England. The true center of the Saxons was around the state of Lower Saxony, whose capital is Hanover in today's Germany. For some reason which I don't understand, the present state of Saxony is over in the eastern part of Germany where Dresden and Leipzig are. But in medieval times, that territory was occupied by the tribe of the Thuringians. During the Saxon Wars around the year 800, all of this pleasant tribal life was brought to an abrupt end by Charlemagne, who imposed his cruel, oppressive Christian rule.)
    Anyway, in Thomas Hardy's novels, this Wessex is a kind of parallel, imaginary England, where the towns correspond with real towns, yet they have have different names. The Wikipedia article gives a table for translating these names. Thus, for example, we have the correspondences Oxford = "Christminster", Salisbury = "Melchester", Shaftesbury = "Shaston", and so forth.
    The plot of the book is well summarized here. The story has been filmed, most recently in a version with Kate Winslet playing the role of Sue, Jude's almost, but not quite, wife. But when reading the book, my picture of Sue was of a thin, nervous, flighty person, the opposite of the sensual, earthy Kate Winslet.
    I very much enjoyed the book. It's written in a very direct way, describing things - basic human emotions - which still exist today, but now sometimes wrapped in different forms. Thomas Hardy shows how religion, and the institution of marriage as sanctified by religion, may lead to tragedy. Of course the church in late Victorian England condemned the book, even to the point of having it burned. The reaction against it was so great that Hardy wrote no more books in his lifetime.

The Grapes of Wrath, by John Steinbeck

     An unpleasant, dismal story. Much worse than the movie with Henry Fonda. We follow the Joad family from their small, indebted farm in Oklahoma, along Route 66 in a dilapidated jalopy, to their end in the inhuman, rapacious cynicism of Southern California in the 1930s. The book is a long, tedious read, filled with unpleasant dialogue. I had the impression that at least 50% of it consisted of this dialogue. Opening the book at random just now, my eye happened to find the following fragment, spoken by the "Ma" character.
"Didn't none of these here have no breakfast?"
    And the answer from the children:
"We et good. We're a-goin' south to-night."
    And so on.
Now it is true that when reading these words, I knew immediately what the first sentence was supposed to mean, just as did the children. Nevertheless, when the question is written out more clearly, namely: "Did none of these here not have no breakfast?", then I think that the overabundance of negations serves to make the whole thing almost incomprehensible. It would be a challenging problem on an I.Q. test to inquire as to whether a yes or a no answer - or something else - would be required in order to convey the information that at least some of the children did, in fact, have breakfast.
    The fact that this book is a classic obviously rests not on the elegance of its prose. Rather it is the shocking state to which the Midwestern farmers in the story are reduced, and the thought that their story was shared by many during the Great Depression.
    According to the story - and perhaps it was true in real life - the large land holders of Southern California distributed hundreds of thousands of printed advertisements to the destitute farmers of the Midwest, saying that there would be many well paid jobs for fruit picking. The cynical motive was to flood the country with hoards of desperate, starving people, willing to work for almost nothing. These people, the "Okies", were to be kept under control by brutal bands of police and militias, serving their masters, the landed aristocracy of California. Yes, I'm sure it was horrible. In a way, even more horrible than the experiences of Valentino Achek Deng in South Sudan. Refugees who have fled to a foreign country have the hope of regrouping and returning to a better life, or at least the hope of forming a community within the foreign country to give one another mutual support. The Okies were alone in the world with their families, fighting one another to survive.
    Undoubtedly many people would say that the book is commendable, merely owing to the fact that we have sympathy with the plight of the people who are represented in the book. But still, having read it, I am left with a number of questions.
    For example, much is made of the idea that these Midwestern farmers were living life in some sort of "natural" way, before their lives were destroyed by capitalism, by unnatural, mechanical farming methods, and so forth. And thus John Steinbeck, writing in the 1930s, transports us into the dream-world of the modern "eco"-lobby.
    But what about the lives of the Indians who were living in Oklahoma in the days before all those lovable "granmas" and "grampas" drove them out in the 1870s, or so? Surely they were living more "naturally" than the "sod-busters" who came in, plowing away much of the vegetation, annihilating the vast herds of buffalo which roamed the lands. And going back even further, one can say that the Indians were not living naturally (if we take this term to mean what the eco-lobby apparently wants it to mean). After all, the Indians regularly burned the vegetation in order to create the "Great Plains". In a dry climate, such as that in Australia, trees and bushes grow if they are not gotten rid of by people.
    If the granmas and granpas of this book destroyed the Great Plains of the Indians, then surely it was a natural development for the small, inefficient farms of the sod-busters to be amalgamated into larger blocks which could be more easily farmed, using modern machinery. John Steinbeck devotes pages to romanticizing the use of horses in heavy farm work. And then, after the long trek along Route 66, his main character, Tom, expresses - using his Okie dialect, as always - the pleasure of pounding away at the ground for eight or ten hours a day, using a hand pick. In contrast with this, Steinbeck gives us a long-winded passage describing tractors as being dead objects, and the people driving them as being mindless robots. And yet, strangely enough, he seems to attribute more human characteristics to the lonely truck drivers, driving their trucks along Route 66. Why is a truck better than a tractor? Whereas a modern harvester retains almost all of the grain in a field, the old methods with primitive, hand held tools, resulted in as much as half the harvest being lost in the dirt to rot and be wasted.
    Reading the description of John Steinbeck's life in the Wikipedia article I have linked to above, it seems doubtful if he ever had the romantic "pleasure" of manually swinging a pick-axe all day long in the hot sun. This was more of a pleasure for his imagination. And quite frankly, I prefer to see horses in their modern role as the playthings of young girls, rather than being whipped by a cruel farmer in order to force them to drag heavy plows across fields, or stuck with spurs and having their gums painfully squeezed by bridle bits. For me, the sight of a man sitting comfortably in the air-conditioned cabin of a modern tractor or harvester, doing the work which in earlier times required hundreds of men and animals, exerting themselves in back-breaking, menial labor, is a magnificent testimony to the genius of the human spirit.
    There are parallels between the situation of the 1930s and that of today. 40 million Americans are on food stamps. The true rate of unemployment, according to some estimates, is greater than that during the depths of the Great Depression. The level of debt is certainly much greater. The conditions in Greece, or Spain, caused by the introduction of the common European currency ten years ago, are a catastrophe. All of this is caused by a corrupt combination of moneyed interests and a bloated government dependent upon those interests. Back in the 1930s, such people as Steinbeck romanticized the Russia of "Uncle Joe" Stalin, who was perhaps the greatest mass murderer of all time. Hopefully in the modern world people will be more sensible.

The Guilded Age, by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner

     A longish, rather complicated story, involving a simple family in the Tennessee of the 1850s which owns thousands of seemingly useless acres of backwoods land. They move on to another backwoods place in Missouri, and we are introduced to various larger-than-life characters living there. All of them have schemes for making lots of money at the expense of other people. The main character we follow is Laura, who, after a tragic boiler explosion on a Mississippi paddle-wheeler, lost her parents and was adopted by the family. She grows up and goes to Washington in order to convince Congress to buy the Tennessee land for millions of dollars. The story now takes place sometime after the Civil War, in the 1870s. She quickly becomes a leading lobbyist, manipulating things at will. In the end, she becomes disgraced and dies of a broken heart. The Tennessee land is not bought by Congress, but on the other hand, one of the other characters close to the family finds a thick vein of coal so that everybody is saved from poverty, and everybody except Laura lives happily ever after.
    The story is about the corruption and cynicism of the politicians in Washington. I wonder how much of the book was due to Mark Twain. Somehow it lacks his usual humor.
    Obviously the situation in Washington has not improved in the hundred and forty years between the time this book was first published and today. Back then, in 1873, the details of Laura's transition from a simple, but beautiful, country girl to a powerful lobbyist are glossed over in a few implausible pages. A contemporary author would undoubtedly revel in the sexual depravity elicited by the modern Washington call-girl. The unfortunate thing is that the power modern politicians have to produce evil has been multiplied out of all proportion to the situation back in 1873. But it is astonishing to read this book and to realize how little things have changed in the United States in all that time. The religious hypocrisy. The bumbling incompetence.
    Having just read The Grapes of Wrath, this book puts that other story into a different light. The world today seems to be entering into a new Great Depression, perhaps even greater than that of the 1930s. The world is drowning in debt, owing to the fact that the central banks of the world - following the lead of America's Federal Reserve - have reduced interest rates to way below the level of inflation. That is to say, government is paying speculators to increase their debt beyond all reason, and if the various parties to debt get into difficulties, then they can rely on their corrupt lackeys in Washington to "bail them out", meaning that we normal people must pay for their extravagances.
    At least in 1873 money was a stable thing. The dollar was backed by gold or silver. And so if you got 5% interest on an investment, then you really got it. In today's world, if you get 1.5% interest, while inflation is three or four percent, then you are simply loosing things slightly slower than would be the case if you put them in the piggy bank. And then you must pay a capital gains tax on your losses!
    Thus many people say that we should go back to the gold standard. Perhaps that would be a good thing, particularly in view of the absurd corruption here in Europe which has accompanied the dreadful euro currency. Unfortunately though, as this book shows, even a world with "real" money is no utopia. The fact of the matter is that in earlier times, when coins were really made of silver, most people had very few of them, and the 1% (or more realistically, the 0.01%, or even less) of people who were rich swam in their ill-gotten hoards of gold and silver.

    As a final note, I must say that I found the punctuation of the book to be very strange. Now of course I have no idea about proper punctuation. Perhaps it was taught at school, but I am sure that if it was, then I turned my mind to other thoughts. Thus I have no idea where to place commas. I imagine that they should be there in order to break up the ideas in a sentence into logical segments which can then be more easily read. But both in this book, and also in Mark Twain's Tom Sawyer, the commas seem to appear all over the place, often in the most inappropriate places.

Of Human Bondage, by W. Somerset Maugham

     This is the story of the youth and coming of age of Philip Carey, an English boy in the 1890s. Apparently there are many parallels with the life of the author. Maugham was born in Paris (in the British Embassy, so technically on British soil) and grew up initially as a French speaker. Thus English was a problem for him, and he developed a stammer, which was an embarrassment. Similarly, the Philip of this book has a club-foot which is an embarrassment. Maugham's mother, to whom he was most devoted, died when he was only 8, and his father died two years later. So he was sent to live with his uncle, a cold, straight-laced vicar in an English country town. The Philip of the book had the same experience. Both were sent to unpleasant boarding schools. Both quit school and went for a year to study at Heidelberg. Both returned to England to study accounting, for which they found they had no aptitude. But at this point, the story of the book departs from the story of the life of the author. The author went directly into medical studies, whereas Philip decided to become an artist and moved to Paris, where he spent two years amongst the English art students, living the low life. In this way he was able to make up for the French experience which the author had already lived through as a small boy. After realizing that he had no talent for art, he then returned to London where he also studied medicine. And at this stage of things, the story of the author, and of his character, Philip Carey, diverge into different worlds.
    It is a wonderful book. Such a contrast with Maugham's The Moon and Sixpence, which I read a year or two ago. We suffer with Philip through all his trials: love, money, the meaning of life.
    At the beginning we are told that Philip's parents left him about 2000 pounds. Putting this into the inflation calculator, we find that the British pound of 2012 is only worth about a hundredth of its value in 1900. Thus, thinking in terms of today's ephemeral paper money, he had 200,000 pounds. This was invested for him by the lawyer acting on his behalf in mortgages which returned 5%, giving an annual income of 10,000 pounds. But of course the 100 pounds he was receiving in 1900 was real money. It wasn't disappearing in inflation. This was sufficient to pay for all of his expenses.
    On his return from Paris, when starting his medical studies in London as a grown man, he gains control over his finances. But he is not particularly thinking about them. An experienced nurse in his hospital tells him that nobody commits suicide for love; instead it is always the problem of money, lack of it, hunger, homelessness. And so the book concerns itself with similar subjects to those of earlier 19th century novels - one thinks of Jane Austen - where everything is concerned with money, wealth - and love. Only on the last page does the hero or heroine of such a romance marry the wonderfully wealthy object of desire, and we are left to imagine that life then continues forever afterwards in perfect bliss.
    But in contrast with Jane Austen's novels, Philip experiences true hardship on his passage to the last page of this novel. Rather than falling madly in love with the person who will eventually fulfill his dreams, he becomes infatuated with Mildred, a dreadful character. She really hates him, but since he spends huge amounts of his money on her, hoping thus to buy her love, she finds it convenient to use him. Dreadful scenes. We think surely he has now realized that it is hopeless. And many times, just when we think Philip has gotten himself into a more sensible path of life, Mildred again turns up, weeping, asking for more money, and Philip takes her back. This process was so painful that I often had to exclaim out loud, "Oh no!". All of this leads to Philip becoming totally destitute. He is starving. He sleeps on park benches. Thankfully though, his uncle, the vicar, dies, leaving him enough to be able to resume his medical studies.
    In the end, Philip realizes that Sally, the healthy, uncomplicated daughter of a good friend, loves him. He thinks that he doesn't love her, since in his imagination love is the selfish, destructive, one-sided infatuation which he had experienced with Mildred. After a summer night's tender coupling on a rural holiday with Sally's family, the question arose as to whether she was pregnant. At first he was shocked, thinking that this is now the end of all his romantic plans for travels to exotic, tropical places as a ship's doctor. But then he comes around to thinking that life would be good in a comfortable medical practice on the English seaside, together with Sally and all the children they would have. They meet and Sally tells him that he is free; it was a false alarm. But he tells Sally that he loves her still, and so they are set to marry and live happily ever after.

Lamas of the Western Heavens, by Régis-Evariste Huc

     I first read this book about 30 years ago, when it was published by the Folio Society, and now I have re-read it. It seems to be possible to obtain copies through various online antiquarian bookshops, and also through amazon.com. For those who can understand French, there is a beautifully set pdf version of the original publication from 1850.
    Around the year 1845, Huc, together with Joseph Gabet, both of whom were French Catholic missionaries to China, belonging to the Lazarist congregation, set off on a long trek from their mission in Manchuria, through northern China and Mongolia, and then across the mountains to Lhasa in Tibet. Their idea was establish a Christian mission in that center of Buddhist religion. But they were not religious fanatics. They dressed in the costume of "lamas". According to the Wikipedia article, the definition of a lama is a "venerated spiritual master", or to use the Sanskrit word, a "guru". And thus they were accepted by all of those Buddhist monks traveling about in central Asia as one of them. This despite the fact that the Christian religion had been declared illegal by the Emperor of China.
    In fact lamas had much freedom of travel. Huc and Gabet, being French, only had to make sure that nobody thought that they belonged to the nation of those horrible "sea-devils", the English. At that time, China was fighting a "war on drugs" involving the opium which the sea-devils were bringing from India in their warships to Canton. Unlike the poor Mexican drug barons of today who live in fear of helicopter gunships, and all the other advanced armaments of the United States, the sea-devils of the 1840s enjoyed a military superiority with respect to the overwhelmed Chinese police. Both in China, and also in Tibet, there was great fear that the English in India, who were known for their trickery, might soon cross the mountains and overwhelm central Asia.
    The book is a fascinating account of their long trek over some of the most extreme terrain in the world. Huc tells us of the many conversations they had with Buddhist monks, and their extended stays in large monasteries. Upon arrival at Lhasa, they began by setting up a small chapel in some rented rooms. But soon a suspicion arose that they might be English spies, making maps in order to facilitate an invasion. Some years before that, the Englishman William Moorcroft settled in Lhasa, staying there 12 years or so. And then it was discovered that he had spent his time making maps of the country, for which he was executed. Thus Huc and Gabet were arrested and brought to the worldly administrator of Tibet (the spiritual administrator, the Dalai Lama, was a 9 year old child then, and small-pox was going around, so it was decided not to introduce Huc and Gabet to him). They had a nice long talk with the administrator about philosophy, religion, geography, and what have you, and so they became great friends with him. Of course the "Western Heavens" from which they told everybody they came was Europe, and particularly France, not England!
    The Chinese Ambassador, who at first put on a show of force, also became great friends with these two French monks. The Chinese Ambassador, whose name was Kichan (or Qishan), had a few years before been sent by the Emperor to Canton to try to deal with the sea-devils. He found that when they were not drug-running, they were a reasonably civilized people. So he negotiated with them, and agreed to let them have a small island - Hong Kong - in the Pearl River Delta. When the Emperor heard of this, he at first wanted to have Kichan executed for treachery. But he spared him, and later sent him to the wilds of Tibet in order to let him try and rehabilitate himself.
    So Kichan was in a delicate position, and he realized that if the Emperor got wind of the fact that he was tolerating the presence of Christian monks in Lhasa, then he would certainly be executed. Thus he ordered Huc and Gabet to leave Tibet via China, rather than the more simple crossing of the Himalayas into India and the English. They objected, saying that they were guests of the Tibetans, and the Administrator of Tibet was very much on their side. But they soon realized that the conflict they were provoking could even lead to armed conflict between the small Chinese force in Lhasa and the Tibetan forces, perhaps with further consequences. Thus they reluctantly agreed to leave.
    Kichan provided them with a large escort, and they traveled with all the honors which would be accorded to highly placed Chinese mandarins. But still, the difficulties of the return journey eastwards through the mountains were again most extreme. In the end, the old Chinese general who was accompanying them, traveling back to retirement, and two other people of the aristocratic class, a father and his son, died on the journey, so that they finally reentered China accompanied by three coffins and the ragged remains of their escort.

The Bhagavad Gita

     This was one of this year's Folio books. It is a very nicely made book, a beautiful cover, and many illustrations by the (presumably Indian) artist Anna Bhushan in water color, giving often dream-like, but apt visions of the thoughts in the text. Of course you can also read the book in various formats at Gutenberg.org. Unfortunately, I must say that while most of the books of the Folio Society have sensible, well-written introductions, providing the reader with a clear picture of what the book is about; introducing him to the background and the circumstances of the book; arousing his interest, the introduction to this book fails on all these counts. It is written by somebody named Amit Chaudhuri, obviously an Indian. Perhaps, as with many of his literary inclined countrymen, he seems to imagine that he floats above the world in an ethereal plane, inaccessible to such primitive, simple-minded people as me. A far better introduction is given by the Wikipedia article which I have linked to above. There it is said, for example, that Gandhi came back to the text again and again throughout his life, drawing inspiration and guidance from it.
    Famously, Robert Oppenheimer, the father of the atomic bomb, says in this video, that when observing the detonation of the first atomic bomb - for which he determined that it be given the biblical name "Trinity Test" - he thought of a quotation from the Bhagavad Gita, namely:
"Now, I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds."
On the other hand, according to his brother, who is quoted here, in reality, he simply said "It worked!". And others said that "his face relaxed into an expression of tremendous relief".
    Be that as it may, I looked carefully through the book in order to find this quotation, but without success. Thinking that I must have missed it, I downloaded the Gutenberg.org version of the book and let the computer search through the text, but it failed to find anything resembling that quotation. Looking further, I find that Oppenheimer actually learned enough Sanskrit in order to read the thing in the original, and so that was his interpretation of one of the verses. The verse must be 10:34, which in the translation by Juan Mascaró, which is the basis of this Folio edition, is:
"I am death that carries off all things, and I am the source of things to come. Of feminine nouns I am Fame and Prosperity, Speech, Memory and Intelligence, Constancy and patient Forgiveness."
Perhaps when thinking of the brilliance of the light emitted by the atomic bomb, Oppenheimer was also thinking of 10:21, which is translated as:
"Among the sons of light I am Vishnu, and of luminaries the radiant sun..."

    Indeed, the basic story of the text is that Arjuna, a member of the warrior caste of ancient India, is about to engage in a deadly battle. But he realizes that his adversaries include members of his own clan. Is it right to go to battle and murder his own people? In order to resolve this difficult problem in ethical and moral philosophy, he invokes Krishna, the God of all things. Krishna appears to him in human form and expounds at length on the various points of his philosophy. It is, indeed, rational and often inspiring. He describes in detail the things that distinguish the upright, honorable man. One who lives in harmony with his existence. And yes, for Arjuna, the message Krishna has to tell him is that he should go for it. Fulfill his destiny as the great warrior, conquering all before him. I can well imagine that Oppenheimer saw himself placed into the role of the Arjuna of the Atomic Age, and he gained some measure of inner peace with the thought that according to Krishna, he was doing the right thing.
    Thankfully I am not a member of the warrior caste. Towards the end of the Bhagavad Gita, Krishna describes the various forms of yoga. Sattva yoga is obviously the most sublime, being (according to 14:6) pure, giving light, health, and so on. Raja is passion, thirst. "It binds the soul of man to action." I would hardly think that applies to me. Yet having just now enjoyed a nice large portion of very dry, salty popcorn, topped with sizzling butter, I see that according to 17:9: "Men of Rajas like food of Rajas: acid and sharp, and salty and dry, and which brings heaviness and sickness and pain." Oh well. All I can say is that despite all of this, I enjoy popcorn, consumed in a state of mind transcending the raja mode of Indian philosophy.

Greek Science by G.E.R. LLoyd

     Having just finished this book, I wonder why I bothered to read it in the first place. One is simply impressed with the fact that the ancient Greeks really didn't have very sensible ideas about how things work. How was it possible for Aristotle to maintain that the speed of a falling object is proportional to its weight when even a small child, playing with its toys, soon learns that such an idea is absurdly false?
    And then we have their speculations on astronomy - or rather their attempts to understand the movements of the planets. Placing the earth at the center of the universe, and having the universe rotate about the earth each 24 hours is no great problem. After all, following Einstein we see that everything is relative. According to Mach's principle, in such a frame of reference this rapid rotation of the universe about the earth will result in the centrifugal force which - in the usual frame of reference - would be attributed to the earth's rotation in a non-rotating universe. The real problem was the fixed idea which the ancient Greeks had, attributing strictly uniform, circular motion to the planets. This led to the nonsense of epicycles within epicycles. The book has many illustrations to describe such things. Even Ptolemy realized that his system simply didn't work, and later writers were satisfied to say that the problem of describing the motion of the planets is beyond the capacity of the human mind to understand it. But we now know that the planets follow the simplest paths imaginable, namely "straight" lines (geodesics) in the curved space and time of the world. Somehow it is depressing to read how the dogmas laid down by the earliest Greek philosophers blocked any real progress for almost 2000 years.
    But what is science? For the ancient Greeks, living in a culture of debate, perhaps their main innovation was to base their arguments on - more or less - rational ideas, rather than simply appealing to the gods and to ancient superstition.
    For us, science has a much more rigorous definition. (Or at least it should have!) Given some physical phenomenon, then hypotheses are put forward to explain it, and experiments are performed to test the hypotheses. And even after people have settled upon an agreed explanation, we are still open to the idea that something might come up to falsify the explanation, leading to a search for new explanations.
    LLoyd shows that in medicine the ancient Greeks were somewhat more practical. After all, sick people want to be healed. They will not be satisfied with vague philosophical reflections about nothing in particular. But surely many different ancient cultures also accumulated practical methods for dealing with injuries, sicknesses, and so forth. This is nothing unique about the ancient Greeks.
    So why do people say that "science" originated in ancient Greece?
    I suppose the one area where the Greeks are thought to have made important contributions is mathematics. But again, this begs the question, what is mathematics? The Greeks concentrated upon geometry, and the text of Euclid played a central role. The idea was that, starting from certain basic assumptions, geometric relationships can be proved. However, in fact, Euclid made many extra, unstated assumptions in his proofs, rendering the whole work inconclusive. In contrast, we have for example Tarski's axiomatic scheme for geometry, which reduces everything to a clear, logical basis. Perhaps it is computers which have focused peoples minds on the true basis of mathematics in the modern world. If you write a computer program, then you must tell the machine what to do, step for step, to accomplish the task you have set. If you are going to write a computer program dealing with geometry, then it would get you nowhere trying to define in the computer language such things as: "A point is that which has no part", or "The edges of a surface are lines", and so on. (See this site for an online version of Euclid's Elements.)
    I had always thought that at least Archimedes accomplished lots of sensible things. Yet I was astonished to read in the book that he wished the fact to be engraved on his tombstone that the volume of a cylinder of radius r and height 2r is two thirds the volume of a sphere of radius r. Was this his greatest accomplishment? After all, such a cylinder has a base area of πr2, and a height of 2r, giving the volume 2πr3. On the other hand, the volume of a sphere is r3/3. Was it this later formula which Archimedes was so proud of? The fact that the area of a circle is πr2 is demonstrated very nicely here. But the business of the volume is a bit more complicated. The standard method is to use a simple integral, as shown here. Archimedes used instead something called Cavalieri's principle, which also gives a very obvious geometrical derivation.
    Was all of this so very much unique to the ancient Greeks? When thinking about this it is interesting to consider the case of traditional Japanese mathematics, which developed independently of European thought. In particular, we have the achievements of the great Seki Takakazu. The results were often simply written on wooden tablets and placed as ephemeral offerings in the temples. Who can say that, for example, the Maya did not also develop such a tradition?
    According to both the Epicurean and the Stoic schools of Hellenistic philosophy, the true goal of science, mathematics, philosophy, is to achieve a state of peace of mind. And so in a more peaceful world which is not as preoccupied with progressing into the future as ours is, I can imagine people making scientific discoveries which they then offer to the winds, or to a temple fire, as a deep form of meditation.
    Perhaps the thing that distinguishes modern science from everything that came before is the technology we have, enabling us to make machines which would have been unimaginable in the ancient world. Thus the true basis of science is the gradual accumulation of practical knowledge about materials in the 2000 years after Aristotle. For the scribes in the scriptoriums of the monasteries of the middle ages, such things - the innovations of blacksmiths, and what have you - were of no interest, and thus they are lost to modern historians.

The Darling Buds of May by H.E. Bates

     A very lightweight book. From his Wikipedia entry, I see that this Bates was a prolific writer, satisfying the imagination of the English reading public in the post World War 2 world of the 1950s. The story is concerned with the lifestyle of the Larkin family. Before reading the book, I had vaguely thought that it might be concerned with the family of the poet Philip Larkin. But no, the Larkins of this book are ridiculous caricatures of what I suppose the straight-laced, class-conscious English people of those days secretly admired. The book is filled with unrestrained gluttony - pork, eggs, beer, champagne... is consumed continuously from morning to night. While the wife and mother is correspondingly fat, the husband, at least in the illustrations in my copy of the book, is not, and the children, particularly the sex-obsessed oldest daughter, a pregnant, sweet sixteen, is depicted as being breathtakingly beautiful. These must be the dreams of a bygone generation of English people. Unfortunately, the children, or rather the grandchildren of such families as the 1950s English Larkins have now grown up to become the hooligans which infest such otherwise pleasant places as Majorca or Ibiza.

A History of the World in 100 Objects, by Neil MacGregor

     The author is the director of the British Museum in London, and this book has 100 short chapters, each describing some particular object in the museum. It seems that the idea for the book was the result of a series of radio programs on the BBC, where these objects were described. It's all quite interesting. MacGregor describes in detail what is known about the circumstances of each object, what the people were like who made it, and how their history fits in with the histories of the other peoples living in the world at various times.
    Of course, as a man of the modern world and the representative of an iconic institution of the English Establishment, the author takes great care to maintain a perfect level of political correctness. In so doing, he diverges strongly from the original founders of the British Museum in 1753. Their curiosity was more concerned with the superiority of the English race of people, and the fact that it could be demonstrated to the public by means of an exhibition of the primitive artifacts of the inferior races.
    For example, MacGregor is at great pains to show that the populations of the Americas were on an equal level with those of the Eurasian populations in the time before Columbus. But that is nonsense. The Indians had not yet invented the wheel. The art of writing was only established within a few nations, based on hieroglyphic structures. In the great empire of the Inca, it was completely missing (their system of coding information using knots on string seems to have mainly been used for recording numbers, but perhaps some other information was coded as well). It is more plausible to say that the more highly developed Indian civilizations of 500 years ago - the Maya or the Aztecs - were comparable with the classical Egyptian culture of 4000 years ago, or the Indus Valley Civilization.
    But who is to say that those peoples were living at a "lower level", more "primitive", than the world of today? This may be true when measured in terms of our modern idea of "progress". We have many machines, artificial chemicals, and what have you to help us in our hectic progression into the future, thereby destroying much of what is naturally given to us on the earth. But despite all of this progression from one thing to the next, the end of life - death - is the same for us as it was for people in those earlier civilizations. And who is to say that the period that counts, namely our limited time in this world, is better today in our hectic world than it was for the Indians. Of course the Incas were dreadful people. Mass murderers. But there were many other, surely more sublime, Indian cultures besides the Incas.
    One object in particular has a great story to tell. It is an Australian Bark Shield, taken from the Aborigines at Botany Bay during Captain Cook's first landing in Australia on the 29th of April, 1770. A small group of people were on the shore, and they ran away at the sight of these seemingly dangerous intruders. But two men stood their ground, trying to tell the English to clear away. Since that had no effect, they resorted to throwing stones at these strange people, and Cook's reaction was to take a pot-shot at them with bird-shot in one of his muskets. Thus they too ran away, dropping this bark shield which is now displayed in the British Museum. When thinking about this scene, I imagine that if I had the choice of either being a member of the Aboriginal community living at Botany Bay (but before the intrusion of the English!), or being a common sailor amongst Captain Cook's crew, then it is obvious which alternative I would choose.

Rain and Other South Sea Stories, by W. Somerset Maugham

     I was somewhat put off by The Moon and Sixpence, but the stories in this book are very good. Well worth reading. Each of them is only 20 or 30 pages long, so it would be simpler for you to just read the stories, rather than reading what nonsense I have to write here about them. I've linked to an online version of the title story, Rain. In most of the stories, much is made of the fact that the women are wearing "Mother Hubbard dresses", which were imposed upon them by the intolerant Christian missionaries.
    One of the stories, namely The Pool, did remind me of some of the things I objected to in The Moon and Sixpence. The story of the Pool describes the way an Englishman ruins his life by "going native" and marrying a young maiden of the Samoan Islands. At first our hero travels to Apia, the capitol of Samoa, to escape the English climate. Perhaps he had tuberculosis. He gets into the habit of swimming in a small, isolated, natural pool of water, surrounded by the beautiful, lush vegetation of the tropics. A young woman also swims there. Her father is a Swede who has "gone native" and married a Samoan woman whose family belonged to the ancient royal caste of Samoa. All the regulars at the local pub, or at the "English Club", tell our hero that he should just enjoy himself with this half-caste woman, but it would be a disaster to actually marry her. Despite this, he does it. Thus all the fine ladies of the European and (white) American colony in Apia are embarrassed to have anything to do with him. He becomes an outcast, resigned to spending more and more time in the overcrowded, somewhat soiled hut of the Swede and his extended native family. Thus he resolves to return to England with his exotic wife. At first she is excited about the prospect, but in England, the cold and darkness gradually gets to her. And one day she secretly disappears with her children, taking the next ship back to her home in Samoa. The hero is devastated. He follows her, but finds himself despised by both white society and the natives who see him as a despicably weak person. His wife hates him. But he grovels in his sorrow, in the end drowning himself first in alcohol, then finally in the pool.
    I suppose W. Somerset Maugham was describing the true situation of racial intolerance in the South Seas back in those days, a hundred years ago. In The Moon and Sixpence, he seemed to be adopting this view as his own. But surely today, most people would say that it would be a wonderfully romantic thing to see a young couple in the situation of this Englishman and his South Seas bride, swimming in a tropical pool in Samoa.

As I Lay Dying, by William Faulkner

     During the 1920s and 30s it seems to have been the fashion to write stories as if they were incoherent riddles, using fragmentary, illogical bursts of words and half words in order to describe - or at least to convey in some measure - the thoughts of the characters in the stories. The most famous example of this technique must be James Joyce's Finnegans Wake. As a student I did try wading through the first couple of pages of that book before deciding that there are better things to do in life than to spend large amounts of time trying to make sense out of nonsense.
    This book by William Faulkner starts off in this tradition. It consists of short chapters, each of which describes the thoughts of one of the characters in the story. There are many characters, all of which have extremely strange names. But by putting the book aside, then coming back to it after a couple of days when getting into the mood and just reading a few half understood pages, then putting it aside again, I did gradually get into the story.
    It all has to do with an extremely dysfunctional family of farmyard hicks, somewhere in the Deep South of the USA, or maybe they are hillbillys, or something. The mother of this family is in the process of dying. The eldest son, whose name is Cash, is sawing timbers in order to make a coffin for the mother. This sawing business goes on and on, being observed by the various characters, using their various, more or less incoherent effluences of words. The student of literature may be able to read into such things one or another philosophical observation on the futility of life, the role of religion in the bucolic mind, the hopelessness of the downtrodden, and what have you.
    But things finally get going when the mother expires and enters the coffin. The family has the task of transporting the mother's corpse to the distant town of Jefferson, using the primitive means available to it, namely a broken down wagon drawn by a mule of two. The task is made difficult due to the circumstance that a heavy rain has fallen, causing the local river to overflow its banks, washing away the bridges. The simplest thing would be to just bury the body near the local farm. But for some reason the family feels obliged to transport it to Jefferson for burial. Other characters, not part of this crazy family, also have their short chapters, offering to help in some way. The father, "pa", whose name is "Anse", refuses help. He continually says that he does not want to become "beholden" to others. Thus the nights are spent crouching by the wagon in the rain, refusing the food and accommodation offered to them by less dysfunctional farmers in the districts through which they pass.
    At least the prose of William Faulkner becomes progressively more coherent in inverse proportion to the chaotic wanderings of the family in their trek through the waterlogged Deep South. When attempting to draw the wagon through a ford in the raging river, the wagon overturns, drowning the mules. Yet the family manages to salvage the wagon together with the corpse in its coffin. But also Cash is a casualty of this business, suffering a broken leg and various other injuries. So he is strapped on top of the coffin, and the caravan proceeds ever onwards in its journey to Jefferson. The decomposing body emits an increasingly revolting smell. Cash's leg begins to putrefy. The family decides that rather than consulting a doctor, the best idea would be to pour concrete around the leg to "set" it, which increases the level of putrefaction. During a further episode, the second son of the family, "Darl", apparently in a fit of madness, sets fire to somebody's barn. So he gradually disappears into the hands of Justice. The daughter, "Dewey Dell", has gotten pregnant, and she enters one drugstore after another on the trek, seeking some illegal medicine for aborting the fetus. An unscrupulous druggist takes advantage of the naivety of Dewey Dell and rapes her himself.
    And during all of this narration, we find out more about the dead mother and why she wanted to be buried in Jefferson. She was not the happy center of Apple Pie America, which we had at first suspected. In fact we find out that she was the cause of this whole mess of a family, not only in the sense that she bore the children of Anse, but also because she created the initial seeds of discord.
    It certainly is an unpleasant story. Yet despite this, it is considered to be one of the great classics of 20th century literature. Such are the whims of fashion. For those who have a destructive view of the human condition, it might perhaps be said that the story is a surreal allegory on the life of Everyman. But at least the edition of the book which I read, from the Folio Society, is interspersed with beautiful watercolor illustrations of various scenes in the whole drama.