Archive for Sunday, February 17, 2008
DISCOVERIES
summaries
The Wisdom of Donkeys
Finding Tranquility in a Chaotic World
Andy Merrifield
Walker & Co.: 246 pp., $19.95
“Ifelt long ago that the grown-up world isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, that I had to invent my own truths to get by.” So Andy Merrifield, professor of geography, biographer of French philosophers, child of Liverpool, went looking for peace of mind. Inspired by Robert Louis Stevenson’s 1879 book “Travels With a Donkey in the Cévennes,” he decided to go walking.
Key to this journey was a donkey, Gribouille (a variant of “doodle” or “scribble” in French). “Time slows down amid donkeys,” the author writes. “In their company things happen quietly and methodically. It’s hard to forget their innocent gaze. It’s a calm that instills calm. Your mind wanders, you dream, you go elsewhere, yet somehow you remain very present.”
Heidegger, Schubert, Chesterton and others are companions on this journey. But Merrifield is looking for his own lost self as well: “Hitherto, I’d lived my life sort of vicariously, modeled myself on somebody else, a character in a book, a famous writer, a famous professor.” Searching for silence after a life of noise, he hears rain, birds, insects, church bells, wind and owls – some of these for the first time. “I can’t help thinking,” he notes at the end of his trip, “that daydreams make us, that our little life is rounded with reverie rather than sleep.”
High Crimes
The Fate of Everest in an Age of Greed
Michael Kodas
Hyperion: 358 pp., $24.95
CON men, murderers and base-camp prostitutes are among the cast of characters journalist Michael Kodas encountered on his 2004 trip to Mt. Everest. In “High Crimes,” he also tells us of climbers who are so eager to get to the top that they step over dying comrades, faulty oxygen tanks knowingly sold to climbers – and of course drugs (“Virtually every banned, performance-enhancing substance that has driven sponsors and fans away from … cycling and baseball has made its way into mountaineering”). In this lawless arena, Kodas reports numerous instances of appalling cruelty. He quotes Sir Edmund Hillary’s characteristically understated response to the 2006 death of David Sharp: “It was wrong, if there was a man suffering altitude problems and huddled under a rock, just to lift your hat, say ‘good morning’ and pass on by.” One wonders if the ghost of George Mallory (who died on Everest in 1924) still haunts its ridges.
Reservation Nation
A Novel
David Fuller Cook
Boaz: 200 pp., $24.95
“THE Reservation is a concept. The white man invented it, a system of thought, a manifestation of his mind,” writes David Fuller Cook in “Reservation Nation.” The reservation is an endlessly mysterious part of the American psyche and landscape. Many writers have tried to describe it, from within and without.
This astonishing first novel brings its readers into the silent heart of the Uwharrie reservation in North Carolina. Warren is the novel’s storyteller. His Indian name is “the Seed.” As a child on the reservation in the 1950s, and through the Vietnam War period, he collects stories of the lives around him. He grows up with “There ain’t no future in the old ways” ringing in his ears, but it is the old ways he returns to. “The white people aren’t fighting Indians anymore,” Grandfather tells him. “Their war is with the Earth.”
“It was time for me to live in my power, which is different than what a white man means by that,” Warren comes to understand. “True living is loving; this land, the Earth, the people we share life with. The highways, the lines of automobiles, the power lines, the business of cities and states, these are all illusions, the appearance of life.”
- Surfers' spirits sink as artificial reef near LAX is dismantled
- Hans' ginger scones
- U.S. tapped intimate calls from Americans overseas, 2 eavesdroppers say
- Fox News' faux documentary sets new low
- The Dunbar in South L.A., once a landmark, has lost its beat
- Children of Vietnam War servicemen seek U.S. citizenship
- Still undecided? Then just don't vote
- AIG cancels planned events amid rebukes for hosting $440,000 function
- Homeless man dies after being set on fire in Mid-Wilshire
- BMW 335d sedan: Elegant electronics and a gestalt-altering diesel
- President Bush vows action on financial crisis
- Palin abused her power, legislative inquiry finds
- Phillies beat Dodgers to take 2-0 series lead
- U.S. to buy shares in banks
- John McCain, Barack Obama on healthcare
- Leland Wong gets 5 years in 'pay to play' corruption scandal
- Lakers still have questions to answer
- Huntington Beach woman gets 25 years to life for killing her mother
- Golden Gate Bridge to get suicide net to catch would-be jumpers
- Palin abused her power, legislative inquiry finds
