February 19, 2005

Recommended Reading:

When even the book reviews are thoughtful, perhaps the magazine is worth a look

    By Jack Grant

One of the reasons I really enjoy reading The Economist is shown by the opening paragraphs of a recent book review:

Walk into any major European art gallery and you are likely to see soldiers, cavalry and cannon spread across huge canvases. In some, the troops line out across the plain under the watchful gaze of a general. Others show the battle up close, often in a moment of conspicuous heroism-the capturing of a standard, say, or a cavalry charge.

This genre dates from the period between the French revolution and the end of the Victorian era, but after that time it suddenly disappears, killed off by new, more scientific ways of writing history and by fundamental changes in how warfare was imagined. The battles that Tolstoy describes in "War and Peace", which was published in the late 1860s, were neither tidy nor heroic. Even less so were the muddied struggles of the first world war. Treating them as if they were suddenly seemed naive.


This is the opening of a book review!!! They don't even mention the book until the third paragraph.

A magazine that has this level of contemplation in book reviews is well worth the time it takes to read.

Posted by Jack Grant at 16:25 on 19 February 2005
Comments




























































































































































































































































































































































This is an individual entry
if you want the main page
click below:


email me at:


Random Fate - latest posts


We don't handle randomness well.
   -Dr. Lucy Jones



Trying to hold the center in not so quiet desperation while the left and the right do their damnest to tear everything apart.


What Others Say
An American transplanted to France for the moment, Jack is sometimes conservative, sometimes liberal, and almost always right.
   -Pennywit

Jack has an impressive knowledge of history, politics, and Keanu Reeves. When it comes to pirates, Jack is waaay sexier than that pansy Dread Pirate Roberts. Oh, wait--I'm thinking of Jack Sparrow...
   -Jennifer (Jennifer's History and Stuff)


Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the center cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
   -William Butler Yeats, January 1919


Do not condemn the judgement of another because it differs from your own. You may both be wrong.
   -Dandemis


Wahabism Delenda Est
Wahabism must be destroyed.
-John Donovan, 12 May 2004