“Must the artist always be vulnerable to being pushed aside by manipulative phonies?” A poem and a little talk by John Tranter from the current issues of Poetry.
Social Media Doesn't Sell in a Vacuum
Jane Friedman talks about the value of social media and how its critics want it to sell books or merchandise without personal investment.
Breathless, by Dean Koontz
Say what you like about Dean Koontz; he isn’t afraid to experiment and mix it up. Breathless is part spiritual thriller, part science fiction. It’s a book with a clear message, one many readers won’t like. It’s also a very sweet story, and I enjoyed it and was moved by it. For reference, the same spirit that animates the Odd Thomas books is at work here.
Koontz jumps between several characters and story lines, before bringing them together, if not in one place, at least around one theme. A wonderful thing has happened in our world. Each witness to that event responds for the good or the evil, depending on the capacities of their souls.
Because of the multiplicity of story lines, it’s hard to give a synopsis, but the central story involves a man named Grady Adams, who along with his dog Merlin (gratefully, the dog is not a supernatural being this time out) observes the Event while on an evening walk in the woods. Soon he notices strange creatures watching his house. Meanwhile, his friend Camillia Rivers, a veterinarian, is trying to find an explanation for a strange “seizure” experienced by a number of domestic animals, which not only doesn’t seem to have done them any harm, but has done them good.
And nearby a sociopathic murderer is preparing for the collapse of society by building himself a secure compound on a mountain farm.
It all comes together in the end.
If you’re a Koontz fan and a religious believer, you’ll probably enjoy Breathless. If you don’t get the whole religion thing, you may find it offputting.
I don’t recall any very rough language. No sex, and the violence happens early on and is not explicit.
Not Koontz’ best, but recommended, for those with eyes to see.
The Warm Sincerity of Polish Carols
Carols are buried deep in Polish hearts and may reveal a distinctive beauty in Polish poetry. Cynthia Haven makes this connection when writing about the “Slavic Choral Concert Christmas in Kraków” at the Historic Hillside Club in Berkeley, California, quoting that great poet Czesław Miłosz on the charm and freshness of Polish carols. You can hear a snatch of them on this CD site.
Thanks to Patrick Kurp for this link and his additions to the topic and poem quotations.
Let Well-Tuned Words Amaze
Reading Dickens for the small touches, the word turns, and the character portraits.
Snowmageddon 2010, report from the frontier
If you’re not interested in Snow Stories, you may skip what follows.
Here’s a picture of the view from my house on Saturday:
It snowed. A lot.
I bought my snow blower last year so that I wouldn’t have to spend half a day shoveling snow.
I spent half of Sunday blowing snow.
If I’d have had to shovel it, I’d probably still be at it out there.
Seventeen inches, I’m told. The fifth highest snow accumulation in a single event since records have been kept in Minnesota.
The logistics of my snow blowing system are complex, and high snow levels only complicate them.
Because much of my driveway is sandwiched between my house and my neighbor’s (with little or no yard as a buffer), there are stretches where I have to throw the snow either in front of me, where I haven’t cleared it yet, or behind me.
After a normal snowfall, I usually throw that snow into the “to do” area, so I don’t have to go over the same ground twice.
But after a heavy fall, where the snow is, say, five inches higher than the intake on my snow blower (as was the case Sunday morning), the only sane choice is to throw that snow into the “already done” area. Because the snow ahead of me was already higher than my machine was designed for.
So once I’d done it all once, I had to go over it again, to clean up the backblow.
But once it was done, I surveyed my work in the sunlight and found it good.
And then went inside and lay down.
Beautiful Gallery of Ptolemy's Cosmographia
Here’s a beautiful book to page through.
Claudius Ptolemaeus , Cosmographia , Jacobus Angelus interpres
Source: Bibliothèque nationale de France
"In the Bleak Midwinter"
This Christmas Carol by Christina Rossetti, performed by Sissel, seems a good choice as I approach a weekend when YET ANOTHER snowstorm is portended. It’s supposed to start coming down heavily late tonight, and continue tomorrow–pretty much all day. Indications suggest I’ll finally be able to get to snowblowing on Sunday morning, which may interfere with church.
At least I ought to have plenty of time to work on Christmas cards without distraction.
Have a good weekend!
England no longer deserves its history
The Glastonbury Thorn before the infamy
Big—and shocking—news in the world of legend and fantasy today. The Glastonbury Thorn, which according to legend was planted by Joseph of Arimathea himself, has been cut down by vandals. Various motives have been suggested. The second most shocking thing in the article, to me, is that apparently the tree enjoyed no legal protection whatever, and even if those responsible are identified, nothing is likely to happen to them.
Who knew the only legal act left in hyper-regulated England is to destroy a national treasure?
The legend of the thorn is that Joseph of Arimathea (identified as the uncle of Jesus) was a tin merchant who voyaged frequently to England (bringing Jesus with him once; hence the hymn “England’s Mountains Green”). While there he thrust his thorn staff into the earth one day, and it budded like Aaron’s rod and took root. For centuries it was revered by pilgrims to Glastonbury (a famous Arthurian site), until Oliver Cromwell’s men chopped it down. But the roots were saved, and nurtured by the faithful. The tree which stood there till now was cultivated from one of those roots. One hopes the same sort of thing can be done again.
What’s intriguing is that the Glastonbury thorn is indeed an exotic. It’s not a native English tree. It’s been identified as a Middle Eastern variety.
We Have Seen the Culture, And It Is Us
Jonathan D. Fitzgerald has an article criticizing Pastor Mark Discoll called “Disengage Culture.” He makes a good point about what culture is and how it’s odd for Christians to talk about engaging it, as if it were something outside of us. An interesting discussion has come up in the comments.