Good Reads meta-data is a listening time of 17h and 3m, rated 4.4 out of 5 by 18 audiblistas.
I read the Inferno, Part I of the Commedia, as an undergraduate and it made an impression on me. One for Dr Sarah Gardner. But I aways wondered about the remaining two parts. I finally scratched that itch by listening to an Audible version of the whole over the last few weeks on daily patrols of Newtown.
Hmmm…. I found Purgatory boring, all too much like listening to conference presentations: one after another, each successive one less interesting than the one before.
However, it proved more bearable than Paradise which was so saccharine that I gave up on it with more than two hours of empty rhetorical calories to follow.
Conclusion? Machiavelli was right, the people in Hell are more interesting than those in Heaven. He wrote something like this: In hell I shall enjoy the company of popes, kings and princes, while in heaven are only beggars, monks and apostles. Certainly Dante’s Hell is far more entertaining than his Purgatory or Paradise.
Further reading: Maurice Joly, The Dialogue in Hell between Machiavelli and Montesquieu (1864) adds to the fun. See also Sebastien de Grazia, Machiavelli in Hell (1989), sanctimonious though it is. But first try Machiavelli’s own short story, Belfagor.
Good Reads meta-data is 323 pages, rated 3.55 by 16,526 litizens.
Genre: Thriller diller.
DNA: Switzerland.
Verdict: Gulp!
Tagline: The AI did it!
It all began when Rich Brain received a book fin the mail, a first edition of Chuck Darwin’s Origin of Species. Nice. It will add to his collection of first editions that he never looks at among the other luxury goods stuffed into his vast Geneva mansion. (Thereafter passages from Darwin are chapter epigrams. Neat.)
Trouble is, who would give churlish, reclusive Rich Brain anything? He rings up the seller at 2 am, because he is Rich Brain and time means nothing to this titan, to ask who bought the book. The groggy seller says, ‘You did.’ Huh! That threw Big Brain but Seller read out the details, including the bank account, which is later checked and found to be one of his many stashes, this one is not in a Cayman Islands tax shelter. The mystery begins!
(I have occasionally received a book delivered in the mail and forgotten both that I ordered it and why I wanted it. But I knew who to blame. The dog!)
Rich Brain is a mathematical genius, just ask him. Wait! Don’t he will simply sneer at you for asking about the obvious. While Brain disdains money, he disdains even more those without it. He seems to characterise those around him from the outside in. Think Jay Gatsby. A man wearing a cheap suit must be a cheap (= stupid) man, and so on, thus reasons this Croesus. Although it is true that he disdains just about everyone else, too. He is an equal opportunity despiser of one and all.
This genius has devised an Artificial Intelligence program, call it Vix, capable of learning to trade stocks and he has been minting money from it. Trades of a billion US dollars is all in a day’s work. Overnight he makes millions, each and every night. Oh hum.
Well the Darwin book is one thing but an intruder into his fortress home who seems to have walked in through the front door, politely leaving his shoes at the mat, despite the Maginot Line security, is quite another. The plot thickens. In what follows there is much to’ing and fro’ing in Geneva that I liked. I spent a day there once including a homage to Rousseau.
He is now caught between two men in cheap suits, a weary police officer and the intruder. Though his coincidental sightings of the later stretch credulity.
Is Rich Brain having a schizophrenic nervous breakdown? Is someone out to get him? Are both true, or neither? He goes off the rails, but was he pushed or did he jump? Then again, he was never quite on the rails to begin with. Meanwhile, what is Vix doing? Well quite a lot, and that is scary, too. I thought of the Forbin Project (1970). Reviewed elsewhere on the Blog.
Vix is determined to survive per Darwin.
Great ride; no finish. Why did Vix gaslight Brain (book) and then try to get him killed (intruder)? Was it an Oedipus complex? Will Brain be tried for murdering the German? Does Vix have yet a third location? Why did Gabby latch onto Brain in the first place, and second why did she stick with him? Will Inspector Weary make it to retirement?
P.S. I classed it as a ‘thriller’ above but it is not written in the frenetic, confused, jump-cut style which leaves it to the reader to fit the jigsaw puzzle of words together. A mercy that.
Good Reads meta-data is 25 pages rated 3.95 by 213 litizens.
Genre: SciFi; Species: First Contact.
DNA: USA
Verdict: A landmark.
Tagline: Mirror, mirror.
Interstellar space flight is routine, and Earth ship Llanvabon is on a research mission to study a double star in the Crab Nebula. This is such an unusual astronomical opportunity that, whoa, it has attracted another, alien ship.
First problem is to identify it. Definitely not from Earth. Yikes! Aliens. This is the first contact of any kind with an alien species after decades of interstellar flight.
Second problem how to establish peaceful contact. Many tentative steps are taken by each side.
Third, now that rapprochement seems to have been established the next problem to solve is how to communicate. Fortunately, Ensign Apple whipped up a translator app on his iPhone. [Sure he did.]
Fourth, the aliens are humanoid in the same way MAGAs are. They do not talk but use a radio wave telepathy.
Fifth, the ships swap two crew members to get acquainted. Still things are volatile. Why? Each ship has armaments intended to blast meteors that they are could use on each other and back track to the home world for invasion!
Six, it is a stalemate. Neither captain wants to attack if this is a good opportunity for cooperation, but neither wants to reveal their origin in case the other has hostile intentions. Indeed, they – both captains and both crews – begin to realise they are thinking nearly exactly alike.
Murray Leinster
Spoiler ahead!
The resolution is to swap ships, each denuded of any revealing information about origins as a kind of technology transfer of good will. Each leaves for its homeward with alien ship.
Murray Constantine (Katharine Burdekin) Swastika Night (1937).
Good Reads meta-data is 208 pages rated 3.62 by 2909 litizens.
Genre: Dystopia.
DNA: Brit.
Verdict: Prescient and timely.
Tagline: ‘I told you so.’
Anno Domini 2444, five hundred years after Germany won World War II (yes the author saw that coming when even Charles Lindberg didn’t) together with the Japanese. Hitler has now been deified in gold. Women are herded like cattle and used only for selective breeding. Jews, homosexuals, the Bosox nation, Slavs, Romani, game shows hosts, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Quakers, and other subhumans have been exterminated. On the other side of the world the Empire of Japan luxuriates in its triumph by pillaging far and wide.
The demigod Hitler is portrayed as 7’ (2.1m) tall with a strong chin, blond hair, cobalt blue eyes, and dimples. Even better looking than Elvis.
No books are left to burn, but the thought police remain ever vigilant. If this is starting to sound like….
In the novel Hero begins to find out the truth about the war and Hitler and is hunted down by the aforementioned ICE agents and murdered. End of story. Downbeat indeed.
Katharine Burdekin
Irony is that in the free Britain of 1937 the author had to pose as a man to get her book published.
Further Reading: The Man in the High Castle (1962) by Philip K. Dick with its novel within a novel, which seems mild in comparison. Likewise, Swastika Night makes Handmaiden’s Tale seem like a fairy story.
Good Reads meta-data is 183 pages, rated 3.58 by 189 litizens.
Genre: Krimi.
DNA: Swiss.
Verdict: Bah.
Tagline: Bah!
Liked descriptions of winter weather, city, train station, and the Rhine River…. Also liked the personalities of the supermarket check-out woman and her de facto: She practical and down to earth; He a dreamer who thinks he is smarter than he is. In fact he is almost too dumb to believe.
Didn’t like Inspector Grump’s constant whining and whingeing, and feeling sorry for himself. Nor the aggressive verbal relations he applied to his squad members and they reciprocated. Repetitive blaming all ills and woes on unnamed ‘higher ups.’ I suppose the author thinks that is social criticism, but it is not. It is just lazy carping. He should read some Michel Foucault.
Very little detecting or police work, and ever more padding about snow, interspersed with Inspector Grumble’s simple-minded monologues on the idiocracy of everyone else in the Ruling Class/Deep State.
Hansjörg Schneider
The Basel train station has an unusual history in World War II, and that fact always makes me receptive to novels set that city. The station was split, half administered by Nazis and half by Swiss. I read a thriller that started there, see: https://theory-practice.sydney.edu.au/2021/09/target-switzerland-a-novel-of-political-intrigue-2020-by-william-walker/. I read that earlier book because I had found an intriguing reference to this railway station schizophrenia. Nothing about that in this pot simmerer which did not reach a boil.
Good Reads meta-data is 90 pages, rated 3.5 by 4 litizens.
Genre: Fiction
DNA: Greco-Roman.
Verdict: Fake news.
Tagline: It’s all lies, and that is the truth!
‘Call me Luke’ (AD 125-180) was a geographic Syrian and Roman citizen who went west to fame and fortune, first as a visiting professor hither and yon, and then as a celebrity author. He was often ‘in conversation’ with local nobs, engaged in panel discussions, and spruiked his many books at personal appearances. Like most learned Romans of the time he spoke and wrote Greek, the language of international culture, as well as enough Latin to cash his appearance cheques.
Lucian’s story is true in that it is all lies, and he tells us from the get-go. Is he that logician’s specimen come to life, a lying Blackfoot? You be the judge!
In this autobiographical foray Luke takes off, literally, in search of a good time and willing ladies, with fifty other likely lads; together they sail through the pillars of Hercules to wild and woolly adventures on earth, on the sea, on the moon, among the stars, in the belly of 300 kilometre long whale, on an island of tree women, and more.
The sarcasm and satire are piled on. The main targets are earlier tellers of tall tales like Herodotus who reported every rumour as fact in the best tradition of the free press. Lucian outdoes them all in his fantasies. But he is lying as he happily reminds the reader.
He ends by promising a volume two, but that, too, was a lie.
It figures.
Luke
Of course then as now there were Good Readers who thought the lie was itself a lie and believed what he said to be true concealed behind that lie. Straussians avant le mot.
I got around to reading it because Thomas More with Desi Erasmus translated it from Greek to Latin, and published it in Florence (1519) in Machiavelli’s lifetime. I began to pick again at the thread that Machiavelli might then have been aware of More because he was a personal friend of the printer. Also because Lucian might have turned More’s mind to Utopia.
Keith Houston, The Book: A Cover to Cover Exploration of the Most Powerful Object of Our Time (2016).
Good Reads meta-data is 442 pages rated 4.09 by 1161 litizens.
Genre: History.
DNA: USA.
Verdict: A synthesis.
Tagline: ‘It takes a strong will to resist the lure of ebooks.’
So many books are about books it is no surprise that there are books about the physical object we call a book: A biography of the book.
What I learned about the evolution of the book was that it is a tale of laborious trial and error by many hands over several millennia to get to the book as we kne/ow it: Paper, ink, fonts, binding. Gutenberg was one of a cavalcade of obsessives who went broke trying to improve book printing.
Other tidbits include the following:
Book-locks which I have seen were not parental controls which I had thought but to tighten closed books so that the parchment would not curl.
The consequences of shelving books on end rather than lying flat were many. See also, Henry Petroski, The Book on the Bookshelf (2000) on this point.
In many cases fonts were named for the first to develop them. From Italy Italic was a reaction to the heavy Gothic type Gutenberg used.
Foolscap paper derived from a watermark left on certain size sheets of paper in England 17th Century after the fall of monarchy. The crown was replaced by a ‘Fool’s cap’ watermark as sign of loyalty to the new order.
Paper sizes A1 to A10 originated in Germany. A1= 1/2 a square meter, each subsequent size is a half of its predecessor. Sizes of paper originated with the reach of workers who made paper.
Georg Christoph Lichtenberg (1786): The initial idea for a proportional paper system came from this German scientist. He proposed a width-to-height ratio of 1:√2, recognizing its mathematical efficiency for scaling. A sheet of paper with this ratio can be folded in half to produce two smaller sheets that have the exact same proportions as the original.
Dr. Walter Porstmann (1922): German engineer formalized Lichtenberg’s concept into the DIN 476 standard. This standard set the largest size, A0, to have an area of exactly one square meter, with all other “A” sizes defined by successively halving the larger sheet. Such a progression is called geometric harmony.
Codified by International Standard Organisation in 1975.
I also found a clanger when author says Herbert Hoover was Secretary of State in Woodrow Wilson’s cabinet (p 418). Not only was Hoover not Secretary of State, he was not in cabinet at all, though he certainly worked closely with Wilson’s administration.
More interesting was James John Audubon:
born in Haiti to slave owning family of planers. The family returned to France when the slave revolt stirred. In 1814 family sent teenage James John to Pennsylvania to avoid conscription in Napoleon’s endless wars.
He was a boy naturalist, first in Haiti, then France, then USA.
Tried to make a living out of his naturalist interest. Bird book with travels. No one in USA wanted to publish it. Took it to London. No. Then Edinburgh where he succeeded.
One copy of all ‘textual books’ must be given to British Library. He only had 200 and was deeply in debt. Didn’t want to surrender even one copy for nothing. So extracted text describing locale and birds from the pictures and printed it separately and compared to the illustrated book this textual book sold cheaply and gave that to the BL, but not the picture book.
In medieval Europe mirrors were used by the faithful to reflect divine rays from relics onto pilgrim. A good business for touts outside churches selling mirrors. A proto selfie?
So many technical details, so many proper names I got lost in the morass.
Remember the Norwegian ‘Medieval helpdesk’ on You Tube? It is still there.
Author opens with that tagline above and then says little or nothing about ebooks. Whoops, no that silent withdrawal of Nineteen Eighty-Four (p 9), though he used the numeric title and not the words. Orwell stipulated words not numbers for the title, but no one listens to authors. Certainly not publishers.
Keith Houston
Me, I compared the resistance to printed books (leads to atrophy of memory, allows rubbish to be published and read, makes us solitary rather than conversational and convivial, and class aesthetics because printers were begrimed working class, whereas scribes were learned, devout monks) to current resistance to ebooks (too fiddly, put bookstores out of business, allows a tidal wave of crap, and does not have the aesthetic qualities of a nice book). Certainly right about the crap. I can leave the aesthetics to others. Video dented but did not destroy cinemas and I hope digital books will not destroy bookstores. What has already destroyed far more bookstores were the predatory mega franchise chains like Barnes and Noble, Borders, Smith, Waterstone, and their ilk which set out to do so with pricing and location.
Good Reads meta-data is 331 pages, rated 3.79 by 1726 litizens.
Genre: Krimi.
DNA: Kiwi.
Verdict: Trying (too hard).
Tagline: Abandon credulity all ye who read here.
Havelock North NZ pop. 14,500 in the wine country of Hawke’s Bay is the scene of much mayhem and even, perhaps, murder. Happily ensconced bookstore proprietors, who just happen to be retired Plods from Old Blighty, get drawn into this netherworld along with their dog, which has some of the best lines: ‘Arf!’ Their store is called Sherlock Tomes, and that bon mot is why I choose to read this book. But never judge a book by one clever twist. I tried and failed a time ago to read one featuring the Cat of the Baskervilles.
I found this one hard going wading through pages and pages of superfluous detail. True some of it redounded later, but it was impossible to detect which was relevant. TMI. About clothes, decor, food (including dog food), many other sidetracks. Even where life and limb is threatened, the proprietors cannot focus. Neither could this reader.
There is a lot to like about the plot but it was whitened out by the blizzard of ephemera. It was hard to believe that the original police investigation was as superficial as it seemed in retrospect. The disappearance of a school girl, followed by the departure of her best friend, the disappearance of a drug dealer, and the disappearance of $NZ100,000 all with a few days of each other, and only the first school girl was investigated. It was pretty clear that stereotyped FW was a blue herring from the get-go. He was too bad to be true. Likewise the multiple authorship which was hinted at in the text was on the cards.
I read it while sitting on a veranda looking out to the Pacific Ocean in Fiji. Lucky me. I left the paperback copy in the guest library of the Royal Davui Resort, August 2025. Perhaps the next reader will be more receptive and perceptive than me. This is the first of a series and ends with a cliff hanger to the next volume. Not for me.
Good Reads meta-data is 368 pages rated 4.28 by 72 litizens.
Genre: Biography.
DNA: Academic.
Verdict: The anti-platonic Plato.
Tagline: He kept all of receipts.
Focus is in the title, that is, Plato’s on-again, off-again relationship with the tyrant father and son, Dionysius the Elder and the Younger of Syracuse on Sicily. Before going on please note, that in Greek the word ‘tyrant’ meant a ruler who was not hereditary. Because Herodotus’ account of the Persian Wars looked east (as did Alexander the Great later in retaliation), and much of Thucydides’ account of the Peloponnesian War concentrated on the Greek peninsula and the east, with the exception of the catastrophe at this very same Syracuse in earlier times when it was a democracy. In contrast, the extensive Greek settlements in the western Mediterranean are not as well documented and known. But Greek colonies populated southern Italy, Sicily, Marseilles in France, as far as Cadiz in Spain.
The greatest single power among the Western Greeks was Syracuse. It had wealth from silver and gold, and large population compared to many other cities. Its double harbour gave it an advantage in sea trade. And it had, by the time the Dionysius two ruled, a formidable military reputation after having defeated that Athenian invasion in the Peloponnesian War.
Plato went to Syracuse – a long and expensive voyage with some risks from weather and pirates – three times over two decades. He did so, when the smoke and mirrors of scholarship have been exhausted, to encourage the ruler(s) of Syracuse to exercise moderation. He hoped to convert a ruler to think of the whole in the long term against the highest and most abstract standard. The Dionysii were infamous for their cruelty, debauchery, hedonism, and worse, but Plato decided he could but try, despite the apparent odds. The Elder was cruel and rapacious but liked to have trophy wives, slaves, and intellectuals in his entourage. The Younger was vain, selfish, and debauched by food, drink, and sex. Not promising ground then, but Plato had a student of old at court, one Dion who was wealthy and an in-law of the Dionysii to pave the way for him. So Plato tried and tried again, and again. To no avail.
These efforts have long fascinated Platonists and much has been written about them over the centuries. The author’s mastery of this multi-lingual literature is impressive. Very. Intriguing also to learn Twenty-First century efforts to apply MRI technology to reading carbonised scrolls destroyed/preserved by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius.
Instead of admiring Plato for dirtying his hands, even risking his life, and trying to redeem the tyrants (and thereby lighten their yoke on the people of Syracuse), he is indicted for interfering by hindsight moralists. But he did little more than advise moderation. Does make him liable for what followed. It seems so since he is routinely arraigned as an accessory.
I first read of this story in Mary Renaut’s novelThe Mask of Apollo (1954) when I was an graduate student. It was recommended to me by someone whose identity has by now escaped me. Perhaps I will re-read that. We will see.
Awhile ago I read and commented on a book the front cover of which declared it to be a biography of Plato. It was a very well done account of the history of his time and place, but not a biography of the man. Ergo, I was still in the market for a biography and when Howard Whitton sent me a review of this book, I had a look, and it promised some more biography. This is another excellent study that tries to bring out the biographical echoes in Plato’s essays, particularly Republic.
A few months ago I read and commented on a Straussian study of Plato’s thirteen letters (Ariel Helfer, Plato’s Letters [2023]) that…. That entry is elsewhere on this blog for clickers. Well, Straussians make a lot out of little or nothing. If aboriginal stargazers concentrated on the black areas of the sky rather than the stars, Straussians concentrate on what it absent; silence; what is not said. Of course, there is a lot of nothing, right Jean-Paul? And you can make it mean whatever you want want.
Long ago I read Ludwig Marcuse, Plato and Dionysius: a Double Biography (1947) and learned nothing about either of them from it.
IMDb summary: ‘After thousands of years since the extinction of the human race on Earth, an astronaut named Gladia lands on the now uninhabited Third Rock. Gladia comes from a distant planet where the last terrestrial settlers found refuge, before forgetting their planet of origin forever. She finds one inhabitant, a robot that has inherited all of human knowledge has evolved and developed a consciousness. The two will fight each other first but then they will realise that they are more similar than they thought.’
Gladia makes a crash-landing that destroys her vehicle so she calls for road service only to be told that there is none from the low-bid contractor. Ergo, no rescue but over the hologram communication Gladia is thanked for the service. A typical corporate dismissal. She is now abandoned by the company. Full marks for realism.
We begin to realise Gladia is being watched, and Gladia then becomes aware of it.
I have nothing more to add. If there is more, I missed it. Nor did I notice much stargazing, literal minded as I am. The titular ‘Blue Dot’ brings to mind Carl Sagan and that must have had a purpose. But what it is I cannot say.
Will Earth be repopulated by Gladia and the Robot? That should be interesting! But we’ll never know.
PS I wondered if that ‘all knowledge’ included the locale of all the missing socks from laundry.