The Sad, Beautiful Fact That We’re All Going To Miss Almost Everything

Source: NPR

The vast majority of the world’s books, music, films, television and art, you will never see. It’s just numbers.

Consider books alone. Let’s say you read two a week, and sometimes you take on a long one that takes you a whole week. That’s quite a brisk pace for the average person. That lets you finish, let’s say, 100 books a year. If we assume you start now, and you’re 15, and you are willing to continue at this pace until you’re 80. That’s 6,500 books, which really sounds like a lot.

Let’s do you another favor: Let’s further assume you limit yourself to books from the last, say, 250 years. Nothing before 1761. This cuts out giant, enormous swaths of literature, of course, but we’ll assume you’re willing to write off thousands of years of writing in an effort to be reasonably well-read.

Of course, by the time you’re 80, there will be 65 more years of new books, so by then, you’re dealing with 315 years of books, which allows you to read about 20 books from each year. You’ll have to break down your 20 books each year between fiction and nonfiction – you have to cover history, philosophy, essays, diaries, science, religion, science fiction, westerns, political theory … I hope you weren’t planning to go out very much.

You can hit the highlights, and you can specialize enough to become knowledgeable in some things, but most of what’s out there, you’ll have to ignore. (Don’t forget books not written in English! Don’t forget to learn all the other languages!)

Oh, and heaven help your kid, who will either have to throw out maybe 30 years of what you deemed most critical or be even more selective than you had to be.

We could do the same calculus with film or music or, increasingly, television – you simply have no chance of seeing even most of what exists. Statistically speaking, you will die having missed almost everything.

Roger Ebert recently wrote a lovely piece about the idea of being “well-read,” and specifically about the way writers aren’t read as much once they’ve been dead a long time. He worries – well, not worries, but laments a little – that he senses people don’t read Henry James anymore, that they don’t read Sinclair Lewis, that their knowledge of Allen Ginsberg is limited to Howl.

It’s undoubtedly true; there are things that fade. But I can’t help blaming, in part, the fact that we also simply have access to more and more things to choose from more and more easily. Netflix, Amazon, iTunes – you wouldn’t have to go and search dusty used bookstores or know the guy who works at a record store in order to hear most of that stuff you’re missing. You’d only have to choose to hear it.

You used to have a limited number of reasonably practical choices presented to you, based on what bookstores carried, what your local newspaper reviewed, or what you heard on the radio, or what was taught in college by a particular English department. There was a huge amount of selection that took place above the consumer level. (And here, I don’t mean “consumer” in the crass sense of consumerism, but in the sense of one who devours, as you do a book or a film you love.)

Now, everything gets dropped into our laps, and there are really only two responses if you want to feel like you’re well-read, or well-versed in music, or whatever the case may be: culling and surrender.

Culling is the choosing you do for yourself. It’s the sorting of what’s worth your time and what’s not worth your time. It’s saying, “I deem Keeping Up With The Kardashians a poor use of my time, and therefore, I choose not to watch it.” It’s saying, “I read the last Jonathan Franzen book and fell asleep six times, so I’m not going to read this one.”

Surrender, on the other hand, is the realization that you do not have time for everything that would be worth the time you invested in it if you had the time, and that this fact doesn’t have to threaten your sense that you are well-read. Surrender is the moment when you say, “I bet every single one of those 1,000 books I’m supposed to read before I die is very, very good, but I cannot read them all, and they will have to go on the list of things I didn’t get to.”

It is the recognition that well-read is not a destination; there is nowhere to get to, and if you assume there is somewhere to get to, you’d have to live a thousand years to even think about getting there, and by the time you got there, there would be a thousand years to catch up on.

What I’ve observed in recent years is that many people, in cultural conversations, are far more interested in culling than in surrender. And they want to cull as aggressively as they can. After all, you can eliminate a lot of discernment you’d otherwise have to apply to your choices of books if you say, “All genre fiction is trash.” You have just massively reduced your effective surrender load, because you’ve thrown out so much at once.

The same goes for throwing out foreign films, documentaries, classical music, fantasy novels, soap operas, humor, or westerns. I see people culling by category, broadly and aggressively: television is not important, popular fiction is not important, blockbuster movies are not important. Don’t talk about rap; it’s not important. Don’t talk about anyone famous; it isn’t important. And by the way, don’t tell me it is important, because that would mean I’m ignoring something important, and that’s … uncomfortable. That’s surrender.

It’s an effort, I think, to make the world smaller and easier to manage, to make the awareness of what we’re missing less painful. There are people who choose not to watch television – and plenty of people don’t, and good for them – who find it easier to declare that they don’t watch television because there is no good television (which is culling) than to say they choose to do other things, but acknowledge that they’re missing out on Mad Men (which is surrender).

And people cull in the other direction, too, obviously, dismissing any and all art museums as dull and old-fashioned because actually learning about art is time-consuming — and admitting that you simply don’t prioritize it means you might be missing out. (Hint: You are.)

Culling is easy; it implies a huge amount of control and mastery. Surrender, on the other hand, is a little sad. That’s the moment you realize you’re separated from so much. That’s your moment of understanding that you’ll miss most of the music and the dancing and the art and the books and the films that there have ever been and ever will be, and right now, there’s something being performed somewhere in the world that you’re not seeing that you would love.

It’s sad, but it’s also … great, really. Imagine if you’d seen everything good, or if you knew about everything good. Imagine if you really got to all the recordings and books and movies you’re “supposed to see.” Imagine you got through everybody’s list, until everything you hadn’t read didn’t really need reading. That would imply that all the cultural value the world has managed to produce since a glob of primordial ooze first picked up a violin is so tiny and insignificant that a single human being can gobble all of it in one lifetime. That would make us failures, I think.

If “well-read” means “not missing anything,” then nobody has a chance. If “well-read” means “making a genuine effort to explore thoughtfully,” then yes, we can all be well-read. But what we’ve seen is always going to be a very small cup dipped out of a very big ocean, and turning your back on the ocean to stare into the cup can’t change that.

Review: Ishmael

Ishmael
Ishmael by Daniel Quinn

My rating: 2 of 5 stars

First of all: I read this in its abridged, audiobook edition. I don’t think if it had been longer my opinion might have been any different but I had to share the fact for what it might be worth for. Maybe it influenced more than it would have the impact of what I perceived the book’s short-comings on me. Maybe it being an audiobook pronounced the book’s obvious shortcomings I detail below.

Why 2 stars:

The main point of Ishmael, the gist, the essence, the core of it I agree with. The agricultural revolution 10,000 years ago changed everything for Homo Sapiens. It began the era of the manipulation of other species, be it floral or faunal, it made people settle down and (as Jean-Jacques Rousseau would have it), “enclose a piece of ground and call it theirs[…]”; it created private ownership. It moved people away from their earlier “primitive communist” ways of living and finally it founded civil society and cities. As one can thus etymologically deduce, this event created what we tend to call civlization today.

All this I heartily agree with. A great deal, if not all, of humanity’s problems and imbalances that are now reaching their logical climaxes were created back then, thousands of years before people had even begun making writing stuff down a habit.

What’s wrong then?

-This book is NOT a novel. Why does it pretend to be one? Why does it have a story? Why does it have a stupid guy as its protagonist that answers to every question with a “yes” or a “no”? Why even a guy in the first place with whom practically no-one out of the book’s target audience would be able to identify? Do we have to read these discussions? I honestly grew tired of them very quickly.

In my opinion the Socratic method doesn’t work for written teachings for it does not let the reader figure their own answers out; they only have to keep reading to “get it”, not to say that they might have different answers than the, frankly, unimaginative ones the student comes up with. At the same time as the students don’t really have to think their answers out at all, the teacher gets all condescending and irritating.

-Wouldn’t you say it’s a failure of a book structure?
-Yes.

The wise gorilla, the book’s namesake. This wise gorilla, complete with his own needless backstory and apparently symbolising the whole of nature apart from humans, has the ultimate solution. His ultimate solution though depends on every student spreading the message to not one, not two, but one hundred others. Really? A hundred? I don’t even have this many acquaintances I am on speaking terms with, if facebook is to be trusted; how would anyone in this age of pluralism of opinion but monolithicism of practice take such bold and life-changing decisions just by listening to me? To return to the subject of the gorilla: he is the front for the writer himself, but his temper with the arbitrarily dim student is short, his arrogance annoying and his bullheadedness and sporadic refusal to teach, completely out of character. Why the whole blasé air?

A funny personal sidenote: because the gorilla was of the talkative kind, I imagined him as wearing clothes, glasses and a hat. Cultural conditioning much.

TLDR: the book has a valuable message but the presentation takes almost all of the value away from it.

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Review: Dale Carnegie’s Lifetime Plan for Success: How to Win Friends and Influence People & How to stop worrying and start living

Dale Carnegie's Lifetime Plan for Success: How to Win Friends and Influence People & How to stop worrying and start living
Dale Carnegie’s Lifetime Plan for Success: How to Win Friends and Influence People & How to stop worrying and start living by Dale Carnegie

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book’s title is so very easily misunderstandable. It’s sort of like all the conspiracy theory videos out there. People will catch a wiff of “global elite” or “federal reserve” and will turn their noses straight up in a matter of seconds. Conspiracy “sceptics” have poisoned so many wells, its a miracle that remote villages the world over haven’t yet been completely wiped out.

The reason its title is so misunderstandable is because, similarly to the alleged conspiracy theorists, it alludes to techniques and practices used in picking up women or something; devious hypocrisies of socially challenged, sad little people that practice their speech in front of mirrors and reduce human contact to rules and habits; strategists of human contact that know about as much of real bonding between people as a typical child knows about chickens from its early rearing on McNuggets.

~~

In a nutshell:

Six Ways To Make People Like You

Become genuinely interested in other people.
Smile.
Remember that a man’s name is to him the sweetest and most important sound in the English language.
Be a good listener. Encourage others to talk about themselves.
Talk in terms of the other man’s interest.
Make people feel important, and do it sincerely.

Twelve Ways Of Winning People To Your Way Of Thinking

The only way to get the best of an argument is to avoid it.
Show respect for the other man’s opinions. Never tell a man he is wrong.
If you are wrong, admit it quickly and emphatically.
Begin in a friendly way.
Get people saying “yes, yes” immediately.
Let other people do a great deal of talking.
Let other people feel that the idea is theirs.
Try honestly to see things from the other man’s point of view.
Be sympathetic with other people’s ideas and desires.
Appeal to the nobler motives.
Dramatize your ideas.
Throw down a challenge.

Nine Ways To Change People Without Giving Offense Or Arousing Resentment

Begin with praise and honest appreciation.
Call attention to people’s mistakes indirectly.
Talk about your own mistakes before criticizing the other man.
Ask questions instead of giving direct orders.
Let the other man save face.
Praise the slightest improvement and praise every improvement.
Give people a fine reputation to live up to.
Use encouragement. Make the fault seem easy to correct.
Make other people happy about doing the thing you suggest.

~~

Mr. Dale Carnegie in his book that gave birth to the self-help genre is suggesting, simply put, that we care about others. That’s about it. A little active interest can go a long way, whether its for other people’s sense of pride, problems, aspirations or interests. If “How to Win Friends and Influence People” does something excellently in its quaint, ’30s American way of dealing with things, is to show how in our self-centredness we forget how much we like other people treating us since we so often refrain from doing it ourselves.

The awesome thing about the list above is that the book doesn’t suggest you do these things just to win others over and be likeable, it doesn’t tell you: “OK you loser, this is what people like so you better do it. Of COURSE I know you hate being kind and interested in others, you’re a self-obsessed bastard like all of us, time to quit acting like a loser and be a champion”. No. That’s the end, or course: improving the quality of your social life; but the means is being a better person in all honesty, someone who others would like to be with and share things with because, damn, it’d be worth it! What can ever be wrong with that? In fact, we see so little of the above these days that suspicion is immediately raised when people seem to be genuinely interested in others. What can I say? Let’s stick to being nice for a change and see what happens!

After reading this book I didn’t come out thinking that I knew how to better “make people like me”, “win people to my way of thinking” or “change people without giving offense”. I don’t even want to make people like me or win people over; I just want to be kind to others for the pure joy of it! In all actuality, I now feel that the titles above are there only to lure unsuspected people in and help them, by the end of the book, get over the limitations and close-mindedness of wanting to “change people over to their way of thinking”.

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Review: The Joyous Cosmology

The Joyous Cosmology
The Joyous Cosmology by Alan Wilson Watts

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Seldom before have I read 30 pages of printed .pdf so tightly packed with meaning. A lot of it was profound, written in a time when psychedelic substances were a new unexplored area of the human experience. Research was being done on their medical and other properties (with Watts being sceptical about whether the proper environment for relative experimentation really was research laboratories and clinics). It was an innocent time, before the powers that be had really found out about what a gaping hole into their walls of modern vices their initial allowance of the use of LSD and mushrooms had blown.

“The active and the passive are two phases of the same act. A seed, floating in its white sunburst of down, drifts across the sky, sighing with the sound of a jet plane invisible above. I catch it by one hair between thumb and index finger, and am astonished to watch this little creature actually wriggling and pulling as if it were struggling to get away. Common sense tells me that it is the “intelligence” of the seed to have just such delicate antennae of silk that, in an environment of wind, it can move. Having such extensions, it moves itself with the wind. When it comes to it, is there any basic difference between putting up a sail and pulling an oar? If anything, the former is a more intelligent use of effort than the latter. True, the seed does not intend to move itself with the wind, but neither did I intendo to have arms and legs.”

Descriptions of powerful and deep insights only possible during a psychedelic trip are what the meat and potatoes of The Joyous Cosmology is. It’s a journey with the aid of these substances to planes of thought and existence impossible before to reach, far away from the egoistic mind and squarely in the consciousness behind the thinking mind. It’s a story of a temporarily selfless being experiencing the world.

It’s very hard to describe actually. I’m not at all sure if anything from this book stuck with me for good, but I’m not even sure if it’s supposed to, in the same way that powerful psychedelic trips are fleeting and strong cosmological realisations during them feel like dreams after the trip is over. Tim Leary warns in the foreword that this is a difficult book. Perhaps a couple of powerful entheogenic experiences are indeed the correct required “reading” for tackling it. The fact that the substances needed for having these experiences are almost ubiquitously illegal says much more about the laws, the lawmakers behind them and their intentions, than it does about the substances themselves.

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Review: Replay

Replay
Replay by Ken Grimwood

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I started replaying Majora’s Mask a few weeks ago and that was enough reason for me to start looking again for books, movies or other games with a similar central idea. Replay appears to be the original work of fiction which examined this particular kind of thought experiment this exhaustively. In Replay, it’s not three days or a single day like in Groundhog Day –which this book directly inspired; it’s 25 years.

The concept sounded very exciting — if you’re fan of this narrative gimmick like I am, of course. 25 years sounds like enough time for anyone to be able to do pretty much anything they want in and live comfortably. What could possibly go wrong with Jeff’s new life, what could possibly produce any kind of drama and make the book interesting? Well, let’s just say that long-term relationships, including families, don’t exactly thrive on such circumstances…

Every replay was a mystery and the possibilities were spreading out in front of me together with Jeff every time he returned to 1963. But I could not always identify with some of his choices or the way he opted to handle some matters, like

Spoiler
meeting his wife on the first replay or him being content with Judy but subsequently forgetting about her almost completely.

I also thought it was sloppy writing having all the sporting events conveniently turn out exactly the same way every time. In what kind of cause-effect comological system do teams of players play exactly the same way, the same horses come first 25 years in 25 years out? This story could have a lot of extra worth as a feast of alternate history but unfortunately it does not deliver anywhere close to what it could, apart fromthat little bit close to the end when

Spoiler
Jeff and Pamela go public. Now that I think about it, I don’t know how much different I would make every replay if I was writing this story. Too much difference between every time and the story loses its main antagonist (the repetition of time itself) and becomes boring, too little, ditto.
I gusss Ken Grimwood (great name for a writer, btw) wanted to have the best of both a clockwork and a quantum theory world.

Another of my qualms:

Spoiler
Pamela wasn’t the most likeable character. I even found her annoying at times, especially closer to the end, when she gets angry at Jeff for approaching her old self (and he rightly protests). It got me thinking, what do people love in another person? Their personality, the memories they have together? Would it ever be possible to compare and contrast the two? Would it be considered cheating going out with a version of your loved one that has no recollection of you, you know everything about them and the newer version catches you red-handed? Interesting questions, interesting questions.

You know what? Now I want to watch Star Sea. It would be my favourite movie ever. I bet I’d also be one of the geeks that liked Continuum.

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Review: The Importance of Being Earnest

The Importance of Being Earnest
The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Another work I enjoyed in Audiobook form, this one from LibriVox — Oscar Wilde comfortably belongs to the public domain, after all. Most of the voice actors were quite good, especially given the fact that most, if not all, of them were amateurs. As always, however, no measure of generalisation can capture the full spectrum of reality; some of the actors were bored with the text and were yawn-inspiring and others were very much into their role. By the end it was impossible for me to disconnect those actors’ voices from their respective characters!

So, what about The Importance of Being Earnest as a script, as a work by the great Oscar Wilde? It’s a fairly standard play. I mean that in the sense that everything falls into place by the end, it has a first, second and third act, all clearly defined. The characters are as delightfully unrealistic as they perfectly working symbols of late 19th century upper-class England. Even the surprises of the plot are carefully measured, predictably unpredictable. That said, it’s excellent insofar as standard, classic plays go. It’s rather a lot like anything perfect, be it a book, a film, a person or a work of culinary art: ultimately forgettable. The little quirks so common in contemporary, postmodern art add much-needed flavour to things. Some would say that lack of such quirks in any given work, especially by Oscar Wilde and others of his time and prestige, could count as proof of its timeless quality. I wouldn’t have any qualms with that opinion, even though for me the quirks are the soul of any piece of art.

Note: I still enjoyed it, laughed a lot with it and would attend a performance of it in a heartbeat.

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Review: The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment

The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment
The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment by Eckhart Tolle

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I… um… “enjoyed” The Power of Now in audiobook form — difficult choice of words here because “read” would be a lie and “listened to” would make it Power of Now sound like a song. I guess audiobooks need their own transitive verb now. Anyway.

Audiobooks have their strengths and weaknesses, obviously. I had the pleasure to enjoy the Power of Now as I was exploring a part of my city that had long been invitingly mysterious and still. The setting reinforced the listening and vice versa. The experience would have certainly been very different had I visually read the book in that jungle of reed. Those hours of exploration are now inseperably interwoven with the listening in my mind. I touched the Power of Now as described in the book while I was there; my attention was not in the past, nor in the future, it was squarely focused on my ears and eyes. I didn’t finish it during that exploration, however, and most of my subsequent listenings were rife with inattention. I thus have problems now remembering which parts I do not have any recollection of; I have no page to turn to. When you’re visually reading a book, the lack of memory is connected with an image related to the book — perhaps a page number or even the visual arrangement of the page, the shape of all the letters in tandem jumping out to create a subconscious bookmark. When aurally reading a book, this image is connected with the surroundings, especially if one listens to the book when using mass transit and all kinds of faces and other people are there to capture the attention and fantasy in ways reeds cannot.

Enough with describing the medium. The book in itself is very good. I did not find Tolle awfully didactic and the Q&As through which he chose to convey his teachings were satisfactory catalysts for bringing out what he wanted to say. Neither was I annoyed with his “recycling” of old teachings; essentially, that’s what religions have been doing anyway, repackaging old wisdom in different flavours. His message is more important and relevant now than it ever was, what with our lifestyle crisis and general existential confusion: 1) There is no past or future, only present. Giving in to dominance of the mind filters out true consciousness and presence (as in being in the moment wherever and whenever one is, not in the past and future) 2) People’s minds are imposters pretending to be their true selves and worrying about all sorts of things when there is no real reason for it.

What I found slighlty annoying was his insistence on quoting Jesus. Then again, my being annoyed with Jesus is only part of being disgusted by the church and naturally connecting hiw with it. That is however, as I understand it, a logical fallacy (I would like to mention at this point that discrediting the book because Oprah popularised it is comitting the very same fallacy). To do Tolle justice he does say that he’s not in that way supporting Christianity over other religions (he often quotes Buddha as well as other enlightened figures of the past), he’s merely putting Jesus’ words ouf ot the context of that religion and into the context of the shared meaning behind all religions, of course with added stress to Eastern philosophies which emphasise more strongly on those aspects than the –generally moralistic– monotheistic ones.

Now that I’m trying to sum up the actual contents of this book I’m finding it hard to describe, even though I think I did get the gist of it. If I knew how to accurately and meaningfully reproduce it I wouldn’t have felt the need to read it. I guess “true wisdom cannot be shared through words; it lies within and waits for the right wake up call”. Yep, it’s one of those…

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Review: Εκατό χρόνια μοναξιά

Εκατό χρόνια μοναξιά
Εκατό χρόνια μοναξιά by Gabriel Garcí­a Márquez
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Λίγες φορές έχουμε την ευκαιρία στον χώρο της λογοτεχνίας ή της καλλιτεχνικής αφήγησης να παρατηρήσουμε την ιστορία μιας ολόκληρης οικογένειας αντί μόνο ενός χαρακτήρα. Στην περίπτωση του Εκατό Χρόνια Μοναξιά, δεν προκείται απλά για μια οικογένεια ως ένα σημείο στον χρόνο –«αυτοί είναι οι γονείς, αυτά είναι τα παιδιά, αυτό είναι το ευρύτερο σόι, ας βουτήξουμε στην δράση»– αλλά για μια οικογένεια της οποίας την ζωή και την ιστορία διαβάζουμε λες και ήταν ενός ανθρώπου, με την γέννηση του, την ακμή του, την παρακμή του, τις κακές συνήθειες και τις εμμονές του.

Οι Μπουενδία (Καλημέρηδες!) είναι μια καταραμένη οικογένεια σε έναν υπερρεαλιστικό κόσμο, με την έννοια του hyper-real και όχι του sur-real, αν και για να είμαι ειλικρινής πολλά από τα σουρεαλιστικά που κάνουν την εμφάνιση τους στο βιβλίο με κάνουν να αναρωτιέμαι για το ποια ακριβώς είναι η διαφορά. Συμπρωταγωνιστής αυτής της καταραμένης οικογένειας είναι το Μακόντο, το χωριό που ιδρύει ο πρώτος Χοσέ Αρκάδιο Μπουενδία και η γυναίκα του Ούρσουλα σε βάλτους της Λατινικής Αμερικής που δίνει την αίσθηση του πιο απομονωμένου μέρους του κόσμου.

Στο Μακόντο, η ζωή είναι περίπου όπως την ξέρουμε αλλά όχι ακριβώς. Οι άνθρωποι ερωτεύονται για όλη τους την ζωή, κλείνονται σε δωμάτια τα οποία η σκόνη δεν αγγίζει ποτέ, οι Άραβες πουλάνε ιπτάμενα χαλιά τα οποία είναι ένα καθημερινό και συνηθισμένο θέαμα. Όλα σε αυτόν τον κόσμο δίνουν την αίσθηση της αχαλίνωτης υπερβολής: αν ζήσεις πολύ, θα ζήσεις πάνω από 140 χρόνια. Το πάθος θα είναι ολοκληρωτικό και αδύνατο κανείς να του αντισταθεί και οι επιμιξίες αποτελούν μικρό εμπόδιο, οι βεντέτες θα κρατάνε μια ζωή ή και περισσότερο, οι φόνοι είναι τρομακτικά βίαιοι. Οι Τραγωδίες κάνουν την εμφάνιση τους μόνο με Τ κεφαλαίο. Στον κόσμο του Μακόντο, αν ξεράσεις μια πράσινη γλίτσα γεμάτη βδέλες δεν θα υπάρχει κανένας λόγος ανησυχίας. Οτιδήποτε το αφάνταστα φρικιαστικό μπορεί να πάρει πραγματική μορφή αλλά κανείς δεν θα του ρίξει δεύτερη ματιά, είναι άλλωστε όλοι συνηθισμένοι σε φαντάσματα, τέρατα, παιδιά με γουρουνίσιες ουρές. Είναι μια απολαυστικά ενισχυμένη έκδοση της πραγματικότητας η οποία παραμένει παραταύτα εξαιρετικά ρεαλιστική, όσο αντιφατικό και αν ακούγεται αυτό. Ακολουθεί το σκεπτικό του αν οι άνθρωποι πιστεύουν σε κάτι, αυτό αρκεί για να το κάνει πραγματικό. Ο Μάρκες παίρνει αυτή την ιδέα, την φέρνει χίλιες βόλτες κι εμείς είμαστε οι εκστατικοί επιβάτες.

Υπό αυτές τις συνθήκες, η ομώνυμη μοναξιά που χτυπάει την οικογένεια των Μπουενδία είναι πραγματικά ασφυκτική. Γιατί όπως όλα σε αυτό το βιβλίο, η χαζομάρα, η τρέλα και οι φοβίες παίρνουν και αυτές δραματικές διαστάσεις. Τέτοιες διαστάσεις που εμποδίζουν ή γεννάνε μεγάλους έρωτες, κρατάνε παιδιά κλεισμένα σε χρυσά κλουβιά σκαλισμένα με ασημένιους καθολικούς σταυρούς, διαστρευλώνουν και αφαιρούν από τον ιστό της πραγματικότητας μακελειά και πολέμους, σκοτώνουν την χαρά της ζωής. Οι Μπουενδία είναι μια δυστυχισμένη φάρα από την αρχή μέχρι το τέλος της. Η τραγική της μοίρα κρύβει πολλές ειρωνίες της μοίρας. Μια εξ αυτών βρήκα ιδιαίτερα μεγάλη: τον ρόλο της Πιλάρ Τερνέρα στην διαιώνιση των Μπουενδία. Δεν θα γράψω τίποτα περισσότερο για να μην αποκαλύψω περισσότερα απ’όσα θα ήθελε να ξέρει κάποιος ο οποίος δεν έχει ακόμα διαβάσει το βιβλίο. Όπως λέει συχνά και η Ούρσουλα, εν μέρει συνένοχη του αναγνώστη, η τραγική ειρωνεία επαναλαμβάνεται και κάνει κύκλους σε αυτή την οικογένεια η οποία ποτέ δεν μαθαίνει από τα λάθη της και κάθε γενιά είναι γραφτό της να τα επαναλάβει. Πόση αλήθεια του κόσμου δεν κρύβεται σε αυτές τις γραμμές; Αυτό ακριβώς αντικατοπτρίζει και η επιλογή των ίδιων ονομάτων για τα παιδιά των Μπουενδία (πόσοι Αουρελιάνο πια!! Ήταν πραγματικά χρήσιμο το οικογενειακό δέντρο στην αρχή του βιβλίου και κατάφερνε να μην σποϊλεριάζει) η οποία στην αρχή είναι μεν κουραστική αλλά όσο προχωράει το βιβλίο αποκτάει ξεχωριστή σημασία. Η μοίρα των Μπουενδία μπορεί να μην αντικατοπτρίζεται πουθενά καλύτερα απ’ότι στο αρχοντικό τους και την κατάσταση του, την επέκταση και την φθορά με τις δεκαετίες.

Στα Εκατό Χρόνια Μοναξιά, η αλληγορία των Μπουενδία συναντά αυτόν τον υπέροχο υπερ-ρεαλισμό και μαζί δημιουργούν μια συναρπαστική ιστορία η οποία δεν χάνει από πουθενά. Η γενεαλογία των Μπουενδία και η ιστορία της μου κέντρισε το ενδιαφέρον για το τι σημαίνουν οι πρόγονοι και οι γενεαλογίες για τους ανθρώπους γενικότερα — ίσως έχει να κάνει και με το ότι έχω μικρή οικογένεια, καθόλου αδέρφια και ελάχιστους θείους/ες. Τα έξτρα στοιχεία όπως η ματιά στην παράδοση, στην θρησκευτική και «μεταφυσική», γιατί στο Μακόντο δεν υπάρχει μεταφυσική, μόνο φυσική, πίστη και στην ιστορία της Λατινικής Αμερικής, τουλάχιστον της πατρίδας του Μάρκες Κολομβίας, είναι το αλατοπίπερο της διήγησης. Προετοιμάζομαι ήδη να το διαβάσω και στα ισπανικά. Δεν με νοιάζει πόσο θα μου χρειαστεί: θα το καταφέρω!

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Review: The Human Evasion

The Human Evasion
The Human Evasion by Celia Elizabeth Green

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

In this book, Celia Green tries to deconstruct the term ‘sanity’. She argues that sanity is only an evasion taken on by people to avoid looking at reality and the whole spectrum of problems it brings with it, e.g. how little of the world we know or can, as humans, ever know; or the knowledge that our presence in the world is finite and therefore could be deemed as pointless, etc. In other words, sane people get used to dealing with problems concerning their relationships with other humans so as not to have to deal with reality and their finiteness. “Dealing with reality” is avoiding reality. Curiously, sane people do not seem to be aware of the fact and may insist that they are taking reality head-on while telling fellow humans more concerned with otherworldly or trans-human issues (in the sense of transendence, not transhumanism) that they are not dealing with reality.

An interesting book and one I that I wish to read again, if only because I feel that reading it off a screen somehow reduced my retention even if it is a short read. It is fully available on deoxy.org, which looks as if it has many other interesting articles, books and opinions that can go a long way in challenging the conceived sanity of most.

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Review: Ρεμπετολογία: Εικοσιτέσερις παράγραφοι μονότονης φλυαρίας

Ρεμπετολογία: Εικοσιτέσερις παράγραφοι μονότονης φλυαρίας
Ρεμπετολογία: Εικοσιτέσερις παράγραφοι μονότονης φλυαρίας by Ēlias Petropoulos

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Αυτό το βιβλίο το βρήκα από έναν τύπο ο οποίος είχε στήσει ένα τραπεζομάντιλο στο πεζοδρόμιο στην παραλία του Φαλήρου και πούλαγε τα παλιά του βιβλία. Μου είπε ότι η Ρεμπετολογία ήταν πολύ καλό, από τον γνωστό εθνογράφο Ηλία Πετρόπουλο. Μου φάνηκε όντως καλή ιδέα να δώσω μόνο 3 ευρώ για να διαβάσω για τους ρεμπέτες, είναι άλλωστε μια πτυχή της ιστορίας που με ενδιαφέρει: οτιδήποτε σχετικό με την «άγραφη» ιστορία του ελληνισμού εντός κι εκτός Ελλάδας με ενδιαφέρει. Του έδωσα τα τρία ευρώ και το πήρα, μαζί με τον Λύκο της Στέππας του (Χ)Έσσε.

Το βιβλίο αυτό, με θέμα τους ρεμπέτες, γράφτηκε το 1989, την χρονιά που γεννήθηκα, στο Παρίσι, και πρωτοεκδόθηκε στα Γερμανικά. Οι πολλαπλές αναφορές ήδη θα έλεγα μου ταιριάζουν γάντι. Δεν είναι διεξοδικό, αφού είναι μόνο 101 σελίδες με εικόνες και τεράστια γραμματοσειρά. Αλλά είναι απόδειξη πως ένα ενδιαφέρον βιβλίο δεν χρειάζεται να είναι πολύ μεγάλο για να σε κάνει να σκεφτείς· μια αναφορά είναι αρκετή για να βάλεις το μυαλό σου να αναρρωτηθεί. Συχνά η εικόνα των ρεμπετών εξιδανικεύεται πλέον κι επιλέγεται να αναδειχθεί η χασικλίδικη τους πλευρά, η ελεύθερη, παράνομη ζωή που συχνά κατήυθηναν και φυσικά η μουσική και οι χοροί τους. Όμως τι ξέρουμε για το τι φόραγαν, την σχέση τους με τον έρωτα (και τις διαδεδομένες ομοφυλοφιλικές τους σχέσεις — όπως έλεγαν, άλλο εραστής άλλο θυληπρεπής «πούστης»), την αργκό τους, τα τατουάζ τους, τα όπλα τους και ειδικά την αγάπη τους για τα μαχαίρια –ήταν μαχαιροβγάλτες, γενικά– αλλά και για ακριβώς αυτή την μουσικοχορευτική παράδοση τους που μας έχει μείνει σήμερα;

Το γεγονός ότι όσα χόρευε, τραγουδούσε αλλά και τα μουσικά όργανα που χρησιμοποιούσε, μια εντελώς περιθωριακή για την εποχή της ομάδα, είναι σήμερα σε βαθμό αχώριστο συνδεδεμένα με την σύγχρονη ελληνική ταυτότητα, λέει πραγματικά πάρα πολλά για την άγνοια που έχουμε για την πραγματική μας πολυπολιτισμική ιστορία και είναι μόνο ενδεικτικά της έλλειψης ενδιαφέροντος για την ανακάλυψη του ποιοι πραγματικά είμαστε.

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