I have to be honest, when our Book Club decided to read Strength to Love by Martin Luther King Jr., I was not excited. The world was full of BLM protests and I was frankly tired of being told how racist America and all white people are. I don't believe that, and I was hesitant to read anything that might reinforce the narrative. Not that I don't love MLK and the vision he had for America, but I had some notion that King had moved further to the Left later in his life, and I wasn't sure what to expect.
I love to read. And write. I have very eclectic tastes in books and if I don't rant about them here, I'll drive my family and friends crazy. Since I read so much, I thought it best to record summaries of what I read here. This way all my reading is not in vain!
Wednesday, September 2, 2020
Strength to Love by Martin Luther King Jr.
Sunday, August 30, 2020
The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis
'Is it really tolerable that she should be untouched by his misery, even his self-made misery?''Would ye rather he still had the power of tormenting her? He did it many a day and many a year in their earthly life.''Well, no. I suppose I don't want that.''What then?''I hardly know, Sir. What some people say on Earth is that the final loss of one soul gives the lie to all the joy of those who are saved.''Ye see it does not.''I feel in a way that it ought to.''That sounds very merciful: but see what lurks behind it.''What?''The demand of the loveless and the self-imprisoned that they should be allowed to blackmail the universe: that till they consent to be happy (on their own terms) no one else shall taste joy: that theirs should be the final power; that Hell should be able to veto Heaven.'
'I don't know what I want, Sir.'
'Son, son, it must be one way or the other. Either the day must come when joy prevails and all the makers of misery are no longer able to infect it: or else for every dn ever the makers of misery can destroy in others the happiness they reject for themselves. I know it has a grand sound to say ye'll accept no salvation which leaves even one creature in the dark outside. But watch that sophistry or ye'll make a Dog in a Manger the tyrant of the universe.' (p. 135)
Wondering why the Spirits couldn't venture to Grey Town to make their case, MacDonald explains that they are too large and would never fit. This confuses our author until MacDonald leads him to a tiny crevice in the ground. That, he explains, is where you will find Hell. Astonished at the thought of this, the narrator details the long journey it took to arrive in Heaven. Apparently the entire journey was simply becoming big enough to experience it. But it felt infinite. "And yet all loneliness, angers, hatreds, envies and etchings that it contains, if rolled into a single experience and put into the scale against the least moment of the joy that is felt by the least in Heaven, would have no weight that could be registered at all." (p. 138) For the damned are not just tiny, they are less than nothing, so shut up as they are. "Only the Greatest of all can make Himself small enough to enter Hell." (p. 139)
Saturday, August 29, 2020
Mathematics for Human Flourishing by Francis Su
The school where I teach asked the teachers to read Mathematics for Human Flourishing by Francis Su over the summer and come prepared to discuss it at the beginning of the school year. Contrary to popular belief, the summer can be a very busy time for teachers. We have much to do to prepare for the upcoming year and this summer was certainly no exception.
Saturday, August 22, 2020
White Guilt by Shelby Steele
I am so glad I read this book. Originally written in 2006, its thesis had aged well and therefore has the authority of truth.
Steele argues that after whites acknowledged their horrific wrongs vis-a-vis treatment of black fellow citizens, an implicit agreement was made: in exchange for a chance to regain the moral authority lost, whites would work to level the playing field for blacks as well as the outcomes, while blacks need only wait for whites to serve them. This explosive concept, that white guilt motivates whites and indulges and infantilizes blacks, is so radically different from the current narrative that it shocks the conscious. Yet it hold up well as an explanation for our current situation.
Steele weaves his own autobiography of growing up in segregated Chicago into the broader narrative of what went wrong. He saw first-hand his parents struggle in the non-violent protests of Martin Luther King, their stunning victory, the legal reforms, and the inability of many blacks to take their winnings and create successful lives for themselves. The rapidity of whites acknowledgement of their failure simply stunned blacks into a place of not exactly knowing what to do. After you have vanquished the foe, then what? Steele argues that is the time for blacks to take responsibility for their own lives and for whites to treat blacks as autonomous fellow citizens.
The opposite happened.
Steele is a perfect example. In college, after seeing his parents model famously succeed, he turned to radical black power movements. As he analyzes his inappropriate anger, he comes to the conclusion that blacks, fearful of the prospective of finally being able to live free, lashed out. "Anger is acted out by the oppressed only when real weakness is perceived in the oppressor. So anger is never automatic or even inevitable for the oppressed; it is chosen when weakness in the oppressor means it will be effective in winning freedom or justice or spoils of some kind. Anger in the oppressed is a response to perceived opportunity, not injustice. And expressions of anger escalate not with more injustice but with less injustice." (p. 21) It's too much; Freedom is overwhelming. Worried about not being able to succeed on their own merits, black decided to demand more and more from a guilty nation. When more did not prove enough, rage resulted.
After college, Steele went to work administering the very plans he and his fellow blacks had demanded. It was this experience that convinced him that black success did not lie in whites' hands. You cannot give a person success. He must earn it. He noticed black rejected the help, instead preferring riots and destruction. He saw an almost direct correlation between the amount of white guilt and black's demands. The more white guilt, the less blacks demanded of themselves. This explains why so much of the protests centered on college campuses. The white guilt displayed by the university administration invited protests.
Steele sums up his thesis: "Black America faced two options. We could seize on the great freedom we had just won in the civil rights victories and advance through education, skill development, and entrepreneurialism combined with an unbending assault on any continuing discrimination; or we could go after these things indirectly by pressuring the society that it wronged us into taking the lion's share of responsibility in resurrecting us. The new black militancy that exploded everywhere in the late 60s – and that came to the find a strategy for black advancement for the next four decades — grew out of black America‘s complete embrace of the latter option." (p. 58)
Steele tells a hypothetical and yet heart-breaking story of a young black boy. As a student, he is pardoned for poor grades. White racism after all explains his failure. His education is dumbed down and expectations on him plummet. Yet outside the schoolroom window is a basketball court. He knows his failure to prove his bona fides on the court will provoke ridicule and estrangement. Therefore, given the choice between homework or free throw practice, he knows where to put his efforts. He is expected to prove himself through his efforts on the court. He is not expected to prove himself through his efforts in the classroom. As an interesting aside, we can see that where blacks are given the least amounts of hand outs and the most expectation of meritocratic behavior, they will succeed in a dramatic fashion. The black community has proven time and again, that unleashed from white, debilitating "help" they are capable of amazing achievement.
"The greatest black problem in America today is freedom. All underdeveloped, formally oppressed groups first experience new freedom as a shock and humiliation because freedom shows them they’re underdevelopment and their inability to compete as equals. Freedom seems to confirm all the ugly stereotypes about the group – especially the charge of inferiority – and yet the group no longer has the excuse of oppression. Without oppression – and it must be acknowledged the blacks are no longer oppressed in America – the group itself becomes automatically responsible for its inferiority and non-competitiveness. So freedom not only comes as a humiliation but also as an overwhelming burden of responsibility. Thus, inevitably, there is a retreat from freedom." (p. 67)
With crushing accuracy, Steele states, "How could a people that has survived centuries of slavery and segregation — through ingenuity, imagination, and great courage — get this confused, this alienated from man’s most elemental power: responsibility? Because freedom scared the hell out of us – our first true fall, our first true loss of innocence – and because there was nothing less than a locomotive of white guilt coming our way and hungering to prop us up in our every illusion. White guilt has wanted nothing more than to confuse our relationship to responsibility, to have us feel responsibility as an injustice, a continuation of our oppression. It exploited our tear of freedom and precisely the same way that plantation owners once exploited our labor. Whites needed responsibility for our problems in order to gain their own moral authority and legitimacy. So they set about — once again – to exploit us, to encourage and even nurture our illusions, to steal responsibility from us, to take advantage of our backwardness just as slave traders had once done on the west coast of Africa. Suddenly, in the age of white guilt, we were gold again." (p. 69)
Steele analogizes his own coming of age as a teenager to the surrounding cultural circumstances. Like most teenagers, he rebelled against his parents. Although he believes that most rebellious children are secretly safe in the knowledge that their parents are actually right and actually know the best way forward, blacks "came of age" when the "parents" (whites) were actually wrong. When a teenager confronts an actually guilty parent, that will likely result in more teenaged rebellion. After all, by what moral authority does a guilty parent tell a youngster what to do? And not only does the guilt of the parent seem to absolve the child of any moral responsibility for his own life, when the guilty parent indulges the child's rage and entitlement mentality, the teenager will never learn to be responsible. In order to assuage their own guilt, whites were perfectly willing to indulge a recalcitrant black population.
Not only did whites lose the moral authority granted them by the idea of white supremacy, whites lost the authority to promote any values that might be heralded by whites in general. "Whites also lost a degree of they authority to stand proudly for the values and ideas the had made the West a great civilization despite its many evils." (p. 109) Whites could not demand of blacks the same things they would demand of their own children. It seemed too white to demand responsibility and hard work. Even the Smithsonian has recently stated these timeless values that lead to successful people are vestiges of white supremacy. Therefore blacks were denied the very tools that would help them succeed. And when they failed, as many inevitably did, that was seen a further failure of whites to provide for blacks. Therefore the cycle of poverty began. Whites refused to provide blacks with the tools necessary for success and provided material resources instead. Blacks failed. Whites beat themselves up for their failure and provided more material resources and fewer tools. Not once did whites stop to think that maybe their "help" was actually hurting, because the "help" provided did double duty: it avoided "blaming the victim" and it assuaged white guilt. Win-win.
Yet it is not a win for blacks. It keeps them perpetually at the mercy of the very people said to be oppressing them. Never are blacks told to use their freedom to achieve their own success. Through the exploitation of, and desire to alleviate, white guilt, blacks are kept in a perpetually inferior condition.
"So post 60s American liberalism preserves the old racist hierarchy of whites over blacks as virtue itself; and it grants all white who identify with it a new superiority. In effect, it says you are morally superior to other whites and intellectually superior to blacks. The white liberals reward is this feeling that because he is heir to the knowledge of the West, yet morally enlightened beyond the West's former bigotry, he is really a 'new man,' a better man than the world has seen before." (p. 148) This perfectly aligns with C.S. Lewis' observation, “Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience.”
The tragedy of this new focus on alleviating white guilt produced an obsession with "disassociation." No longer could whites defend time-honored principles because these were now associated with racism. The "good" white must disassociate himself from all vestiges of the past no matter how proven or principled. We see this today in the tearing down of statues, even of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and Abraham Lincoln. We joke they are not sufficiently "woke." In reality, they represent a world of insufficient white guilt. They, in their own fallen and flawed ways, advocated principles, that however virtuous, are tainted by the vices of their spokesmen. Therefore the principles must be thrown out with the people. The more a white person "disassociates" from the past the more virtuous. The actual virtuosity of this "new man" is completely meaningless.
What is Steele's recommendation now? He advocates the hard work of reclaiming timeless values for all men despite the taint given them by imperfect humans. He says we must see each other as individuals and not members of a group. We, in fact, must see each other, really see each other. For too long we have treated each other as means to an end. Whether it's more spoils or more virtue, we have used each other for our own gain. It must end.
However, with the recent spate of racial unrest, the country is moving in exactly the opposite direction. When "Top CEOs Vow to Hire 1 million Black Americans" screams from the headlines, we can see we are treating humans as things to me manipulated. Objects to be moved around at the will of white Americans.
Some, who agree with Steele, see hope for pushback against this mentality. Steele himself says it puts the Right in the enviable position of defending equality and liberty, easy sells. However, I think the forces that push fallen humans to "prove" they are good people apart from Jesus' sacrifice are simply too strong. As long as people can buy cheap grace by offering blacks crumbs, they will jump at the chance. The fact that it keeps blacks infantilized and will never end the "virtue" cycle is irrelevant. As long as whites can convince themselves that they are the good guys, they will continue to oppress and lord over blacks, in the name of helping. The impulses of racism remain. It is just dressed in fancier finery.
Thursday, August 20, 2020
How We Love Our Kids by Milan & Kay Yerkovich
A friend had recommended this book after the original, How We Love had made such a difference in her marriage. This companion book on parenting, How We Love Our Kids by Milan & Kay Yerkovich, also helped in her relationship with her daughter.
It was an easy read, and well-worth reading. I would not say it changed anything in my life, but it did help me recognize my parenting pattern and the possible pitfalls.
Milan and Kay Yerkovich have identified five styles of loving others:
The Avoider
The Pleaser
The Vacillator
The Controller
The Victim
Each of these stem from what the parent, herself, was raised with as well as her own experiences. These styles in turn influence the behavior of the child. In many, if not most, cases, the Yerkovichs believe that problems that children are exhibiting are actually a reaction to one or more of the parenting styles. How we parent is rarely a conscientious choice, it is rather, the confluence of events that make us who we are as humans. However, the Yerkovichs believe we cannot end the story there, but must identify our personal style in order to address the resulting issues that arise between the parent and the child.
Directly from the book:
AVOIDER ASSESSMENT
• It seems my spouse has more emotional needs than I do.
• What is upsetting to my spouse or kids seems like no big deal to me.
• My childhood was fine, but I don't have many memories from my upbringing, let alone positive ones of receiving comfort.
• I'm independent and self-reliant, and those are values I've worked to pass on to my kids.
• I would rather work on a project alone than sit and have a long conversation with someone.
• I've been told I don't show enough affection.
• When something bad happens, I get over it and move on.
• If a kid is upset, I reassure her with, “You're fine."
• I tend to guard my space and feel annoyed when I'm required to spend a lot of time and attention on family matters.
• I like to make decisions on my own.
• When someone is very emotional, I find a way to escape, especially if they think I'm supposed to help. I don't like tears and lots of emotion.
• In my family growing up, everyone pretty much did his own thing and kept to himself.
• I have siblings with whom I have little or no contact today.
• I have never felt particularly close to my parents.
• Nothing gets me too bothered or upset.
If you identified with this assessment, congratulations. You're that much closer to being a better parent. And you might want to thank your kids for helping you to grow and recognize yourself better. But let me assure you, avoiders have positive traits too. They raise responsible kids who are often extremely accomplished and uncommonly resourceful. You can learn to balance your focus on achievement as you expand your ability to connect emotionally. Your kids will benefit and so will you.
PLEASER ASSESSMENT
• I'm usually the giver in relationships.
• I'm a peacemaker and peacekeeper.
• I anticipate my spouse's needs and meet them.
• Sometimes I'm dishonest to avoid conflict.
• I fear making my spouse or kids upset or angry.
• I tend to give in to get conflict over with.
• I don't like to be alone.
• It really upsets me if someone is mad at me.
• When someone requests help, I usually say yes and get overcommitted.
• I tried hard to win a critical or angry parent's approval.
• Sometimes I get mad, but I don't show it, and I smile a lot.
• I had a parent who never stood up for himself, but passively accepted poor treatment.
• When I sense others distancing, I try harder.
• I'm on the cautious side; I definitely wouldn't call myself a risk-taker.
• I had an overprotective parent who worried a lot.
• I crave reassurance and affirmation from others.
VACILLATOR ASSESSMENT
• No one has ever really understood what I need.
• I fall in love instantly, and my relationships are initially intense and passionate, but they never last.
• I always hope for great relationships, but everyone disappoints me. Some people try to make amends, but it's always too little, too late.
• I'm a very passionate person, and I feel things more deeply than others.
• I know far more about being a good parent than my spouse does.
• I could describe many examples of how I've been hurt and disappointed, and I often feel unappreciated by my spouse and kids. I can always sense when others pull away from me.
• I want far more connection than I have currently.
• I love the feeling of making up after a fight.
• When people hurt me long enough, I write them off.
• If my spouse would pursue me more, things would be better.
• I don't like to be alone, but sometimes having people around makes me worse.
• My parent(s) still drive me crazy.
• Sometimes I pick fights, and I'm really not sure why.
• I make it obvious when I'm hurt, and it's only worse when no one asks what's wrong.
• I'm always waiting for people to be available, and I wonder if they've forgotten me.
• I'm convinced I have the ability to read people really well and quickly judge their motives and intentions before they even speak.
CONTROLLER ASSESSMENT
• Growing up, a parent or sibling threatened me, intimidated me, or was violent with me.
• No one protected me when I was growing up; I was on my own for the most part.
• My spouse and kids do things behind my back and that infuriates me.
• I dislike authority and feel angry when others tell me what to do or ignore what I tell them to do.
• I tend to use alcohol, drugs, pornography, gambling, or overspending to feel good.
• My life has had its share of problems, so I'm under more stress than most people.
• I try to control my temper, but it's hard not to let it out.
• My spouse does things to make me jealous.
• I know my family doesn't like me losing my temper, but they shouldn't make me so angry.
• I have hit, slapped, or pushed my spouse or kids, or I have come close to it.
• I've changed jobs frequently.
• By the time I was a teenager, people knew not to mess with me.
• I left home early, and some family members were afraid of me.
• My spouse and kids don't listen when I ask them to do things.
Controllers enter adulthood believing childhood is behind them, but therapists call these “unresolved issues” for good reason. Most chaotic adults don't want to touch their childhood memories with a ten-foot pole. And who can blame them? How do you begin to resolve the enormous amount of unresolved, unprocessed hurt and pain when there's little to no feeling left? It's all been stuffed down—all the powerlessness, fear, grief, and shame—and they're completely out of touch with what's now happening to their own children.
And so the nightmare continues.
If there is to be growth, hope, and real change, the controller needs someone with a lot of compassion, persistence, and courage. The kind they've never known, likely never even seen in real life. This is often the only way to get at the heart of the issue. If it takes the help of a spouse, a therapist, or a psychiatrist, the controller with the best chance is the one convinced he needs to compassionately face his past.
VICTIM ASSESSMENT
• People in my family struggled with outbursts of anger, violence, addictions, and abuse.
• I try to keep my mate from knowing certain things, to prevent him from becoming angry.
• I have been in and stayed in destructive relationships.
• I get depressed and anxious, which makes it hard for me to cope as a parent.
• I'm loyal even when others are probably exploiting me.
• For most of my life, I've felt unworthy and unlovable.
• Sometimes I'm far off, and I feel detached and disengaged.
• Sometimes I find myself not paying attention to my children.
• My parents had drug and alcohol problems.
• One of my parents was abusive, the other passive.
• Growing up, I functioned as the parent.
• My spouse mistreats me, but I stay because it would be horrible to be alone.
• I was physically, emotionally, or sexually abused during my childhood—or saw these things happen to other people.
• I get nervous when things are calm, and I anxiously wait for the anger to come.
• When my spouse is unkind to our children, I feel powerless to do anything about it.
• Sometimes I feel life isn't worth living.
• I don't let myself cry, because if I started, I'd never stop.
If you see yourself or someone you know in this assessment, be encouraged. There's hope for recovery! Some of the nicest, most wonderful people in the world are victims, and we have met and known many such people. Incredibly sweet and compliant, there are few who try harder than the victim to do things right.
While the Yerkovichs acknowledge that no one fits neatly into any single category, we all have styles to which we tend to default. For me personally, I think I fall most into the Avoider, with some Vacillator thrown in. This was helpful to me because I realized that there are things I am doing as a parent, that my children pick up on, and therefore respond in certain ways. By being an Avoider, it means the hard conversations never happen and so a child can feel misunderstood and unappreciated.
I'm glad I read the book, but I think it would have been even more helpful when I first became a parent.
Saturday, June 6, 2020
All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque
However, I went on to read it for myself anyways, figuring, who knows, maybe we'll read it next time. Dream do die hard, don't they?
I'm glad I did. It's pretty much canonical in historical fiction. Told from the perspective of a German soldier in World War I, it forces those of us whose sympathies obviously lie on the other side in this conflagration to confront the reality of the hell of war. And it is hell. No one wins in this novel.
Our narrator is Paul Bäumer a young, idealistic man who joins up, along with his pals, at the patriotic urgings of his teacher. Written in a haunting present tense that somehow enables the reader to simultaneously feel both part of the action and reflective, Remarque, through Bäumer, realistically describes the descent into inhumanity that characterized the War to End All Wars.
Bäumer begins his narrative in media Regan's, "We were at rest, five miles behind the front." And the action never stops. No explanations are proffered. The only introduction we are given is the names and a short bio of who, exactly, comprise the "we." But in fact, the "we" has already lost one member, obviously the one most reluctant to join. Although it seems clear pretty early on that Bäumer reproves Kantorek, the schoolmaster who impressed upon the young men their patriotic duty to enlist, for their current troubles, he assures us that, "Naturally we couldn't blame Kantorek for this. Where would the world be if it brought every man to book? There were thousands of Kantoreks, all of whom were convinced that they were acting for the best—in a way that cost them nothing.
"And that is why they let us down so badly." (p. 12)
And so begins the penetrating commentary on war masked in the narrative of one soldier's experience. At a minimum, Kantorek should be given his due for his ability to teach his pupil the art of insightful writing.
While most of the book is written in the present tense, occasionally, Bäumer reflects back to the past. In describing how it was that he and his fellow comrades had gotten to the point where they could callously debate the means by which they could abscond with the boots of their dying pal before both they and his body were shipped off, he slips into reminiscing about the necessary training that shaped them. "So we were put through every conceivable refinement of parade-ground soldiering till we often howled with rage. Many of us become ill through it; Wolf actually died of inflammation of the lung. But we would have felt ridiculous had we hauled down our colours. We became hard, suspicious, pitiless, vicious, tough—and that was good; for these attributes were just what we lacked. Had we gone into the trenches without this period of training most of us would certainly have gone mad." (p. 26)
Much of the book is spent going back and forth between the terror of fighting and the absurd situations into which war necessarily places its participants. Vividly describing the bathroom habits of men forced to make due with the lack of latrines, grippingly detailing the death-defying trek to secure a treasured bird to roast, nonchalantly depicting horrifying injuries sustained on the battlefield, Bäumer time and again disconcertingly jumps from the daily banality of war to the carnage and its consequences.
"Habit is the explanation of why we seem to forget things so quickly. Yesterday we were under fire, today we act the fool and go foraging through the countryside, tomorrow we go up to the trenches again. We forget nothing really, but so long as we have to stay here in the field, the front-line days, when they are past, sink down in us like a stone; they are too grievous for us to be able to reflect on them at once. If we did that, we should have been destroyed long ago. I soon found out this much:—terror can be endured so long as a man simply ducks;—but it kills, if a man thinks about it." (p. 138)
Remarque, however, will not allow the reader to duck. We are forced to confront the terror.
At one point, Bäumer almost succumbs to the thoughts he cannot think. He almost begins to see his enemy as a fellow human. He almost begins to see the absurdity of the fact that "a word of command might transform [the enemies] into our friends." (p. 194)
"I am frightened: I dare think this way no more. This way lies the abyss. It is not now the time but I will not lose these thoughts, I will keep them, shut them away until the war is ended. My heart beats fast: this is the aim, the great, the sole aim, that I have thought of in the trenches; that I have looked for as the only possibility of existence after this annihilation of all human feeling; this is the task that will make life afterward worthy of these hideous years." (p. 194)
Again, the reader must think these thought. The reader is not in the trenches.
In a conversation among the men, they wonder at the futility of it all, "But what I would like to know," says Albert, "is whether there would have been a war if the Kaiser had said No." (p. 203)
From there they wonder just exactly it means that one country offended another. Can a French mountain offend a German river. Obviously it means that one people have offended another. Yet one soldier claims to have never met a Frenchman before the war, and that most Frenchmen have never met a German. How can there be an offense? Perhaps wars start because leaders need a war now and then to bolster their legacy. It is clear that these lowly infantry could never hope to comprehend the complexities which lead to international conflagrations. Yet, "no war at all is better" seems unanswerable. (p. 203)
Time and again, Remarque returns to the theme of youth and the impact of the war on the psyche of this generation. Bäumer begins the story by remarking, "Kantorek would say that we stood on the threshold of life. And so it would seem. We had as yet taken no root. The war swept us away. For the others, the older men, it is but an interruption.They are able to think beyond it. We, however, have been gripped by it and do not know what the end may be. We only know that in some strange and melancholy way we have become a waste land." (p. 20)
Later, Bäumer and his friends begin to discuss the ramifications of the war on their generation. "Albert expresses it: 'The war has ruined us for everything.'
"He is right. We are not youth any longer. We don't want to take the world by storm. We are fleeing. We fly from ourselves. From our life. We were eighteen and had begun to love life and the world; and we had to shoot it to pieces. The first bomb, the first explosion, burst in our hearts. We are cut off from activity, from striving, from progress. We believe in such thinks no longer, we believe in the war." (p. 87-88)
Bäumer concludes, "I am young, I am twenty years old; yet I know nothing of life but despair, death, fear, and fatuous superficiality cast over an abyss of sorrow. I see how people are set against one another, and in silence, unknowingly, foolishly, obediently, innocently slay one another. I see that the keenest brains of the world invent weapons and words to make it yet more refined and enduring. And all men of my age, here and over there, throughout the whole world see these things; all my generation is experiencing these things with me. What would our fathers do if we suddenly stood up and came before them and proffered our account? What do they expect of us if a time ever comes when the war is over? Through the years our business has been killing;—it was our first calling in life. Our knowledge of life is limited to death. What will happen afterwards? And what shall come out of us?" (p. 264)
Indeed.
Rumpole and the Penge Bungalow Murders by John Mortimer
Of course you don't need that background to enjoy the book, which I did. I actually listened to the audiobook which featured Benedict Cumberbatch. I think it must have been somewhat adapted from the book because it's more radio theater than an audiobook.
Regardless, I loved it. It was funny, in a dry, British, sort of way. Delightfully retrogressive, and so it takes us back to a relatively innocent and naive time.
While Rumpole is technically a lawyer, he also plays the role of detective when trying to make his client's defense. Therefore, there is always a twist only Rumpole has discovered.
Lots of fun and definitely worth a read.






