I think I was eleven or twelve when I first learned the word
eclectic. I was thrilled to know
there was a label for my particular, for want of a better word, idiom.
I thought of that when I realized that I was in the midst of
or had just finished reading a bunch of very different books.
Our sailor friend Vic loaned me a book called Hatteras Blues: A story from the Edge of
America by Tom Carlson. He was enthusiastic about this book so I settled in
to read it, in spite of the fact that it seemed to be about sport-fishing – a topic
in which I have precisely no interest. But the writing is so good . . . and it’s
also about the Outer Banks and their history and their fragile ecology and the
way of life (commercial fishing) of the residents – the real residents, not the
vacation people – of Hatteras Village. I’m almost to the end and really wanting
to pay a visit to the Outer Banks – in the off season.
I just finished Lost
to the West: The Forgotten Byzantine Empire That Recued Western Civilization
by Lars Brownworth. This is a fascinating and complex subject made slightly
less confusing by an author who is known a ‘populizer’ – one who writes of a
normally academic subject in a manner that the rest of us can enjoy. One of the
most interesting thing in the welter of dynasties and heresies and truly
terrible people in the struggle between the two parts of what had been the
Roman Empire is the absolute relevance of what happened then to what is
happening today. As they say, those who don’t study history are often doomed to
repeat it. (While those who do study it, may have to stand helplessly by as the
mob rages unchecked.)
Then there’s Pollyanna,
a 1913 children’s book by Eleanor H. Porter.
Told you I was eclectic. I read this when I was quite young – about the
same time I was reading the Bobbsey Twins. I remember eventually feeling a bit
cynical about her perpetual gladness, but, as I read it now, it’s not as smarmy
as you might think. In fact, I’m enjoying it after all those nasty Byzantines
and their assorted enemies and their gruesome ways of killing one another.
Another bit of pure pleasure is the audiobook I was
listening to as I cleaned the grease off the kitchen cabinets. Neil Gaiman’s The View from the Cheap Seats is a
collection of his essays and speeches—very, well, eclectic collection. I can’t
do better than to quote from his publisher’s blurb --
"Analytical yet playful, erudite yet accessible, this cornucopia explores a broad range of interests and topics, including (but not limited to): authors past and present; music; storytelling; comics; bookshops; travel; fairy tales; America; inspiration; libraries; ghosts; and the title piece, at turns touching and self-deprecating, which recounts the author's experiences at the 2010 Academy Awards in Hollywood."
Plus, the audio is read by Himself – I’d
listen to NG read the phonebook.
And there was The Conjure Woman by Charles Waddell Chestnutt, a collection of tales from the ante- and post-bellum South, told by an African American author in the late 1800s. The heavy use of dialect would turn some people off but as I grew up reading Uncle Remus and Tom Sawyer and others of that ilk, I was not deterred. An interesting look at the past.
I’ll round it off with Marriage
and Family in the Middle Ages by Frances and Joseph Gies– more ‘popular’
history.
Quoting Library Journal: "Two experienced popular historians have assembled a well-researched and well-written overview of a lively topic in medieval scholarship, the history of the family. They start from the Roman, Germanic, and Christian backgrounds of medieval family life, cover its recently discovered 11th- and 12th-century transformations, and exploit (I wonder if LJ meant explore) the rich late medieval examples of family life. Among other topics the authors treat family definition and size, marriage rules and customs, and sexual relations. " Richard C. Hoffman, York Univ., North York, Ontario.
I admit to kinda skimming this one -- but I really enjoyed the look at the past.
Where will I go next? Perhaps to The Well at the World's End . . .
Oops, hold everything! Ron Rash's latest just arrived, sent to my by a dear blog friend who shares my appreciation for this talented writer. The Well can wait . . .