Saturday, December 03, 2022

November-December

 25 th 


“In fact, I sought the man with the stubble more than “in the broad ways”: I sought him in the gardens of Monet, the novels of Genet, the preludes of Ravel, the statues of Easter Island, the biographies of Jack the Ripper, and in a thousand beds and bars of Europe and the East. The not finding is, in a sense, art. Though art isn’t, conversely, not finding. (Picasso: “Je trouve d’abord, je cherche après.”) (Imagine being rich as Croesus and able to trace the past. Imagine being led to “his” hospital room today in, say, Urbana or Wichita, or rather, to his grave. The joke of it!) Those musical sketches for “Song of Songs” I showed to Leo Sowerby, but didn’t tell him what had impelled me toward the text. I never told anyone.”


— Knowing When to Stop: A Memoir by Ned Rorem


3 December 


“I’ve not joined the avant-garde (henceforth called the Academy) it’s not that I don’t approve of—or even agree with—them; it’s because of a terror of losing my identity. Still, I’m capable of arguing any view or its opposite, depending on who I’m trying to persuade what to.”


— The Paris Diary & The New York Diary, 1951–1961 by Ned Rorem

Monday, October 31, 2022

September and October 2022

 Nope.  Agree completely.  It reads like we're hearing a woman on her cell phone dropping names 

a million times a second to impress someone but it ain't me.  


Guess nyrb is getting desperate about roping in readers under 50? under 40? and gambling that adding

these artsy watercolors and trendy lingo will do it.  Wisin 'em good luck but not doing anything for me.  


In my geezer cluelessness-hauteur I actually thought it was sort of insulting because who the heck knows

all that she assumes "everyone knows."  


Just finished up reading huge biography of Wittgenstein that I started months ago.  Three-fourths

through I lost patience and skimmed through the remainder.  Never read biography, I say to myself

once again!!!  I do have a better set of notions about how and why W left his mark on 20thC 

thought and opinions.  Within the small academic worlds of Cambridge and Cornell etc---philosophy.

Basically W came into their world and behaved like a crazed poet who challenged all their dead

languages, ways of talking about their stuff post-Kant. His upper class Austrian wealth and standing

of course was the initial ticket, plus he was brilliant in lots of unusual ways.   Wish the biographer had been a poet-type

instead of a philosopher-bureaucrat.  He carefully records and sifts through the mountain of letters

and diaries that generation piled up, but by the end you feel he has little enough understanding

of human nature for all of that learning.  Oh well.  Have no interest in trying to read W's writings 

because he never was satisfied with them, constantly changed them, could never finish anything,

difficult with publishers etc etc.  Of course I know nothing about math and logic, so my response

probably looks pretty dumb.  But at one point W himself says the only real way to write philosophy

is to write like a poet.  


Monk's book published in 1990  


"What emerges from Wittgenstein’s Vienna is a clearer understanding of how a philosopher’s views emerge. Wittgenstein no longer seems so peculiar. One can understand that the issues that so perplexed him, and almost at times drove him into a frenzy, were issues that hung in the air in countless coffee shops of old Vienna, where the intelligentsia read with delight the witty and pointed aphorisms in Kraus’s Die Fackel (‘The Torch’), or discussed the poetry of von Hoffmannsthal, the novels of Musil, and the scientific writings of Mach. They correct the inappropriate view of Wittgenstein as a man without a culture. Lonely he may have been (and sexually frustrated too), but Janik and Toulmin show that, beyond a shadow of a doubt, his philosophical investigations were following up on leads he took from others before him.

To know something about a philosopher’s life need not be a useless exercise, even when that something could be a sordid event or a secret the philosopher would have preferred remained buried. So long as one does not engage in the sort of reckless reductionism Paul Johnson revels in, one can come to a better understanding of who that philosopher is, and why he or she chose to grapple with certain issues. To quote from William Gass’s review of yet another Wittgenstein biography, Brian McGuinness’s Wittgenstein: A Life, philosophy is a strange business. “To persevere in such a difficult and unrewarding course,” Gass writes, “requires the mobilization of the entire personality – each weakness as well as every strength, each quirk as well as every normality. … Valery’s belief that every philosophy was an important piece of someone’s autobiography need not be rejected as reductive; for whatever the subliminal causes and their kind are like, the principle put forth must stand and defend itself in a stockade of arguments, it must make its own way out into who knows what other fields of intelligence, to fall or flourish there.”

Thus, while Marx’s boils may have fueled his ire against the bourgeoisie, one cannot dismiss Das Kapital on those terms. The origin of a thought and its impact are not one and the same. Likewise, Wittgenstein’s Viennese upbringing gave him issues to grapple with, but it was his own genius that propelled them forward. If such thoughts were caused at least in part by strudel and coffee, so much the better. As Abraham Lincoln is said to have remarked, when told that his best general, Ulysses S. Grant, was an alcoholic: “find out what he’s drinking and give it to my other generals.”

© Dr Timothy J. Madigan 2002


29 September 2023

Dear Bob, 


This was my quotation.


God is the actor who justifies the world rather than a theology justifying God to the world.


It was in a thread commenting on Levinas (and von Balthasar) and their mutual suspicion of what used to be known as ''natural theology"!


Musil is connected in my mind with Wittgenstein through ''Wittgenstein's Vienna" that I think is the best book on Wittgenstein's cultural context. I do not know whether there was a direct link between the two but there was a shared cultural framing.


Thank you for posting the Houghton/Miller book. I have just been asked to review Mark Vernon's newish book on Dante for the Temenos Academy Review. Life flowing in circles!


When will you be in New Mexico? I am planning a working trip to the West Coast and could plan a side trip.


Just arrived in the UK for my mother's birthday - 90 and counting!


Love and best wishes, Nicholas


——


Hi Bob!


Your letter was at the bottom of my mailbox and I didn't see it until last week. So I'm sorry it took so long to get back.


I am SO happy you shared, and that you took the time to write to me. Yes, I think psychedelics are a much more humane way to treat people that are having mental health difficulties. We are having such amazing results - people coming in with chronic suicidality and depression or treatment-resistant PTSD  and walking out without it (!!) - and so many more options are coming down the pike too (right now we are using ketamine, teaching about psilcoybin, and excited about MDMA). We are so hopeful this will revolutionize mental health.


 Let's catch up next time I'm back! And I'll check out Tim McFarlane! Thanks for the suggestion.


Hannah

————-

Oct 7 


Dear Bob,


The book safely arrived and I have enjoyed starting it and has already given me what I principally wanted which was to hear Houghton's voice (as it were) - and wholly unsurprised he spent four years beavering away at Swedenborg!


Off to Bilbao on Sunday for a conference.


Love and best wishes, Nicholas


——-


Oct 7   Reading yesterday about the 100 year old runner in Cincinnati, Mike Fremont.  Watched an interview video.  He went to Boston for a week to learn macrobiotics from Michio Kushi himself.  Did I

see Kushi in person or am I imagining that?  I ate at the Brookline eatery at least one time.  Brookline or Newton.  


Like how Nicholas wants to hear Houghton's voice.  That is what reading our favorites means.  And what we keep looking for in other voices.  Right

now de Silva's Square is moderately interesting enough but not a voice I am cherishing or wanting to be with for a while.  Already in the second book, Logos, his voice has matured a good deal.  Somehow, however, I've not taken to Houghton's voice quite as Nicholas has and I would say that is cultural.  I am not British after all.  Houghton's voice for Nicholas would have so many more layers of resonance.  For me, Thomas Wolfe perhaps,

or Kerouac when I was interested in him.  Who recently?  Ed Schwartz's two poems.  Salvatore's Volunteer but not that successfully.  Perhaps I should look again at Henry Miller to see how he sounds now.  


18 October Tuesday  


Rainy morning.  Lebanon.  Afternoon cleared, sunny and warm.  Walking in Walmart correctly assumed today was the day Apple released the new ipad Pros.  Sat later in the Basket cafe and ordered one.  Succumbed to Lord Overseer Macdonald.  Decision or shifting to the strong wind blowing took place weeks ago, overwhelmed by the inescapable advertising and buzz vectors guiding the ship.  


Listened to Buddenbrooks on audio in the car most of the day.  Drove out Whittemore Point road.  


Just filled out MuniRevs and posted payment for September!!  Woo Hoo!  What a biz tycoon me be.  What I paid did not jive with what VMG said was due, 40$ short, but I will go with what the website did for me and let VMG

figure things out later.  


Tomorrow I'll look at the air tix prices to see if there's much sense in waiting further or going ahead and purchasing.  


Well maybe I made  mistake on the munirevs site after all.  Got a message saying no problem.  

Booked flights for January.  Should I stay with de Silva's Logos?  


Needed Va's reassurance today that buying Casa Alegre was not a mistake.  Have been feeling it was for a few days now.  Why?  


Hesitating to buy rest of flights.  So strange that I plop down what Apple wants for an item but get spooked by net chat that if I wait x days or hours the price of the air tix will quaver 3 to 13 dollars.  Weird consumer anxieties.  Get a life.  


to Phil 


oh yes the Crawdads book.  Perfect market concoction that won the hearts and money of every womens' reading group

in the country.  Va insisted we see the movie of it on the big screen because the swamps would be so beautiful.  


Cinderella tale for STEP teenage women, who feel Outside and abandoned, figure out nature, find a true love, he

abandons her, she becomes world famous as scientist-artist, he magically returns and true hallmark love conquers all.  

Oh yes Pbs murder mystery woven in for the adult tv viewing readership in case any are needed.  


Va's reading group is now reading a MUst---the women of yalta.  The yalta meetings seen through the daughters

who were either along for the ride or who lived under the shadows of their daddy's greatnesses.  


My reading has been unsatisfying.  4/5s of Wittgenstein.  What an egotist passive agressive soft bully he was!

The Blanche DuBois of 20thC philosophy, living off the kindness of strangers.  Gives away massive fortune and

then expects to be treated the rest of his life as if he still had it.  Is that a Jewish thing?  a gay thing? a

narcissistic thing?  Are any of his books even readable.  Another fifty years will debate it all.  


Also read a new whippernsnapper, de Silva, first generation Sri Lankan American whizkid, phd in philosophy at

Cambridge UK (raised in Oklamhoma!!).  Two huge novels.  Gave up on Square Wave 3/4s through, got

about half into second one, Logos and am giving it a rest to see if I want to pick it up again.  


Listened to one third of T Mann's Buddenbrooks in the car the other day.  Old fashioned but good.  Might keep reading

the rest of it.  May also go back to Musil and reread his whole tome now that I know what it is about and how to

read it for the minor thrills I missed first time through.  Need some suggestions, preferably thin little chapbooks.

Am looking to see if Modiano's most recent has been translated from the French yet.  I may have bought a copy

of Jonathan Lethem's most recent novel but am not sure where it is.  Is it Lethem or the other guy---


Oh, also read the memoir of my campus writer about his year of living with terminal cancer.  Might have a coffee

with him next week.  His book is completely him, and well done.  Smoothly written, quiet and steady.  I "know"

him too well though so between the lines I notice gripes and grudges I find I still have with him, unfair

little rough edges.  Feel sad for him and even sadder about some things---thirty some years after their divorce

he still wants his first wife's approval and forgiveness. (I've surmised she left him.  They were both teaching

at St Paul's prep here in NH at the time.)   His second wife, most recent, he mentions

not a whit even though he adopted her son. He doesn't clarify that.  The son now figures as the hero of the tale for taking care

of his sick father with this cancer diagnosis.  He's about thirty-five I think.  There is a new girl friend of about

seven years, generous and kind, and they've kept their separate lives going too.  Before retirement he

bought a small house on the northernmost coast of Maine, on the ocean beach, cover photo shows him 

on the porch of that place. 

——


22 October 


Larry 


I will confess when I saw mention of "act-networks" I thought, oh, he reinvented Dramatism without having consulted Burke first!!


Maybe about forty years ago I would have gotten into it.  Rapidly skimmed the wiki article on him and could not get much of a take.

Must admit the Title of this book on religious speech is darn good.  Knowing the wee bit of French I do, I'm skeptical that

translation would be easy for a book such as this seems to be.  


But that is an inartful deflection.  More truthful is I've been out of the game for a good while and wouldn't have the energy or interest

to dive into a writer like La Tour.  And---more importantly---I've just made it through 3/4 of Monk's biography of Wittgenstein.

As superb a work it is, it has soured me once more on "big thinkers."  Much prefer Lars Iyer's small book "Wittgenstein, Jr."

For me it is the old back and forth between "poetry" and "philosophy" and I can never stop the pendulum.  Robert Musil

I might go back and reread---I did enjoy his massive "novel" much more than I ever did Proust's.  And last year I tackled

Richard Zenith's biography of Pessoa and liked that very very much.  Z seemed to have the deepest understanding and

empathy for his subject than any other lit biography I've read.  Monk on W just didn't have that---but he did struggle

heroically to track and clarify what was W really after, really trying to achieve in the history of thought.  


If you explore further into Latour let me know how it goes.  The one website I knew about on Burke studies seems to have gone off the

air about a year or so ago.  Do you see many mentions of Booth here and there?  

——-


Bob,


If you are at all interested in Latour, I'd love to hear your take on him.  I see him as having affinities to Kenneth Burke in his own French fashion—maddening and enlightening at the same time.  He's also a pluralist with a metaphysical sense of humor.


If there is anyone who can break the code of Latour's book "Rejoicing: On the Torments of Religious Speech" you are the guy!


Someone named John O'Malley from Georgetown tells us on in a blurb on the back of that book that "As I read, I felt he (Latour)  had climbed into my soul."  I felt the vibe on the first twenty or so pages but then got lost in the density of it all.  If I only knew a Burkean to show me the way.  


Hey I do know a Burkean--It's Garlitz!  


I'd take any morsel from your philosophical table regards to Bruno's "rhetoric of religion."


Thanks again for the note on the Obit and the recommendation of Sebastian's Abyss.


Larry Inchausti

———


spent most of today online shopping for shoes.  One pair just arrived via usps,  the leather ones made in vietnam with a british name.  birchfield?


meet with the DHMC orthopedist not for two weeks.  two other pairs of shoes arriving this midweek.  Preparing myself for the doctor to say

oh fuck, another idiot who has ruined his feet by wearing only barefoot shoes for the past ten years.  Stubbornly wearing them.  To which I will

say how can I find a podiatrist who will not prescribe orthotic insoles?  


new yorker featured "Rouge" so now we will probably subscribe to Criterion once more.  


I haven't heard a peep, by , about, or for Booth in years; but that doesn't mean it's not out there somewhere.  Not much about the U of C either.


I heard a report on NPR about Wittgensteins' WWI Journals that have just been published somewhere.  Apparently, the enlisted men couldn't stand him, although he had crushes on some of them ( most he couldn't stand either.) I haven't read Monk's bio but I've been tempted.  The Zenith book looks good and given your recommendation I might tackle that just for the intensity and passion.  I think your intuitions are right as to Latour and his translators.  After reading his first book Why We've Never Been Modern, I couldn't decide if he was just a poor writer or the translation was bad.  Rejoicing: Or the Torments of Religious Speech has its moments—the closing section is pretty good—but again, it's not a great English prose style.  Does that mean he might be a "stylist" in French? Probably not,  He's popular among the social scientists, so that is not a good omen either.


I've run into passages by Robert Musil that knock me out, but never could sustain a deep trek into his novel—what was it called, Sleepwalkers? Or am I confusing him with some other German modernist.  I always thought Adorno's Minima Moralia was his best work—short paragraphs that you could take or leave—most tiny bundles of aphorisms. 


As ever,


Larry I.  

——

Dear Beckie, Thank you for your very nice and newsy note.  Tell me more about your new dog-name,sex, Has he/she learned any karate moves from your canine crew?  Did you have to take her/him to the vet?? 

Sorry to hear that the balloons were not so great this year.  We tried to watch them on TV, but didn't find much good coverage.  We would like to take our grandkids up when they come for Christmas in February in Albuquerque (since they won't be coming here in Plymouth for the holiday this year). We have a date (Feb 15 ) with Jill HARTKE at the Albuquerque Museum to show us the museum's collection of my great Aunt Alabama's photographs.

You and Dan are welcome to come too. 

Aunt Bama is in my book.  I am very glad you and your friend liked it. Since you seem interested in my stuff  I am sending you a letter that I sent my dad from Spain in 1987. A thousand years ago, right?? 


Keep writing.  It is very exciting to get real letters in the mail.

See you in mid January next year(2023).  We will be coming back here after my birthday on May 18th.  That way I hope to see the rhododenrons blooming in our garden (Imissed them last year, since we stopped to have a mini reunion with Bob's family in North Carolina on the way home.Thank you for the tip on having Bob go to Mountaineer.  

We are trying to think of other places to take my son and his family when they come to celebrate Christmas in Albuquerque.

We will definitely hit the zoo.  I was very impressed by the penquin exhibit last year.  We will have to make sure go when the animals are out.  Can we call to see when that will be??  

We have in mind taking everyone to Santa Fe on the train

 since 6 people won't fit into a car. Do you know anything about the train?? Bob and I can check it out when we are there in NM. (Have to be sure I can get on/off. (boring details...).

Enjoy the rest of this yesr and likw Isaid,l 

    

——-


Phil's post today 


The following comes  from a newsletter published by a Congressman for Maryland:   "Western Maryland is in dire need of more medical professionals." 


Coincidentally, just last night I was thinking of how Cumberland's economy and wealth had shrunk over the past 60 years.   When my father, whose specialty was ophthalmology, was practicing, he had a Cumberland friend who owned the most expensive auto in the world at that time - a Bugatti Royale.  Less than ten had ever been made for European aristocracy   Dad's friend bought it from a cash-strapped Spanish prince just after WWII.  Another  Cumberland friend owned the world's most expensive stamp at the time.   Ironically the stamp was worth more than the car because the stamp was so rare.   But it looks like those days of wealth in Cumberland are gone now. It's a pleasant town these days, but its better days seem behind it. And now there is a shortage of physicians and other medical staff.

Phil


I wrote that email because I didn't think anyone at Lasalle had any idea of such things. 


 I forget who owned the Bugatti, but I think it was Dr. Skidarellick (sp?) who owned the stamp, which was worth $50,000 in the early '50s.  Its face value was something like 6 cents in the native currency,  I forget which country printed it.    Dr.  S told dad that he wasn't a stamp collector, but he was a shrewd investor.


Where is  the Hagan Wright house?   P


———

24   We finished watching A Dangerous Method, film about Jung, Freud and Spielrein.  Most excellent.   I had seen it once before, ten? years ago.

Such a superb  script and cast.  Mortensen and Fassbender 19 years apart just as their characters were.  


26 Oct  Weds 


Just got the call that Va is out of her procedure.  Didn't take more than an hour, hour and a half really.  I left her about 11 and it is now 12:15.  Kids sent great set of photos from their family day at Vuitton center.  Emma said Joan Mitchell's paintings reminded her of mine!!!


Coffee with Joe yesterday morning went better than I'd expected.  He seems slower physically, aging, bit grayer all around, but otherwise the picture of health.  No one would guess that he's on a med to delay death by cancer.  Unless long experience would show you how to look at the expression, a touch of yellow pallor in the skin around the eyes?  Who knows?  Jessica

might be such an expert but I'm not.  Joe is last in a family of seven children.  Two have already gone on before him.  He and Susan are going up the the

Maine cabin this weekend, perhaps the last visit until after this winter.  Doctors give him, on this drug, a year, a year and a half.  Still scribbling away.  Luanne has been steadily successful at it as well.  Joe was on bestseller list in Germany because some agent did the work on his book that is a novelization of a screenplay.  Have to look up the titles.  Not sure if the movie has gotten made or released yet.  He got 100k to do it.  Some reminiscences of campus characters past, a few students.  In all very good fun.  Might check on him with email every so often.  Both of us expect we can have a coffee again next spring or summer.  


Va back from her procedure.  Eye bleeding a bit.  Now sleeping after some soup and crackers for lunch.  Had to go out to get some Tylenol.  Drops every four hours.  


Waiting for my new ipadpro to arrive today so I have a new toy to play with.  With new realizations of all sorts unleashing themselves my inner geek and nerd have found they want to engage as well.  techno stuff, managerial stuff, new cars, screens, pens, you name it. 


Heavy steady rains all day.  Don't dare look into the basement!  Ipad just got here.  Also two Brooks shoes, both double E.  First slip on not at all as comfy as the leather Birchburgs.  


Will I consent now to read everything on the iPad and not buy paper books?



Lunch with my writer friend the other day.  Joseph Monninger.  Sells

about (under) 3000 books a year. 30 year career, 26-27 titles, not sure

how many in print.  He created a publisher for two of the titles, had

some shop make up the copies. Most are with good houses, I guess.

Athenaeum when I first met him.  Few years ago some agent asked

him to write a novel from a screenplay under consideration.  Someone

in the chain gave his novel to an agent in Germany.  She got it to 

be at the top of selling list in Der Spiegel for a few months.  He

got 100k for the novel.  Movie not yet been made.  


His friend in the trade, Luanne Rice, sells many more copies of her

books.  some get 53k reader reviews on amazon and goodreads.

Who are these writers?  She wonders why she has never gotten a

Pulitzer.  Joe sort of knows but grumbles that the new yorker never

took any of his stories.  They need to write like others need to take

a long walk two or three times a week?   They produce the books

that fill out the shelves in barnes & n?  Some of Rice's got made 

into hallmark movies.  Endless genre entertainment, pretty much

like endless stream of detective novels and movies.  


Phil wasn't in the mood for this chat.  


—-The internet seemed like a good thing at first, and to some degree it is, but it has also unleashed a lot of bad stuff,  some of it very bad.   The same seems true of publishing.     So good luck to Joe.   Just like the internet, it's hard to say whether the publishing business is mainly good and mainly bad these days…..P


—-


sounds kinda down.  


—-

31 October



Dear Bob,


I would hold back from a life in advertising! As will I! Though I did think of Pro Freedom, Pro Love and Pro Care. I could think of no way of getting thought in there that had any traction - perhaps because nobody thinks!


Reading yet another Houghton novel - this one written in the midst of World War 2 but set in the run up: All Change, Humanity!. Very similar pattern to previous efforts and I just find them very enjoyable. I am tracking them down one by one! This one has an asylum off the coast of Wales named Beulah (after Blake's realm of the Subconscious, the source of poetic inspiration and of dreams.") where a mysterious psychiatrist is relieving people of their memories in a highly positive way and they are born anew!


Love and best wishes, Nicholas

Thursday, September 01, 2022

AUGUST 2022

 August 1  


Successful draw for K Dopp.  Another cool and lovely morning.  Anniversary for our lovebirds and birdies, now in NJ and NYC.  


note about his birthday party from Nicholas—-


Dear Bob,


We are not at that level yet (nor was that the intention - my introverted self could not cope)! So far, Andrei is signed up (and partner), Pavel (if they allow him out of Russia/into France if he brings his partner that would be the first time the alternate partners would have met! Can we cope with the drama?). Margaret & Robert (from Durham - Margaret Principal of a college, Robert the Professor of Christian Ethics), Dima & Dasha (Dima is a distinguished Russian poet & translator and Dasha a sociologist and both resident in Paris), Jessica (former award winning publisher, practitioner of Tai Chi, collector of icons), Harry & Eli (Harry works with me, and their two children are my latest godchildren), Stacie & Misha (American and Russian respectively and parents to two more godchildren - Polina and Sofi). I have asked one or two others and am waiting to hear - and may conjure up others in due course. This was my first pass. Hope you will reconsider!


P.S. I have met Gary Lachman - we had lunch in London - though I have not invited him to my party! 


Love, Nicholas


—-


yesterday a super fine day off.  Read lots of Musil and tore out a number of pages which had a phrase or two that I wanted to put down here.  Bought upscale earphones at Target, the young salesman walking me to the front of the store after retrieving them from lock and key in the backroom.  I wowed him with tales of how even shampoos are under lock and key in cities in the West!  These ear phones are superb, noise-canceling and of high quality sound reproduction, so they work perfectly to enable sitting in coffee shops and cafes.  Spent most of the afternoon in the cafe at Market Basket (swallowing all my pride about not contributing that "cult.")  Breakfast took place at Tuckerbox, the mediterranean breakfast Va likes so much.  After I

ordered the rice pudding the waiter started up a chat.  Even sat down at the table so he could explain why he loved restaurant work and what he does in his spare time.  Has a music studio at his place in Lyme.  Guitar and keyboard.  His group is now called June Sexton, he is Jamie Sexton.  Grew up in Canaan, his dad a woodworker.  34 now not the 27 I guessed.  Loves sports, basketball, baseball, and podcasts and wants to create a podcast of some sort.  Music and sports.  Love working in the restaurant.  He asked my first name and I remembered to tell him to look up Cobra Fantastic on Youtube after he told me his group was there and had just released a new album.  He's been on some radio show in Concord.  If I see him next week, have to tell him to check out Dave's show at the Loading Dock on August 19.  


Most remarkable to have a surprise chat with a real person!  these days, 

covid, vaccinations, etc.  Surgeon Casey wants to talk with me over the phone on Aug 24 about my request via printout of WaPo article about a new way to do colonoscopy prep.  And my complaint that he didn't discuss being 78 and not worrying about the whole thing anymore.  Me being the grumpy geezer?  Perhaps.  


Now liking Monk's bio.  Everyone, including Nicholas, feels it to be one of the finest.  Glad we decided to not allow the small film company to use the house to make their movie.  


Ready to wrap up Musil too.  Dr Friedenthal is showing Clarisse around the mental hospital in Vienna, outside of it.  "Hell is not interesting, it is terrifying."  Musil 1070  Blame Dante for making hell peopled with interesting people rather than the insane, the poor and the ill.  


from Pat this morning  Sat 6 Aug


If a person listens to an audio recording of a book, can it be said that the person has read the book?


Pat


This is a question for Jim and other high theologians within the reading community, communities!  Probably would need a decree from

the pope himself to settle the issue for all time!!


I joke but it is indeed a burning question on reader reply sites like Goodreads!  Why do you ask and what is the larger context of

the question?


Being a bookish dinosaur I would of course say No.  Not quite.  Not in the centuries old traditions of what reading is, was, and always will be!


Intrigued to know more!  


B


John sent this piece from the Times—-here is the final paragraph—-I didn't read the rest—-


"Smart piece, I think.  It's more or less the perspective I've been trying to convey to students in Sustainability courses, though of course more pressing concerns (im)press more…"





To be alive at such a time is both an exceptional opportunity and a profound responsibility: We can be pivotal in steering the future onto a better trajectory. There’s no better time for a movement to stand up, not just for our generation or even our children’s generation, but for all the generations yet to come.

William MacAskill is a professor of philosophy at Oxford University and the author of the forthcoming book “What We Owe the Future,” from which this essay has been adapted.

—-

Ken sent a very funny reply to this—-have to paste it in from messages if possible—"Longtermism: What does he know? He’s a philosophy professor. Kidding aside, an argument not unlike “do this for your children and grand children”, only he jumps ahead a hundred generations. Also, my car told me just yesterday that a takeover by AI is unlikely."  to which I replied—You know what I had the same, similar reaction and only read the final 2 paragraphs!!!   what does an oxford prof know that I want to listen to??  Agree deeply with your AI guy!"


10 August  Wednesday

Changed the hoses on the upstairs washer!!!!  Cold now going into Cold input, Hot into Hot!!!  testing the machine right now.  1:36

Heat wave ended late yesterday.  Kids arrived about 9:30.  Great talk with Cécile this morning at the breakfast table.  Emma and Eliot both grew a foot in the two weeks down in NY and Philly and the seashore.  

They got into watching Friends so we saw two episodes last night.  Much more fun than the Family thing they had been watching.  They are shooting hoops outside now.  Mugging over building to rain but not nearly as hot.  No ac on.  

oh dear, have I been one of these all my life??

"he was one of those well-meaning ramblers who free-associate from the solemn to the trite without noticing the difference.  

prof august lindner    agee/musil 247 


letter I wrote last night—-should I send it or not??  reading Wittenstein

and how he spent the year in Norway —-  now I can see Lax more clearly—

and Pessoa—-same patterns as creative hermits —-  


10 August 2022


14 Rogers Street

Plymouth, NH 03264

—robert.garlitz@gmail.com

—603-348-5335


Hannah McLane, MD

soundmindproject.org

soundmindinstitute

449 S 51st Street 

Philadelphia, PA 19143-1668


Dear Hannah


You are here in Plymouth today and I thought I might be able to see you for a few moments but looks like that will not happen and perhaps a note is better any way. It is amazing to see how you have created the Sound Mind Institute.  The work you have focused upon is especially interesting and even moving to me, both by its nature and because it is located in Philadelphia.  A place I hold in special memory for lots of reasons.  

Fifty-eight years ago I was a college sophomore in Philadelphia, 1964-65.  I had a nervous breakdown.  They put me on anti-depressants and tranquilizers; these made me feel even worse.  They put me into Eugenia Memorial Hospital, once in November and again in March, 1964-65.  I transferred that summer to the University of Maryland.  Your project looks so promising and hopeful.  It feels encouraging to see you doing such magnificent work. I admire what you're doing and I'm gratified to see you having such success with it.  The greatest living American artist is there in Philadelphia, Tim McFarlane.  Check out his work.  I bought two of his paintings last year.  TimMcFarlane.com.  Bridgette Mayer Gallery.   


all best wishes,


——-

Explaining his resignation from the Hollywood chapter of the Friars Club:] “I do not care to belong to a club that accepts people like me as members.” Groucho Marx, Quoted in Look Magazine, March 28, 1950.--


—-

evening of Rumney Old Home Day, Sat August 13.  Fun watching our photos on the tv screen after Dave found/showed how to use Airplay.  Easy as strawberry rhubarb pie they bought earlier today. Very successful gig for his trio last evening at the Cover Bridge.  We also saw all their slides of their trip so far—-Philly and NY.  The Summit looks more interesting than any ordinary high tower observation deck.  


chanced upon Hollinghurst's review of Halloran—-saves me thinking of skimming it.   

"he pays specific homage to Swann’s recognition that in his love of Odette he has wasted years of his life on a woman “qui n’était pas mon genre.” Throughout all these novels, certain motifs, such as the noise of his parents sleeping in the silent house or his return late at night to his wakeful but unquestioning father, will recur, as touchstones of value or entry points of memory, in a loosely Proustian way. The little local repetitions, across all the books, of ideas, phrases, situations, serve to emphasize the inescapable narrowness of the world described and at the same time invest it with a faint poetic resonance. This, surely, is Holleran’s overarching purpose: to transcend the starved circumstances of a life with a closeness and steadiness of attention, in a structure larger than any one book, and with a force that accumulates even as the life itself diminishes.

Such a vision is a kind of transfigured masochism, quick to find beauty and relief in the experience of pain. In the final Christmastime chapter of The Kingdom of Sand, the narrator describes the ritual late- evening visit to Walgreens that will yield up the only human contact of the day, and the remote erotic frisson of a possible exchange with the pharmacist or the tall, skinny boy at the checkout:

To be the only customer in the store, just the cashier, the pharmacist, and me, alone with the sunglasses and vitamin pills and greeting cards and candy bars and toothpaste and shampoo, if only for fifteen minutes, would be the perfect Christmas Eve.

And he comes back to his highly personal idea of why spending Christmas alone in a small town would be “so erotic”: “Surely I’d experience a degree of despair, loneliness, and self-loathing unsurpassed at any other time.” Whether or not you hear in this ecstasy of self-abasement a note of far-off humor, the laying bare of personal truth inspires both admiration and pity."


——-Could add a Phil-like comment—-just because a guy writes at length about stuff doesn't mean it is valuable for anyone else to read it.  Let alone call it literature or even aspirant lit.  


Emma hard at work on a stop-action video.  


——


Yamamoto: Breathing. Breathing is very important.

When I first came to California a young man came to me for guidance. He believed he had read a great deal of Zen literature. He even believed he was ready to become a master himself. I told him that first he must breathe.

For a while he didn’t understand, even though I sat him in a corner, and showed him proper zazen posture. He protested the simplicity of my lesson, but it is forbidden for a student to challenge his master. A few weeks later, he came up to me as I was leaving our swimming pool. He said: “Master Yamamoto. Why do you leave me sitting in the corner for weeks? Breathing is not so interesting. You do not understand. I am a scholar!”

He was a proud young man. So I grabbed him by the neck and shoved his face into the swimming pool. I held it there and counted to 200. He did not resist. When I released him his face was quite blue. When he regained his breath, he bowed, and left without a word.

He had learned breathing, the highest lesson.

——-

Thinking this morning about my short trip to San Francisco lost to memory.  It was the summer after the summer of love.  I think.  It must have taken place after the first summer quarter at Chicago and before the fll quarter when I might have not had a place to live?  But that can't be right.  I lived in I House, so my room there would have been continuous.  It was in the few weeks in between the two quarters.  Last week of August, 1968?  I rode out with someone, in a car.  Or did I take a bus out?  Few days sleeping somewhere and then a ride back to Chicago with some kids who were doing a DriveAway drive back.  That part I remember somewhat clearly.  


15 August

Gorgeous full moon last night.  In Musil Agathe is intrigued by the effect on her of her meeting with Professor Lindner.  Musil is allowing his prose to sound the organs and trumpets, quietly of course.  

"Everyone has a story they want to be told."  This a clever line upon which writers string out the story of Rogue Agent on Apple TV or is it AMC? whatever.  the script seems very intelligent, the drama captivating, just like the other one, Surface.  String of good movie/shows about psychopathic, sociopathic charismatic rogue bullies, manipulators, con artists, grifters, 


a story they want to be told and it is a story they cannot discover or tell themselves.  It must come from without and be the story they most want to be told which they did not know about until the right person told it to them.

my explication . . . 

this gorgeous weather, hot sunshine overlaid by cool, arctic notes and fragrances, is "prepare your syllabus" weather, so perhaps that is why I want to see what new models Vivobarefoot is offering.  Can they even match the perfection of Lems PrimalZen2?  


First day of theater camp for the kids.  They were nervous, excited and so were the parents.  They said the kids ran off and didn't give them a wave or kiss good-bye!!  

17 August  Weds

Found two Opel Jennings houses, one up on Agate Hill Rd identical to ours with a pool in the back not heated, and a view over the wall of Sandia crest.

It would be just enough of a view to claim to be a view but it would be cut just enough by the walls to be a bit frustrating.  Seems I am indulging in a bit of buyers remorse a year after the fact!!  Strange.  Why do that?  

Interesting to find other areas where the developers built, same year too.  Hillside above the Target store area on Coors.  Our location still preferable, I'll say.  Golf Course road area.  Price seems to be the same on Zillow.  Now. 

339.  was considerably lower three years ago.  in that area.  The Agate road house sold for 190 something.  Listed on VRBO that's where I found it.  I don't like the pool.  Would be a pain to take care of and one we'd never really use.  

ritual dinner at Unos this evening.  kids more tired.  parents shopped.  now all watching Mystic Pizza.  


22  Mike Iontuonno left early this evening to drive back to Brooklyn.  He came up for the Friday gig at Loading Dock.  

Kids watching Matilda, Dave fixing dinner.  Now 8:28 pm.  They played pickle ball most of the day.  we saw Katrina Dopp at Mid-State.  


23  gloomy morning, muggy.  Everyone straightening and packing.  


24  photos from the kids at Logan.  Lobster rolls $39. there.  They are having fish and chips at Legal.  Earlier Royal Nails.  Eliot and I bought Emma new flip flops for $2. at Old Navy.  He said he thought it was a strange name for a store.  

I canceled the colonoscopy.  Difficult to say no to a medical doctor!  guilt and all that.  almost sinful.  Authority.  Casey called me to talk things over in response to the texts I had sent him.  Said the pills to make the prep easier have been around for a while, not satisfactory, cause terrible cramps for some.  Va heard our conversation and agree with me to cancel.  75 was declared six months ago by the gastro authorities to be the new 65 so the recommendations are now yes for 75 to 85 year olds.  All my skepticism rallied to produce this decision.  Long range will tell.  

After left over pizza from Farmhouse last night, the Beet told me what happens when you stop eating cheese.  Withdrawal as with any addictive substance: !!!   digestion releases casomorphine!!  great line.  Most of the info drawn from book by Dr Neal Bernard—-

"When people go plant-based, it's often not the idea of giving up meat that proves difficult. It's cheese. There's a reason for that. In a study on food and addiction, Yale researchers found that cheese triggers the same neuroreceptors for pleasure that drugs do since cheese contains casein, a dairy protein that during digestion releases casomorphine, which plays directly on the brain's dopamine receptors. So if you think you're addicted to cheese, you probably are. Like most addictions, this one isn't healthy."


new writer on the horizon —- Mark De Silva.  Might shake me out of my notion of going into All of thomas mann.  I mean the music critic caught my attention, but what about this guy?  


"But I was inspired by people like Tom McCarthy. I also remember reading Javier Marías, who has become for me a very important writer because he’s very discursive, very philosophical. But also his language is very, very literary, and he refers to his work as a mode of literary thinking. In other words, thinking and literature, thinking and scene and sense detail are one thing — not two things. It isn’t pretty language mapped onto thinking, or taking rigorous thinking and finding a way to turn it into literature. It’s trying to do both at the same time. I took great inspiration from Marías, because I saw this guy and thought, Oh, some people do this."


from interview in the millions.  who is tom McCarthy?  


Willow wrote to PT


DEAR PT,SOME EXTRA CLARIFICATION  ON THE VOW TO HONOR IN SICKNESS AND IN HEALTH.  While Dave and his kids were here in our upstairs guest room I used my bedside potty chair so as not to bother them with toilet flushing,etc.  I go 3-4 times a night and Bob had to empty the pot each time so we now say that our vows include that the man takes care of his wife's pee, ha That's called real "peevotion".,ha ha.


The kids left today after a wonderful few weeks here in the East visiting all their many friends and Dave playing some fun gigs.

We are planning to celebrate Christmas in February this coming year since they will not be coming back for our usual Christmas time together.  They will come during their winter break in February to be with us in Abq which will be great since Cécile and the kids have never really seen the SW. They may even get to the Grand Canyon.  I was telling Cécile that one of the main reasons to see the Albuquerque museum is to see our Aunt Bama's photographs.  CéCILE SAID SHE DIDN'T KNOW MUCH ABOUT OUR FATHER'S FAMILY AND I didn't know  what to tell her or where to send her for more info.  Do you have anything written about it or know of sources I can send her to??

I would like to know more myself.


 Last text message-The kids are now on the plane. They are all excited about the upcoming school year; Emma in the bilingual school and Eliot in fourth grade all by himself in their neighborhood school.  Cécile is in a new school too ;teaching second grade with all different materials. Dave will be back teaching in his music school and in a place they call Rock U. for kids and adults who want to rock out all the old hits.


Enough for now.  

How are you doing?? What can they tell you about your back; your knee; your cough,etc...?  Bob decided today to not have his scheduled colonoscopy since he is 77 and has no family with colon problems;has had no polops on previous procedures etc. 

Hope you and Ray are as well as can be expected.

Much love,

pew   


——  final part of De Silva's interview 

[Laughs.] It’s like a 140-proof, barrel-strength whiskey. It doesn’t go down easy. In terms of the reading experience, it has to be consumed quite slowly. We’ve gotten used to immediacy and absorption and rapidity. We expect books to just pull us in and run with it. This is a book that you should probably not try to read 100 pages of in a night.

I like literature, and experiences in life, that — rather than cater to our existing intuitions about how life works, or about how literature works — expand our understanding of common sense. I hope a book like mine will strike someone as violating a lot of common sense ideas about literature. I know it will. It violates my common sense about literature, and I wrote it. I had to follow my intuitions to this strange place. I know it’s kind of crazy and unstable and uncomfortable: that’s how I felt writing it. So you could say, in the weird way “memoir fiction” is all the rage now, that’s the way that autobiography figures in mine.

Cousin Jan Garlitz gave me info on the two cancer deaths that I know of in our family, Dad's side. 


 Dad had malignant melanoma. He died while participating in an experimental program at NIH.  NIH did an extensive study of Dad's history and, aside from Dad being a sun-worshiper and getting too much sun without adequate protection, malignant melanoma is documented for many of those in the U.S. Navy who served during WWII in the South Pacific. Dad's ship went into the Nagasaki harbor just days after the bomb was dropped there and while radiation levels were still very high.

 Uncle Jim died from bone cancer, although I believe it started as lung or prostate cancer.  In his case, it was determined that his work at the B&O railroad was the underlying cause and, of course, smoking cigarettes for years. Uncle Jim started as the person - I forget the correct title - who shoveled coal into the steam engine. I was told that he would come home covered with soot from head to toe.  He later became an engineer, but that still involved exposure to the coal as long as the RR used coal-based steam engines.


once again I lost us a day.  Turns out today is Saturday and not Sunday.  So we "gained" a day.  


Must be I got too excited that Mark de Silva answered my query on twitter.  He had never heard of Burke.  So I can read his new "novel" to see why it is titled Logos and if he is almost as good as Javier Marías.  Is Marías really any good??  


to Phil 


Half-smart is not a bad way to consider all of these people.  W caught the eye of B Russell and was a "star" from then on.  They later fell out.  W was

a charming jerk, maybe autistic, homosexual (that hasn't come up yet in the bio so not sure what that meant for him), very rich, had nothing to

do but be anxious and  mainly obsessed.  Biographies clearly are works of fiction of a certain sort.  And note how that short video concludes

with the walker-narrator assuring us that being an Anglican priest is quite a good thing to do, but hey if you like riding water slides, W would

 approve of that too.  So would god even if he is now dead.  Did W really make a contribution to thought as great as many assume he did??  

Time will tell or money will talk.  !? 


Stock market took a hit yesterday after the fed chair gave a speech.  Isn't that the model for everything historical-cultural-human?  Why give

him inordinate power for a few days?  Why not give it to Kenneth Burke or J P Jones of Gaithersburg?   I remember about half-way through

trying to study Burke for the dissertation having this collapse of faith in what I was doing---who cares about this guy?  He scribbled and scribbled,

had friends in the city who put his stuff into magazines, are his ideas and thoughts any better than anyone else's?  Another reason centuries

ago we paid attention to a pope rather than to the chair of the fed reserve!!   Or said we did and refined the degrees of lip service.  


Know anyone from Exeter or Brown who is now super achieved, super admired, undoubtedly worthy of a biography??  Where does

that leave us?  the "contentedly" quarter-smart?  

——


this from Steve Taylor's email newsletter:  "To prepare for the trip I re-read a book about Greece, The Colossus of Maroussi, by Henry Miller, which I first read when I was about 20. It’s such a wonderful, spiritual, life-affirming book which powerfully conveys the beauty of the country. Miller had a powerful awakening experience while he was there, in which he felt completely liberated. As he wrote, "Our diseases are our attachments, be they habits, ideologies, ideals, principles, possessions, phobias, gods, cults, religions, what you please...Whatever we cling to, even if it be hope or faith, can be the disease which carries us off. Surrender is absolute: if you cling to even the tiniest crumb you nourish the germ which will devour you." Thinking back, I think that paragraph has influenced me a lot! It could have been the epigram to my last book Extraordinary Awakenings. "

final comments by a young writer about his new 720 page novel, Logos

Mark De Silva.  Never heard of him. interview on The Millions

might suit my current way of reading---which is---not much, and very

slowly  


"[Laughs.] It’s like a 140-proof, barrel-strength whiskey. It doesn’t go down easy. In terms of the reading experience, it has to be consumed quite slowly. We’ve gotten used to immediacy and absorption and rapidity. We expect books to just pull us in and run with it. This is a book that you should probably not try to read 100 pages of in a night.

I like literature, and experiences in life, that — rather than cater to our existing intuitions about how life works, or about how literature works — expand our understanding of common sense. I hope a book like mine will strike someone as violating a lot of common sense ideas about literature. I know it will. It violates my common sense about literature, and I wrote it. I had to follow my intuitions to this strange place. I know it’s kind of crazy and unstable and uncomfortable: that’s how I felt writing it. So you could say, in the weird way “memoir fiction” is all the rage now, that’s the way that autobiography figures in mine.

I looked up his book on Amazon and found it had  five star reviews, but then found that, in fact, there were no reviews of this or one of his other supposedly five-star reviews.  So it seems to me that he loves his own writing, but virtually no one else does.  A description of the plot in Amazon didn't interest me.   It came across to me as his singular little outlook on life and my reaction to all such stories/outlook is:  "If this is the author's view of the world, that's fine for him, but I couldn't care less about what he thinks of the world." 


P

———


just to take the opposite position for the heck and fun of it, and because he replied to my query, I will now read Logos with great, slow care even if it takes me a year, I will assume de Silva is our new Proust, as great as Wittgenstein, as timeless as Tolstoy, as spiritually invigorating as Miller or Mann, and as promising as Thomas Wolfe was, or even Balzac and Hemingway.  So there!


5 pm  Finished chapter 1 in de Silva.  Wow.   Magnificent.  Will be wholly worth my while.  Not since The Recognitions!!??  Will not disappoint.  

Better than Marías for sure.  First impressions.  Stunning.  


28 Sunday   Photos from Chezet birthday gala for Paul and Zoe, now 18.  


30 Aug  Tuesday   


Text from Jessica this morning.  She's dying of cancer.  Fourth doctor discovered it.  50 lbs loss.  Not eating.  Spots on her liver and lungs.  More tests.  Her brother Andre is coming to see her early next week.  She can't contact Cawley, not sure where he is.  Austin or Boston. 


Va off swimming with Elizabeth.  I'm waiting for the Irving furnace check-up fellow.  Muggy day ahead.  Vegan resolve faltering.  Maybe have sushi after all.   Phil sent piece that grapes stave off dementia and aging and female vegans have thinner bones and more liable to hip fracture if they fall.  


Kids are back in school.  Well, technically they go Thursday.  Cécile went Monday.  At Chezet they had a party for Paul and Zoe, turning 18.  Rewrote words to Mama Mia for them.  


Barbara called yesterday.  Small windfall of $50 grand from Dad's estate.  Shares in the grocers' warehouse biz he founded.  Figuring out how to divvy it up and keep taxes on it low.  


Furnace guy showed, 9:50.  Might take off now for the day off.  


Panera in W Leb for lunch.  Two salads! small chicken sandwich.  

Finished The Forgotten Sister which means all of Musil—-for the time being, until I get the last part of vol 2 waiting out in Casa Alegre.  Not sure Agee's translation is as good as the other one.  later I can compare.  


so interesting that paintings of still-lifes figure in the final pages—-resonates with de Silva's novel in some slight way—-painting and drawing.


Now Heavily invested in de Silva!!! three of his huge tomes now on Kindle.  


31 August   Checked out the ipads and air ipads yesterday at Best Buy in W Lebanon.  Conclusions inconclusive.  


Winter holiday in France 2023  11 Feb to 26 Feb.  


Martha Richards says there are handrails both and up and down the front stairs on her house!!  Just for Virginia??  fast work too.  


Today rentrée for the kids.  Well, tomorrow, Emma goes to middle school 

Lycée Camille Sée.  


Should I attribute the new chapter to Musil's ending or de Silva's beginning?  Either way, that sense of first day of Fall and New Chapter.