Saturday, October 17, 2009

The Lost Symbol


Not nearly as good as DaVinci Code, and it drags on far too long, but it does for the Masons what DaVinci did for Knights Templar, et. Al. An awful lot of the book seems very far fetched, but it was kinda like a detective novel built around new age themes and conspiracy theories all rolled into one. Enjoyable but not nearly as compelling as Brown's other work.

Author: Brown, Dan
Date Published: 2009
Length: 17hr 48min
Narrator: Michael, Paul

Thursday, October 15, 2009

For Whom the Bell Tolls


A perfectly written novel. Certainly rates among the very best American novels ever written. The final scene with Robert Jordan waiting to die is worth the read up until that point and may be the best prose ever written, comparable to the Used Car speech of Grapes of Wrather and Lee's instruction to Hamilton on the centrality of timshel in East of Eden.

Hemingway takes stream of consciousness a step further and shows a man's consciousness at war with itself, self-serving, self-denigrating, self-denying at the same time. It points to the sharpening of consciousness in the face of death, so much so that Robert Jordan feels that he has gained the meaning of a lifetime in 3 days’ time, and even knowing that his death was inevitable, much like that of a Greek tragedy.

If true suffering emerges on the other side of suffering, then Robert Jordan is the proto-man in his essential garb, facing death and determined to follow through with his destiny, even though he feels that it is wrong. I don't get it, in terms of a man sticking to and following orders for a cause, but Robert Jordan comes the closest in making me believe it.

Author: Hemingway, Ernest
Date Published: 1940
Length: 16hr 28min
Narrator: Scott, Campbell

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Zen and Now


At first, I thought it was a blatant rip off of ZAMM, and I'm still not sure if it's not. But Richardson tries to follow Pirsig's route across western America, seeking to meet some of the people in the book, and putting a number of tidbits from Pirsig's life and his writing of the book into the journey. It does end up giving a lot more insight into Pirsig, but it doesn't have nearly the depth or the complexity of ZAMM. It makes a nice journey along the way, but somehow Richardson seems to miss the point of the original and seems just like another bozo on the bus rathern than contributing anything original to what was said. I liked him by the end of the book, but it took me quite a while to warm up to him. I think he tries to show Pirsig's feet of clay, but I also think anyone would recognize that before encountering Zen and Now.


Author: Richardson, Mark
Date Published: 2008
Length: 10hr 1min
Narrator: Schirner, Buck

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Ubik


This was a strange little book, but what would you expect from Philip K Dick? I'm not nearly as taken with Dick as many sci-fi  readers seem to be. While his stories have interesting premises, in the end they kind of bore me. Not as good a story as VALIS.

Author: Dick, Philip K.
Date Published: 1969
Length: 7hr 7min
Narrator: Heald, Anthony

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Battle Cry of Freedom


For me, the definitive history of the civil war. This was another book that I read many years ago, and at 40 hours, it is certainly one of the longest books that I have listened to.

I am struck by the role of chance in the north's victory. This is seen most dramatically at little round top, of course, but it seems to play over and over again. Personalities have so much to do with it. A little more forceful there, a little less fearful there, and the outcome of the war may have been completely different. Then there are the completely unexpected victories that play such a huge role. 

I also think it's clear that Lincoln had greatness thrust upon him. He began as a bit player, torn by the vagaries and vicissitudes of the war,  but emerges finally as one of the great figures of history. McPherson doesn't make nearly as much about Sherman's march as Victor Davis Hanson, but that event really marks the end of the confederacy.

Author: McPherson, James
Date Published: 1988
Length: 39hr 43min
Narrator: Davis, Jonathan