Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Vladimir Nabokov

Vladimir Nabokov presents problems for me. A fine writer whose goals seem too different from me. 

General background:


Pnin reviewed:


From Yale Courses, a lecture about Lolita, 5. Vladimir Nabokov, Lolita. This discusses the literary style of Lolita, how to make an unappealing character appealing. That it was a chess problem seems apt to me.


 The Most Misread Novel of All Time | The Definitive Analysis of Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov got me thinking about the misuse of language - something discussed also in the immediately preceding video - and George Orwell. Did they both write on this subject - admittedly from different points, Nabokov from a finer sort of eloquence and Orwell from plain English - having survived through the years of Communism and Fascism? Humbert Humbert as a tyrant is something that comes through to me in these commentaries that was not an idea that formed in my own mind when I read the novel. Sorry, I had come into contact with garden variety Humberts, so that might have left me seeing Humbert as pathetic and delusional. I know there was the ruin and suppression of the girl, but I found nothing else sympathetic for Dolores/Lolita. The only sympathetic character I found in the novel was the mother. 


 The second part of the Yale lecture follows. The lecturer goes into the publishing of the novel, its controversy, and how this also plays into Nabokov's aesthetics. What sticks in my mind is that Lolita dies; art is meant to live; therefore, it seems, Humbert's aesthetics are a dead end.


 I suggest read Pnin, or whatever else comes to hand by Nabokov, before reading Lolita. I cannot escape my original thought is Nabokov wrote a sensation for the sake of making money. This I can see is not the main thrust of the book, unless I am incorrect in what I have gleaned from these videos about the tyranny of eloquence. 

As for my own writing, I think I am too old, with what time I have for writing is borrowed time to have the sense of aesthetics Nabokov possessed and sought after. It may also be I am too Midwestern and have too many vestiges of my childhood Protestantism to be anything but a plain writer.

sch 10/12 

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Free Your Mind and Your Behind Will Follow

The readings from Sunday, after CC left: 

The Outsize Influence of Wales on Fantasy, Music, and Movies by Anna Fiteni (Literary Hub)

For Want of a Toilet by Victoria Brun won first prize at the New Myths contest; I think it is a great story, but I'd also have given her first place just for the title.

Plants, Stones, Dirt, and Sky by Yan Lianke, translated by Jeremy Tiang (Paris Review)

What did Pasolini know? Fifty years after his brutal murder, the director’s vision of fascism is more urgent than ever by Olivia Laing (The Guardian) - I know the director, never seen any of his films, but curiosity did not let me down.

The Eleventh Hour by Salman Rushdie – a haunting coda to a groundbreaking career (The Guardian) - a short collection, but more importantly, why he should be read:

Well, Rushdie isn’t a dead man. He’s still writing. The Eleventh Hour, a collection of  five stories, seems intended as a kind of coda to his career. The stories are death-haunted. One of them is called Late; it’s an afterlife fantasy in which a Cambridge fellow, whose career has resembled both EM Forster’s (writing a great novel about India) and Alan Turing’s (helping to crack the Enigma code), dies and haunts a young Indian student named Rosa; what links them may be the buried crimes of empire. The Musician of Kahani replays Rushdie’s greatest hits: it is about a child born at midnight (“the approved hour for miraculous births in our part of the world”) who, aged four, abruptly becomes a gifted pianist (like the rock star Ormus Cama in The Ground Beneath Her Feet, playing air guitar in his cradle).

***

Rushdie has been one of the deep sources of contemporary fiction. His fingerprints are all over the 21st-century Big Inventive Novel, with its sentient raindrops (Elif Shafak), its melodramatic families (Kiran Desai), its metamorphoses of race (Mohsin Hamid) and history (Marlon James). His influence has not been without its downsides. Rushdie has licensed lesser writers to be sentimental about their own powers of invention. He has given permission for characters to be flattened into comic stickers. And he has presided over a vast boom in telling rather than showing. The events of his own recent novels, such as The Golden House (2017) and Quichotte (2019), have been relentlessly told, rather than dramatised, and the virus of telling – this and then this and then this! – has noticeably infected the contemporary novel. But Rushdie was a pathbreaker. The exuberance and linguistic force of Midnight’s Children is still, after 44 years, a joy to encounter on the page. Another writer might have been fatally discouraged by what Rushdie has gone through. But Rushdie was not. He wrote the books. And the books, many of them, have greatly mattered.
 The Last Literary Lion of New York, Gay Talese (Metropolitan Review) - another item brought here by my curiosity, since I have never read a bit of Gay Talese; I know him by reputation alone.
It is the rarest of gifts to have lived long enough to survey both a life and a century in its greatest breadth; even rarer still to be both an active participant and shaper of the currents, to have walked alongside the titans of the age and brought them, somehow, to fuller life. This is the shorthand for understanding Gay Talese, and it’s nearly correct: Frank Sinatra and Joe DiMaggio, in two immortalized magazine profiles, will be bound to this boy from Ocean City, New Jersey, forevermore. But Talese will be the first to tell you that “Frank Sinatra Has a Cold” is not his greatest work, nor the one he is most proud of. For a man who has dwelt, in one form or another, in a magnificent Manhattan townhouse since the 1950s — though it was not so splendid when he moved in as a mere twentysomething tenant, before it acquired its opulent grandeur over decades of his loving attention and escalating magazine fees — he has always been most at home with the men and women in the shadows, the ironworkers and sex workers and mobsters, not to mention the city’s scruffy alley cats.

Today, Talese is 93 and the very last of his kind: the dashing literary lion, the writer-celebrity, the pulsing center of a high culture that has, to our detriment, grown frailer. Among his contemporaries were Tom Wolfe, Nora Ephron, Joan Didion, Norman Mailer, Jimmy Breslin, and Pete Hamill; some he counted as close friends and others, as he’ll readily tell you, could irk him. To state that Talese is not an ordinary nonagenarian is like declaring that the New York Yankees, his favorite ballclub, are not a mere athletic franchise; we at The Metropolitan Review strain not to be so obvious. But sometimes, that’s where the truth lies.

The Four Spent the Day Together by Chris Kraus review – a cult writer tries something new (The Guardian) - I mentioned this book and author recently and am too lazy to link to that post. If I understand the review correctly, the try did not reach the goal.

11/3:

I spent Monday morning and most of the afternoon working on "One Dead Blonde" Then I went to the dentist.

 John Irving returns to The Cider House Rules in his 16th novel, Queen Esther (The Globe and Mail) - another great writer back with a new book. It sounds like vintage Irving.

"Agnes" went to The Forge

And a rejection:

Thank you for sharing your work with us. We often have to turn down well-crafted writing, and while "Going For The Kid" isn't quite right for our current needs, we appreciate the time and effort which goes into every submission we consider. Thank you for sending your work.

We're all writers too at Sequestrum and appreciate how hard this process can be. So we want to say thanks for trusting us with your work. As a token of respect, feel free to take advantage of 75% off our usual subscription price. That's not something we advertise, but it's something we try and offer writers when possible. As a potential contributor, subscribing means more than just access to great literature: It's the best way to get an idea of our current editorial focus; as an added bonus, subscribers can make free general submissions (limit one pending at a time).  Please feel no obligation. If Sequestrum is a home for literature you enjoy, we'd love to have you.

To fulfill a discounted subscription, use the coupon code "LitWriter" on any checkout page (https://www.sequestrum.org/checkout). For more subscription options, visit our "subscribe" page.

Thanks again for sharing your work, and best of luck.

Sincerely,

Sequestrum

 

Working-class voters think Dems are 'woke' and 'weak,' new research finds (POLITICO)

America’s Founding Fathers Had No Faith in Democracy, Joseph J. Ellis (Literary Hub) -  a reminder of how we can fool ourselves into doing better than was planned for us and how we can also sow our own ruin.

If we move to a higher altitude, we will be witnessing the first chapter in a long-standing American story. Let’s call it the backlash pattern. Briefly put, every step forward toward racial equality generates a backlash from a significant portion of the white population. What Martin Luther King called “the arc of the moral universe” is really an undulating up-down syndrome. It is an inherently paradoxical pattern, since racism surges only after some semblance of racial equality becomes foreseeable.

We should recognize the pattern when it first appears during the American founding, because we are currently living through its most recent manifestation in the movement to “Make America Great Again.” And we should expect to see it again in or about 2045, when demographers predict that the white population of the United States will become a statistical minority.

This Screenwriting Software Is Way More Powerful Than You Remember (No Film School) - still thinking of working on one.

For writers: Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: Top 5 Sites for Science Fiction Writers and Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: Paying Markets

Back from the dentist less one tooth at 3:36.

"Going For The Kid" went to Gemini Magazine.

And a rejection for "Agnes":

Thank you for sending us your work. After careful consideration, we've decided it isn’t quite right for us. Sorry that we have to pass. 

Sincerely,


Pine Hills Review editors

http://pinehillsreview.com

The Lost Ending of “Gaslight” That You Didn’t Know You Needed - Public Books

I spent Monday evening recuperating from the dentist visit. I swear the tooth was mostly root. Three tools were needed to get the thing out. I was sound asleep around 5 or 6 pm, but I did wake up around midnight. I listened to Colbert on YouTube, went through some bookmarks, finished by starting on converting Chapter 3 of "One Dead Blonde" to text.

 11/4

I went to the doctor this morning. Before that, I spent my time on "One Dead Blonde". The reading from the morning.

 Hello,


Thank you for your submission to Bog Matter Magazine, Issue 02. Unfortunately, we've decided not to accept your piece for publication, but we wish you the best of luck on your writing and publishing endeavors.

Keep an eye out for our next open submission period for Issue 03 early next year. We hope to consider your work again in the future.

All the best,
Stephanie Lane Gage
Editor-In-Chief — Bog Matter Magazine 
Head Publisher — Martian Press 
 
And for "No Ordinary Word":

 Thank you for sending us "No Ordinary Word". We appreciate the chance to read it. Unfortunately, the piece is not for us.

Thanks again. Best of luck with this.
Sincerely,
Five Points

After the doctor, I went grocery shopping. I returned to "One Dead Blonde" when I got back here. I had talked to KH earlier in the day and told him I had set a deadline for myself of finishing with revising the novel by tonight. I met my deadline. Then I went to fixing dinner. CC called, I went to pick her up. She shared dinner and is now sound asleep on under blankets on the floor.

Late night reading follows.

I had hoped Our Fascination with People Who Vanish might explain why I had run through a string of videos on YouTube about missing persons. It did not explain why this is an interest, but it is a good essay on the effect disappearances have on us.

 The Trauma Behind the "Good Old Days": Christina Henry on the Dark Trap of Nostalgia in Fiction gives two examples of the dangers of nostalgia. I would add a Nathaniel Hawthorne story, only I cannot recall its names. Too bad for me, not adding anything to my ideas.

Some political stuff I have not avoided.

 Civil Resistance (Sheila Kennedy) - some glimmers of hope.

Congress has been dodging responsibility for tariffs for decades – now the Supreme Court will decide how far presidents can go alone  (The Conversation) - it is always good for the vanity to see someone else pointing out how Congress has been backsliding on its duties for a long time.

Congress didn’t exactly lose its tariff power; it gave it away.

The Constitution assigns “Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises” to Congress, not the White House. Historically, Congress set tariff lines in law – consider the Smoot–Hawley Tariff Act of 1930. The pivot began with the Reciprocal Trade Agreement Act of 1934, which let presidents adjust rates within limits via executive agreements. In the 1960s and ’70s, Congress passed laws expanding the president’s authority over trade, granting new powers to restrict or adjust imports without a separate congressional vote if certain conditions are met.

In my view, two key incentives drove the drift: blame avoidance and gridlock. Tariffs are redistributive by design: They benefit some sectors and regions while imposing costs on others. Casting a vote that helps steelworkers in one state but raises prices for builders in another is politically risky. Delegating to the White House allowed lawmakers to sidestep the fallout when prices rise or when jobs shift.

And as polarization intensified, the bargaining that once produced workable compromises became increasingly complex. Broad emergency statutes and open-ended delegations became the path of least resistance – fast, unilateral and insulated from negotiation. Over time, exceptions became the norm, and courts were tasked with resolving the gray areas.

That’s a poor way to run economic policy.

Let us hope we survive tomorrow when the Supreme Court takes up this issue.

There are some other things read today that will go into another post.

Song for the day: Free Your Mind And Your Ass Will Follow


  

sch 

 

Living, Loving, Proving 2/14/2021

 [ I am back working through my prison journal. It is out of order… Well, the order is as I have opened boxes. The date in the title is the date it was written. I hope this is not confusing. What you are reading is what you get for your tax dollars. sch 7/5/2025

This comes from Dietrich Bonhoeffer's Ethics

... In the passage which we have quotes from Philippians St. Paul describes exactly the same situation when he says that because to live and to increase in love is the precondition of proving, because to live and to increase in love is to live the life of Jesus Christ... Proving what is God's will is possible only on the foundation of the knowledge of God's will in Jesus Christ. Only upon the foundation of Jesus Christ only within the space which is defined by Jesus Christ only, only "in" Jesus Christ can man prove what is the will of God.

Part one; 1. The Love of God and the Decay of the World; "Proving"

Amen.

sch 


Monday, November 3, 2025

Brief Note - Mystery Novels 2/13/2021

 [ I am back working through my prison journal. It is out of order… Well, the order is as I have opened boxes. The date in the title is the date it was written. I hope this is not confusing. What you are reading is what you get for your tax dollars. sch 7/5/2025

I am supposed to be reading Dietrich Bonhoeffer's Ethics, not James R. Benn's Billy Boyle and The First Wave. A Boston cop becomes a special investigator for General Eisenhower. Benn has an interesting character - a bit of Archie Goodwin cheekiness and a bit of the old fish out of the water - with more of a Richard Sharpe view of WW2. Time I have not minded spending. Sorry, Herr Bonhoeffer.

sch 

Sunday, November 2, 2025

Saturday Into Sunday

I like think I was a productive person yesterday. Maybe I just proved I am person without taste or sense.

I worked through the email yesterday morning before going to work on "One Dead Blonde"

Some tiems that came to me through the email.

‘It is the scariest of times’: Margaret Atwood on defying Trump, banned books – and her score-settling memoir (The Guardian) - Atwood is always worth my time.

I read Rebecca Bernard's In Plato’s Cave No. 1 from The Adroit Journal. After reading, I decided I am not good enough to submit there. Damned good story.

Submissions:

Epiphany MagazineGulf Coast, and The Georgia Review - “Coming Home”

“Agnes” went to The Sun.

Videos played:

Please Don't Get a Goat is a hoot and the woman presenting is a joy, watch even if you have never thought of getting goats.


Talking Julius Caesar, a long, deep dive into the guy done very well:


I had hoped for something else when I saw the label David Frum on ‘Settlers & Colonialists'. That it was from the Canadian Institute for Historical Education should have been a warning, but I went on to watch it.

I think, in the end, I got a bit I can use in "Chasing Ashes".

A Scottish weird tale, with a great bit of comedy in the middle:


The Irish Constitution, my curiosity exposed:

CC called, finally. I decided she could fit into my plans for the rest of the day. What I did not expect when i picked her up was she was moving stuff out of her boyrfirend's. I joked that my role with her was to help her run away from home. 

We went to eat at The Downtown Farm Stand. She got the smash burger and I got their new chicken sandwich. I think mine was very good - tasty, not dry. CC liked the burger, but really loved the fries.

From there we went to Minnetrista's Orchard Shop. I was running out of apples at home. She amused me to no end - poking and prodding among the things for sale like a kid in a candy store. I bought her strawberry rhubard perserves and a piece of butter pecan fudge and a candle. Before going in, she was cautious and I said I know, I take you to all the best places.

Then we went and dropped off her stuff at her storage bin before dropping in on Aldi's for a roasting pan. 

After that I dropped her off at a friend's. She is looking for a place to stay - the boyfriend is fighting with her. 

I have to admit here that I was having some issues with my attention. So, I decided to come home and finish some work on the computer. That took me about 8 hours to finish. There was an interruption from MW in the form of a telephone call. Then I fixed dinner, did some of the dishes and dirtying more.

CC called that she did not have a place to stay, so she took up my offer to camp out on my living room's floor. I was about done revising "Theresa Pressley" when she got here.

Saturday PM submisisons:

“Going For the Kid” went to Haven Spec Magazine.

Black Lawrence Press got "Theresa Pressley Attends Mike Devlin's Viewing".

I also got a rejection:

Thank you for your submission! We are grateful for the opportunity to read your work. Although we have chosen not to move forward with "Learning The Passion and Control Twist," we sincerely hope that this piece finds a worthy home and we wish you the best of luck in the future.  

Kind regards,


The Editors 

The Southampton Review

Sunday: I woke around 6:30, came out to a woman snoring on floor. I started to poke around the email and news.

The DOJ lied its way to victory in a key Trump case. It just got caught in court. (Slate). The one thing I never did as a lawyer was lie to a court; it seems the times have changed. I noticed some of this in a case in Howard County. The Indiana Disciplinary Commission decided it did not violate the rules. It must be something in the air that it is also spreading through the federal system. It may surprise you that lawyers take their ethical responsibilities serious. The clients are the ones without ethics.

Talk about deceptive headlines: Researching can be a dead end – and that’s a good thing (cleveland.com). My first reaction was WTF; my second was to click on the link (via Google News).

Research doesn’t have to be relegated solely to libraries, the internet or a few books. Sometimes it can be a dead end.

And in the case of cemetery research, that’s not a bad thing.

As a writer, I sometimes have to go to cemeteries to photograph photos of gravestones for stories or to verify something for a book project. Often when you are visiting a loved one’s grave, it’s easy: You know where the tombstone is, you pay respects and you leave.

But when you are looking for a gravesite a few tips come in handy. This weekend is an appropriate time (Saturday, Nov. 1 is All Saints Day while Sunday, Nov. 2, is All Souls Day) to offer tips on how to approach cemetery research.

This almost as deceptive: Robot's Antarctic Dive for Endurance Wreck Unveils a Mysterious Undersea Grid of Structures 

Found in an area exposed only after the calving of the A68 iceberg in 2017, the site contains more than a thousand active fish nests arranged in geometric formations across the seafloor. The findings, detailed in the journal Frontiers in Marine Science, suggest the region may support one of the largest known aggregations of nesting fish—raising new questions about reproduction, adaptation, and conservation in the Southern Ocean.

Glad to see Sean Bean working - Robin Hood review – Sean Bean gifts us the most gloriously bad TV offering of the year (The Guardian) - but there is only one Robin Hood really worth watching - Erroll Flynn. (The closest has Patrick Bergin and Uma Thurman).

I fed CC scrambled eggs, some of last night's roasted pork, and her perserves. Listenign to her eat suited my vanity. Anyone walking by might have thought she was having sex. She is back snoring. I will let her sleep another hour.

I am sorry the Blue Jays lost last night. However, I must admit that I had forgotten Game 7 was last night. I had a spiritual crisis while revising "Theresa Pressley" and had texted KH and he reminded me that the game was on. He now lives in the Toronto area.

What was this crisis? I had places to submit novellas calendared and when I went back to look at their submission page, Black Lawrence wanted a table of contents. Oh, shit. Well, I put in title headings and I made a table of contents. While doing that, I decided the story was trite and poorly told. I did what I could to fix it. I submitted it. It left me wondering if I know how to write well and if I know what is good writing.

I am taking Cheryl to church today. It is an experiment. If you don't hear from me again, you know it failed.

I pretty much agree with The 10 Greatest Film Noir Performances of All Time, Ranked (Collider), except for adding DeNiro and Taxi Driver. I have never gottent o se ethe whole movie, but I never thought of it as a noir. I would add Linda Fiorentino's performance in The Last Seduction. The number one pick is a shocker.

You don't Fiorentino? How Linda Fiorentino seduced Hollywood – then disappeared (Yahoo Nes)

Sheila Kennedy's This Is How You Keep ‘Em Down On The Farm…  gives a whole post to a Miachel Hick's article that I touched on in Indiana - Legislating Us Into Ignorance; Prosecutors Against Presumption of Innocence. Are Hoosiers really so beaten down as to take this treatment from the Republicans lying down?

I have about another hour before I need leave for church. Not sure what else to do with my time, except to run through the email and take a shower. It is a gray day here and getting cold, Winter is coming.

So, good morning and good bye for now.

sch


Giving Up On Trump 2-5-2021

I am back working through my prison journal. It is out of order… Well, the order is as I have opened boxes. The date in the title is the date it was written. I hope this is not confusing. What you are reading is what you get for your tax dollars. sch 10/11/2025

 I am giving up on Mary L. Trump's Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous Man (Simon & Schuster, 2020). Not because I disagree with her description of her uncle. I do not. She made her case on NPR's Fresh Air. You people elected a nut job President, not me. The Electoral College failed its purpose. We got lucky that Donald J. Trump was as incompetent in his attempt at being an autocrat as he had proven himself a businessman. Nor is it that I think his dangerousness is at an end. Not with much of the Republican Party thinking the party is Trump's, that being a Republican fealty to Trump. We have a wide swath of this country needing, wanting, worshiping a Führer. So much for the self-reliant, independent-minded Americans. Who knew so much of America needed a man to worship. No, I have just impatience and little time in this world and I no longer want to wallow in the filth that America wallowed in - and want nothing to do with those who cannot get enough wallowing. I wish all the luck in the world to Dr. Trump, and a plague on the rest of the family.

sch

[And then you fools went and reelected him, so he has another chance at becoming America's first dictator. From The Label Is Wrong (Sheila Kennedy):

 The problem with labeling our reactionary Court as conservative is that such a label obscures reality. It’s akin to the misuse of other labels like Left-wing and socialism, but it’s arguably more dangerous, because it makes a very real threat–an ahistorical judicial deviation from the rule of law in favor of a very unAmerican authoritarianism– seem like a normal part of America’s ever-shifting political environment. We’ve always had courts and political parties that are properly understood to be more conservative or more liberal, but by mis-labeling this radical Supreme Court as “conservative,” we minimize the extent to which it has deviated from the political and constitutional norms to which both liberal and genuinely conservative courts have adhered.

 If this Court was truly conservative, America wouldn’t be in the midst of an authoritarian coup.

Ep 939: Huckleberry Finn And The Sins Of MAGA 

 

sch 10/11/2025

Saturday, November 1, 2025

Zen and - 9/4/2015

I am back working through my prison journal. It is out of order… Well, the order is as I have opened boxes. The date in the title is the date it was written. I hope this is not confusing. What you are reading is what you get for your tax dollars. sch 10/11/2025

I lack Zen. 

Tried a bright idea for landscaping. [The idea was using grass clippings for much.sch 10/11/2025] Fell flat - not enough grass clipping to do anything with. Did pull some grass. I figured what was done justified my 12 cents per day pay. So here I go with   Robert M. Pirsig's Zen and The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.

I never read this book when we were both young. The printing history has Zen appearing in 1974. My Bantam Book paperback looks like it is the fourth printing from 1980. I remember the book was everywhere when I was a teenager. Back then, I had no interest in Zen. Or motorcycles.

I knew one person who read the book: LAH. She was not impressed, as I recall her reaction. Then, too, philosophy was never her strong suit.

Zen and The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance reads like a novel, but is actually part memoir and partially philosophy primer, with a strong emphasis on the interplay of technology in our lives. I reached the halfway point last night with three questions and two problems. The biggest problem concerns the character Phaedrus.

The plot: Father, son, and a married couple take a motorcycle trip from Minnesota into Montana with a destination of Bozeman. Along the way, the father narrates his thoughts on technology and classicism and romanticism; he also begins telling the story of a shadowy character, Phaedrus. I assume Phaedrus is actually the narrator before some psychotic break and the narrator is also Robert M. Pirsig, the author. Phaedrus seems to have dropped in from some gothic novel - the madman upstairs - by way of Percy Shelley. I hope Pirsig breaks through the wall separating him from Phaedrus (he has but not yet identified himself as Phaedrus.)

 Question #1: did Steve Jobs read Zen and The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance? That seems possible with the distinction between the classical and the romantic:

A classical understanding sees the world primarily as underlying form itself....

***

The romantic mode is primarliy inspirational, imaginative, creative, intuitive....

p. 61 

Question #2: who is/was Robert M. Pirsig? No authorial information accompanied the paperback. But he presents himself as a philosopher who writes thus:

The classic mode by contrast, proceeds by reason and by laws - which are themselves underlying forms of thought and behavior. In the European cultures it is primarily a masculine mode and the fields of science, laws and medicine are unattractively to women largely for this reason. Although motorcycle maintenance is purely classic. The dirt, the grease, the mastery of underlying form required all give it such a negative romantic appeal that women never go near it.

p. 61 

I have an ex-wife and ex-girlfriend who would have no problem with motorcycle maintenance. I suspect there exist many women who would contradict Pirsig's assertion. Maybe this shows the difference between 1974 and 2015? I see why LAH would not be impressed with this book.

I also do not understand how Pirsig, who writes of Phaedrus as a scientist turned philosopher, can keep writing of Columbus showing the world was not flat. The ancient Greeks knew the world was not flat - by mathematics. Columbus was wrong about the width of the world, and his critics were right. That there was land instead of lots and lots of ocean was the real shock to Europe.

Yet, I do find some of Pirsig's purposes and insights interesting. As to his purposes:

This is the source of the trouble. Persons tend to think and feel exclusively in one mode or the other and in doing so tend to misunderstand and underestimate what the other mode is all about. But no one is willing to give up the truth as he sees it, and as far as I know, no one now living has any real reconciliation of these truths or modes. There is no point at which these visions of reality are unified.

p. 62 

Note he specifies living So far, no mention of William James, Nietzsche, Bergson, or Camus; all of whom were in the ground by 1974. No idea who is doing what now - I was out of that particular stream ages ago.

 Maybe Zen and The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance helped quell the idea of a beneficial revolution. Mutterings here at prison about revolution all die out in dead ends like and for the reasons described below:

 But to tear down a factory or to revolt against a government or to avoid repair of a motorcycle because it is a system is to attack effects rather than causes; and as long as the attack is upon effects rather than causes; and as long as the attack is upon effects only, no change is possible. The true system, the real system, is our present construction of systemic thought itself, rationality itself, and if a factory is torn down but the rationality which produced it is left standing, then the rationality will simply produce another factory. If a revolution destroys a systematic government, but the systematic patterns of thought that produced the government are left intact, then those patterns will repeat themselves in the succeeding government. There's so much talk about the system. And so little understanding.

p. 88

So, workers of the world, you've got more than your physical chains to throw off.

The following diagnosis is even more applicable to 2015:

"But what's happening is that each year our old flat-earth of conventional reason becomes less and less adequate to handle the expressions we have and this is creating widespread feelings of topsy-turviness. As a result, we're getting more and more people in irrational areas of thought-occultism, mysticism, drug changes, and the like - because they feel the inadequacy of classical reason to handle what they know are real experiences.

pp. 151 - 52 

I will try to finish the book this weekend. I'm off the reading list and back to the locker until 9/14. Not really up for David Foster Wallace. Also writing "The Overreacher".

sch 

[I have no idea ten years later why I referenced Steve Jobs. The romantic mode makes more sense now than also involving the classical. Having ten years of Elon Musks and Mark Zuckerbergs, there seems like of the romantic mode in the tech side of the world that I do think Jobs does seem to have incorporated. At least, in what was presented to the world.

On the other hand, this is the paragraph ending his Wikipedia entry:

His use of an Apple II and relationship with the company led to him being honored by 'the Pirsig Meeting Room', at one of Apple's Cupertino offices, being named after him.[42][41][when? 

Please understand one thing about prison: information is tightly regulated. Not is the body incarcerated, but also must be the mind. The federal Bureau of Prisons was deeply fearful of granting internet access to its prisoners. No Google. No Wikipedia. I do not disagree that unfettered access would have been a dangerous thing - I know of one fellow who got access from the head of the education department at Fort Dix FCI and went on a spree of fraud. If additional information on a book, author, and/or topic was not available within the barbwire fences of Ft. Dix, then it was not available. Working on this post, following the link above to Pirsig's Wikipedia page gave me this information:

Pirsig had a mental breakdown and spent time in and out of psychiatric hospitals between 1961 and 1963. He was diagnosed with schizophrenia and treated with electroconvulsive therapy on numerous occasions,[7] a treatment he discusses in Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. Nancy sought a divorce during this time;[26] they formally separated in 1976 and divorced in 1978.[11] On December 28, 1978, Pirsig married Wendy Kimball in Tremont, Maine.

As far as the Earth being known as round, any skeptics check out: June, ca. 240 B.C. Eratosthenes Measures the Earth 

Other Greek scholars repeated the feat of measuring the Earth using a procedure similar to Eratosthenes’ method. Several decades after Eratosthenes measurement, Posidonius used the star Canopus as his light source and the cities of Rhodes and Alexandria as his baseline. But because he had an incorrect value for the distance between Rhodes and Alexandria, he came up with a value for Earth’s circumference of about 18,000 miles, nearly 7,000 miles too small.

Ptolemy included this smaller value in his treatise on geography in the second century A.D. Later explorers, including Christopher Columbus, believed Ptolemy’s value and became convinced that Earth was small enough to sail around. If Columbus had instead known Eratosthenes larger, and more accurate, value, perhaps he might never have set sail.

 This I learned more than 50 years ago.

Perhaps we should get kids reading Pirsig before we allow them to use a smartphone. 

Links I turned up typing this post: 

Why Robert Pirsig's 'Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance' Still Resonates Today (Smithsonian Magazine).

If such experiences feel less available to us now, Pirsig would not be surprised. Already, in 1974, he offered this story as a meditation on a particular way of moving through the world, one that felt marked for extinction. The book, which uses the narrator’s road trip with his son and two friends as a journey of inquiry into values, became a massive best seller, and in the decades since its publication has inspired millions to seek their own accommodation with modern life, governed by neither a reflexive aversion to technology, nor a naive faith in it. At the heart of the story is the motorcycle itself, a 1966 Honda Super Hawk. Hondas began to sell widely in America in the 1960s, inaugurating an abiding fascination with Japanese design among American motorists, and the company’s founder, Soichiro Honda, raised the idea of “quality” to a quasi-mystical status, coinciding with Pirsig’s own efforts in Zen to articulate a “metaphysics of quality.” Pirsig’s writing conveys his loyalty to this machine, a relationship of care extending over many years. I got to work on several Hondas of this vintage when I ran a motorcycle repair shop in Richmond, Virginia. Compared to British bikes of the same era, the Hondas seemed more refined. (My writing career grew out of these experiences—an effort to articulate the human element in mechanical work.)

Returning, Again, to Robert M. Pirsig (The New Yorker)

"In Quality,” a collection of Pirsig’s speeches, fiction, letters, and musings that was posthumously published last month, might not satisfy the reader seeking a nostalgic return to the road or the mechanic’s shop. The text, instead, reads like a notebook from a life spent pondering: What does “quality” mean? Why are some things better than others? What is it about humans that causes us to recognize the difference? His answer is that quality “is a characteristic of thought and statement that is recognized by a non-thinking or intuitive process.” He continues, “Because definitions are a product of rigid reasoning, quality can never be rigidly defined. But everyone knows what it is.”

As in “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance,” Pirsig mostly defines “quality” by what it is not. That book starts with a dichotomy: on one side is the narrator, who maintains his own motorcycle and understands its every function; on the other is his riding partner John, who owns a high-priced BMW and can’t even be bothered to learn how to fix it. The narrator doesn’t understand John’s relationship to his machine and realizes that, whereas the narrator can see the Buddha in the gears of an engine, John believes that technology or man-made things are anathema to the spiritual reasons why he rides his bike. Who, then, is correct—the logician or the romantic? Who is closer to quality? The answer, according to Pirsig, is neither, but also everything:

Quality is the Buddha. Quality is scientific reality. Quality is the goal of Art. It remains to work these concepts into a practical, down-to-earth context, and for this there is nothing more practical or down-to-earth than what I have been talking about all along—the repair of an old motorcycle.

There’s a very good chance that unless you spent a decent portion of your life thinking about dharma, reading the Upanishads, or discussing the works of Shunryu Suzuki, there will be very little in “On Quality” that will be of interest to you. The collection almost reads like a scientific proof that tries to identify the exact location of quality while also arguing, somewhat more convincingly, that such a task is impossible. What the reader is left with, then, are a series of word puzzles and contradictions that can be frustrating, but which reveal a lifelong search for what moves Pirsig in a way he cannot explain. In the book’s preface, Wendy Pirsig tells the story of what happened when her late husband joined the army and was stationed in Korea:

Stepping off the train in South Korea when the troops first arrived, he saw a dusting of snow over the nearby mountains that was so beautiful and strange and reflected such a different culture that he became almost ecstatic. “I walked around. It was like Shangri La,” he recalled years later. “I think I was crying. I just stared at the roofs wondering what kind of culture could have built roofs like that,” he said.

In the lineage of Eastern philosophy in American letters—see the works of Pirsig, J. D. Salinger, Kenneth Rexroth, Gary Snyder, or Jack Kerouac—you’ll often find a desire to negate the innate hunger of life. The authors try to find something better in the image of, say, a red wheelbarrow glazed with rain water next to white chickens. This country, they say, is dull and greedy and always misses the point. The possibility of a new type of ecstatic vision and a life filled with meaningful tasks, I imagine, is what drew me and so many other readers to “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.” We believed Pirsig could see the Buddha in a well-maintained carburetor. We wanted to see it, too, and we wanted to work as he did, perhaps in large part because we saw very little future for ourselves in the striving world.

sch 10-11-2025]