Random Books

One of my favorite activities – and further proof of my book addiction – is what I like to call random books. How it works is: you go to a local bookstore’s discount/bargain section (Barnes and Noble, Waldenbook is, or Half-Priced Books work well for me) or even a decent used book store; you browse through the fiction section looking for interesting covers and titles; pick out a book you have never heard of but looks interesting; go home and immediately start reading it.

It is quite simple but it is a lot of fun. I enjoy the random nature of just finding a book I know nothing about and reading it. I like trying to find books I will like judging only by the cover and jacket information. I used to do this in high school with music too.

Last night I picked up two interesting random books:

* The Museum Guard by Howard Norman
A young museum guard must cope with his girlfriend’s obsession with a Dutch painting entitled Jewess on a Street in Amsterdam as well as with his uncle’s fixation on the horrific news of World War II being broadcast from Europe.
This looked interesting and I need some fiction that was intelligent but not draining. Plus the book is less than $5.

* The Very Persistent Gappers of Frip by George Saunders and Lane Smith (Illustrator)
An adult story for children, a children’s story for adults, an earthlings’ story for aliens, an oceanside fable for the landlocked, acapitalist tool for anarchists, a fish story for loaves, The Very Persistent Gappers of Frip represents the classic instant of two young geniuses colliding and colluding. The result is—what else?—an instant classic!

This is an very interesting book! It is a fun childrens book illustrated by the guy who did James and the Giant Peach. But it is also a morality tale. Barnes and Noble described it thus:

Move over, Bill Bennett—the inimitable short story master George Saunders (Pastoralia) and acclaimed illustrator Lane Smith (The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales) have created an astonishing new book of virtues for the child in all of us. Alternately haunting and hilarious, The Very Persistent Gappers of Frip reaffirms the age-old message of the Golden Rule while simultaneously lampooning the great American institutions of social conservatism and religious chauvinism, along with its inbred kissing cousin, evangelical consumerism.

I think they exagerate a bit, but it does poke holes in the way haughty religous people can be so smug despite other people’s suffering. This book was a win-win because my artist wife loves the illustrations and I love the story (actually we both love both). Plus, it only cost $4.00.

So, next time you are out on the town stop at the bookstore try random books.

NYT Books and Koba

Continuing our “all Koba – all the time” theme here at Addicted to Books:

An interesting little snippet I picked up from Andrew Sullivan. Check out the cover of the New York Times Book Review section:

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Now read this post from Counter Revolutionary:

Check out the cover of the NYT Book Review.
Since it’s difficult to read the fine print on the page, allow me to transcribe:

Martin Amis’s War On Stalin.
Nobody likes Stalin, but Martin Amis seems to have a thing about him. In his new book, ‘Koba the Dread,’ he attacks the monster as if he were current. Then he offers some tender reflections about Kingley Amis, his father, who was once a Communist. What’s up here?

This attitude, to me, summarizes the intellectual dishonesty of the Left. Stalin, murderer of tens of millions, has nothing to teach us. His treachery, while great, does not reflect in any way on today’s people or events. He is passe. Ladies and Gentlemen ignore the horrible troll hiding in the Left’s closet.
Is this how the Times treats, say, McCarthy? No, McCarthy, who never killed anyone, is relevant and infinitely useful to remind the People of the sins of the Right. Now, compare Comrade Stalin and Mr. McCarthy. Who should we fear the most? Under whose rule would you choose to live? Yes, the McCarthy era was bad, but at least no-one knocked on your door at night and took you away never to be seen again.
Even Hitler, which I assume the Times would say is relevant today, is only a notch worse than Stalin. Stalin getting bonus points for not discriminating against certain minorities (even to get that point, however, you’d have to look at his entire career — at any given time Stalin was happy to discriminate against specific ethnic groups). How can it be possible that the second worst murderer of the past century is “not current”? Is it that the Times still believes that it was all for a good cause?
Which, of course, makes the author’s point that the Left is unwilling to face up to its own crimes. Until then, it is difficult to have a sober discussion when you have to ignore the big, bloody, menacing elephant in the room.

What I find so intriguing about the stupid cover, is that the whole @#$@# book is about just that: why were intelligent people duped into supporting a raving luantic who killed his people by the millions? What they also fail to point out is that Kinglsy came to his senses and explained publicly why he did so – unlike a great many leftists that the NYT so admires. This is exactly the kind of idiotic jab that continues to make the NYT a joke. Heads up by CounterRevolutionary for catching it – I guess it pays to get the hard copy sometimes.

Koba the Dread by Martin Amis

Ok, so you have read the reviews (NYT, NRO, Salon, LA Weekly, etc.) and you want to know the bottom line – is this book worth buying? My answer is: it depends. It depends on what you are looking for and what interests you. If you are looking for a straightforward scholarly work on the history of Soviet terror this is not the book for you. If on the other hand, you enjoy a skilful writer and critic wrestling with the mind numbing horror and tragedy of communism in the Soviet Union – and its’ historical and intellectual implications in our time – then you might enjoy this work.

Koba the Dread is, as many reviewers have pointed out, an odd book. The oddness is introduced by the personal information and perspective that the author – novelists and literary critic Martin Amis – brings to the book, especially at the end. Although at first blush Amis’ life long friendship with Soviet scholar Robert Conquest and his intellectual sparing with his father, and his close friend Christopher Hitchens on the subject may seem germane, in the end they are distractions. It seems to me that a great deal of this personal information could have been edited out. What it really constitutes is the author’s awkward struggle to come to terms with the issues and events contained in the rest of the book. The problem is that these passages do not bring any great insight but rather move the focus away from the books subject to its author. If I had to guess I would think that the editors saw these passages as the equivalent of intellectual gossip – high brow but juicy personal bits to jazz up the subject and make it more personal. This tactic fails but not in my opinion fatally.

What Amis is struggling with is why communism’s reputation seems so harmless, especially as compared to fascism. Why is Hitler (the little moustache as Amis notes) the very symbol of evil but Stalin (the big moustache) a vague and fuzzy memory – Hitler and the Nazis were evil but communism simply “failed.” Throughout Amis asks “Why” often using the Russian word “Zachto.” Early on Amis outlines the problem:

But the fact remains that despite “more and more voluminous and unignorable evidence” to the contrary . . . the USSR continued to be regarded as fundamentally progressive and benign; and the misconception endured until the mid-1970’s. What was it? From our vantage it looks like a contagion of selective in-curiosity, a mindgame begun in self-hypnosis and maintained by self-hysteria. And although the aberration was of serious political utility to Moscow, we still tend to regard it as a bizarre and embarrassing sideshow to the main events. We must find a more structural connection.” (Emphasis mine)

This is what drives Amis, the almost complete lack of intellectual honesty – on the left especially – about Lenin, Stalin, and the Soviet experiment. What led him to write this book, is the search for an explanation. At this quest he ultimately fails, in fact he doesn’t really attack the subject much. Instead what Amis does is provide a angry, indignant, and outraged tour through the horror, degradation, and terror of Soviet Communism. Amis apparently didn’t find a suitable explanation but instead he came to the realization that the victims of this almost unimaginable terror deserve to be remembered; that if we are to avoid a continuation of this willful blindness we must remember what really happened. In this more limited goal Amis succeeds by using his skills as a writer to memorialize the victims and excoriate Lenin and Stalin – to show them as the monsters they truly were rather than as the misguided and flawed revolutionaries of leftist legend.

What emerges from Amis’ wandering but poignant and often sharp pen, is that Stalin, following in the footsteps of Lenin, waged a gigantic struggle against truth and reality resulting in the death of at least twenty million people. Stalin literally squeezed, crushed, starved, tortured, terrified, and eventually destroyed huge swath’s of his country because he could not face reality. Stalin and his underlings felt bound by no laws moral, ethical, legal, scientific or economic. They literally felt they could remake the world in their own image. Amis notes that communist economist S. G. Strumilin said exactly that:

“Our task is not to study economics but to change it. We are bound by no laws.”

The difference between Stalin and other utopians is that when faced with failure he refused to relent. The amazing, if tragic, thing about Stalin is that he did manage to escape reality or to impose his reality on a vast country for so long. Amis notes that the forced collectivisation and famine of the 30’s was the “most precipitous economic decline in recorded history.” But Stalin refused to acknowledge it. Even Lenin eventually relented after a famine of similar proportions twenty years earlier. Amis explains the difference:

In the earlier case, Lenin accepted defeat, withdrawal and compromise. In other words, he accepted reality. Stalin did not. The peasantry no longer faced a frigid intellectual. It faced a passionate low-brow whose personality was warping and crackling in the heat of power. He would not accept reality. He would break it.

This is what turned Stalin from a petty if brutal dictator to what Amis calls “negative perfection,” his simply inability to accept reality. Amis explores this “negative perfection” and all its base, degrading, and horrifying fullness. He discuss the forced famines, the concentration camps, Stalin’s seeming attempts to wipe off the face of the earth anyone and anything that displeased him. Stalin’s obsessions and maniacal actions literally warped the foundations of civil society in the Soviet Union until they snapped. Soon truth had no meaning and survival seemed almost random luck. Amis illustrates this tragic and absurd situation when discussing the census of 1937. Apparently their was a national census in 1937, the first one since 1926. Stalin felt that the population should be 170 million. The Census Board reported their findings – 167 million. Stalin’s policies of forced famine and concentration camps was having too great an effect on the population. Stalin’s reaction? Have the Census Board arrested and shot! Their crime: “treasonably exerting themselves to diminish the population of the USSR.”

Amis notes that many of the early revolutionaries were often proud of their lack of hypocrisy – their ability to get beyond the illusions that others could not. But this is again a subject in which truth was turned on its head:

In fact, of course, hypocrisy boomed under the Bolsheviks, like hyper inflation. I do not intend it as a witticsm when I say that hypocrisy became the life and soul of the party – indeed this understates the case. Hypocrisy didn’t know what had hit it in October 1917. Until then, hypocrisy had had its moments, in politics, in religion, in commerce; it had played its part in innumerable social interactions; it had starred in many Victorian novels; and so on; but it had never been asked to saturate one sixth of the planet. Looking back hypocrisy might have smiled at its earlier reticence, fo it soon grew accustomed to the commanding heights.

The above paragraph is also illustrative of Amis’s style. His subject is hard and somber but Amis brings a literary and sharp tongue to the task. His descriptions of characters and his unpacking of rhetoric is rich with barbed jabs and beautifully turned phrases. Some see this tone as discordant with the subject but for me it gave the writing a kick it might not otherwise have had.

So, the bottom line for me? I enjoyed the book and found it a powerful reminder of the horrors of the Soviet experiment. It left me with a determination to not let the subject fade; to not let the world shrug off the terrors that occurred with much of the “best and brightest” tacit agreement. The awkward inclusion of Amis’ personal details, demons, and tragedies do not add to the work but neither do the fatally detract from it. The work could have been much more but it is still a powerful reminder of just how much we have chosen to forget about “socialism in one country.” This is what Amis ultimately wants, he wants us not to forget but to remember. In one of those personal stories tacked on the end, Amis describes a political event in which his friend Christopher Hitchens speaks of being very familiar with the chosen venue having spent time there with many “an old comrade.” Amis describes how everyone, including himself and his friend Robert Conquest, chuckled affectionately at the comment. Amis noted the different reaction Hitchens would have gotten had he mentioned having spent time with many “an old blackshirt.” And of course most of us are well aware of the difference between being a former communist and a former nazi in today’s PC environment. To Amis this is not right:

One elicits spontaneous fury, and the other elicits spontaneous laughter? And what kind of laughter is it? It is of course the laughter of universal fondness for that old, old idea about the perfect society. It is also the laughter of forgetting. It forgets the demonic energy unconsciously embedded in that hope. It forgets the Twenty Million.
This isn’t right:
Everybody knows of Auschwitz and Belsen. Nobody knows of Vorkuta and Solovetsky.
Everybody knows of Himmler and Eichmann. Nobody knows of Yezhov and Dzeerzhinsky.
Everybody knows of the 6 million of the Holocaust. Nobody knows of the 6 million of the Terror-Famine.

Despite not having offered a plausible answer for why this is, Amis has done his part to try and change it. This book is one small step in the war to remember.

More Koba the Dread

well, my inability to finish Koba the Dread has allowed everyone and their brother to read it and reiew it first. Next to cover this book is Andrew Stuttaford on National Review Online.

His view:

It is a curious, compelling but more than occasionally self-indulgent work, a meditation that uneasily combines snatches of its writer’s autobiography with tales of the Soviet holocaust.

Perhaps today I can finnish the blasted thing and finally give you my take, for what it is worth.

The Six Days of War by Micahel Oren

If I wasn’t overloaded with books to read, one book I would seek out is Six Days of War by Micahel B. Oren. It has recently been reviewed by both National Review (not online) and the New Republic – amongst others I am sure. The Atlantic interviewed the author recently as well.

The interview is fascinating on many levels becuase of the subject and the authors background:

Michael Oren was born in the U.S., but has spent twenty-five years in Israel, including time spent as a commando in the IDF during the 1982 war in Lebanon. He has a Ph.D. in Middle Eastern studies from Princeton University and served as the director of Israel’s Department of Inter-Religious Affairs in the government of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. He is now a senior fellow at the Shalem Center in Jerusalem, where he leads the Middle East history project . . .

The interview touches on subjects ranging from objectivity in scholarship and the problem of friendly fire to the after effects of the six-day war and Lyndon Johnson. Worth a read.

Penguin Lives Series – good and bad

I have been reading and discussing the attraction of short well packages works on important subjects. The Penguin Lives Series had such potential. In fact I enjoyed Paul Johnson’s Napoleon for all of those reasons: short, accesible, readable, yet scholarly.

Allen Barra discusses the demise of the series in Salon Books. In fact, he views Johnson’s Napoleon as an example of what was right about the series but points to Jane Smiley’s portrait of Chalres Dickens as the worst.

I suppose this is the danger of such an enterprise – if you don’t get the author right or the author flubs it the potential fascinating short portrait becomes a useless rehash. If you are too bland or to outrageous the form doesn’t work.

Personally, I think writing a short and fresh history or biography would be a daunting task. I have always felt it is easier to right a detailed and in-depth history of a small subject than it is to write a brief but insightful work on a braod subject.

Oh, well nothing ventured nothing gained.