Gone with the Wind

Gone with the Wind
© 1936 Margaret Mitchell
1037 pages

It’s been nearly twenty years since I visited the joined worlds of antebellum Tara and postwar Atlanta, tied together through the life of a ruined plantation belle turned business magnate, Scarlett O’Hara. I loved the movie in high school, being then in the middle of a Civil War obsession; Vivien Leigh’s beauty and acting chops certainly didn’t hurt. Gone with the Wind is much abused these days, as are the people it makes its heart – southerners – for now our ancestors are dismissed as cornpone nazis unworthy of any regard. Well, as Miss O’Hara would say – fiddle dee dee. There’s no arguing with political zealotry, and anyone who can’t see the honor in men like Lee is too partisan to take seriously. I came to Gone with the Wind not as a southern romantic or a modern troll, notebook in hand to list all of the things the naughty things I find herein, but to encounter its story – and I find it all the more improved from high school, because now instead of cooing over Tara I find myself impressed by Mitchell’s gift for description, unforgettable characters, and storied retelling of the war and the ruin it brought.  

I don’t know how known Gone with the Wind is outside the South, but down here everyone knows the basic gist: it’s a romance set during the Civil War. This is altogether too simplistic, however, for while it’s largely driven by romance – by Scarlett’s obsession with Mr. Ashley Wilkes, her cold-blooded habit of marrying men purely to manipulate other beaus or come to material gain, and her long, complicated relationship with Rhett Butler — there’s far more drama here than just one flawed woman’s lovelife. There’s the background drama, of course, the opening of the Civil War and the slow ruin of the South as it progresses: we open on scenes of the plantation gentry enjoying daylong barbeques on the lawn, and halfway through find the same characters – at least, those who have survived — getting by on hominy, their world destroyed by war and their families buried under the lawn instead of striding upon it, taken by war and disease. Reconstruction brings no relief, for taxes begin to consume what death left alone, and anyone with any faint connection to the Confederate government is barred from not only office, but voting — leaving Georgia in the hands of military occupiers, outsiders, and ex-slaves. We see the history happening, but Mitchell also weaves it in directly, especially before Scarlett begins paying attention to the war. There’s also incredibly rich character interplay, as four central characters respond to events in unique ways, sometimes taking similar actions for opposing reasons. Scarlett and her romantic rival turned sister-in-law, the saintly Melanie, bounce off one another, as do Mr. Ashley Wilkes and Rhett Butler: Scarlett is scandalized to realize Ashley and Rhett have similar ideas about the war, but Ashley is a man of duty and Rhett a man of appetite. The complex relations between Scarlett and her three peers dominate the novel.

Scarlett is the central figure of the book, and on her shoulders lays the story’s success. Gone with the Wind is her transformation’s as well as the South’s: we open on a child, an incredibly vain and selfish one who regards her mother as a saint and all other women as the devil, and men are her prey who exist to dote on her and ply her with favors for the pure gift of her company. She’s incredibly unlikable, but – having experienced her growth so many times – I can only laugh at her with Rhett Butler, amused by her vanity and hypocrisy because she’s delightfully real in her flaws. But more important than her flaws is her growth, because instead of being ruined by the war, by the loss of all she loves – -the deaths of her friends and family, the sacking of her home, the loss of her adolescent love — Scarlett rises like a phoenix. The war and reconstruction strip everything from her but her will, her determination not to be destroyed or beaten, and we soon see the spoiled but ruthlessly pragmatic belle working hard to turn ruin into rising fortune. A reader doesn’t have to like Scarlett, but by god he has to admire her.   Still, Gone with the Wind is a tragedy — not because it concerns the fall of the antebellum South, but because Scarlett’s cold determination not to be beaten alienates those around her and destroys her chances for a lasting happiness apart from transient pleasure and passing ambition.

Published in 1936, I can imagine what immediate appeal this had for readers stuck in a seemingly endless depression — a reminder that the South has survived worse. For women particularly, having recently realized the right to vote, Scarlett must have seemed a troubled inspiration from another age: a woman who took life by the horns and twisted it to her will, sometimes to excess. Gone with the Wind succeeds brilliantly at bringing the horrors, stresses, and moral dilemmas of the War and Reconstruction to life: it’s easy to read about the casualties at Gettysburg, and not realize the weight of death, but a novel like this draws the reader into a world of personalities and then makes us feel the losses when people we ‘know’ are destroyed. Although moderns like to scoff at Gone with the Wind as a romantic defense of the Old South, they betray their having not read it: both Rhett and Ashley are skeptics of The Glorious Cause, Rhett and other characters continually past against traditionalist prescriptivism, and when Ashley confronts Scarlett about using convict labor, she in turn challenges his and her family’s past reliance on slavery. The thorniest element of Gone with the Wind is its treatment of Reconstruction, particularly the thread in which male members of Scarlett’s class create a certain clannish committee to defend their women against the criminal actions of the now-empowered white trash and “free issue” blacks. As I understand the history of the Klan, it was marked by violence with far less noble motives, but presumably Mitchell was relying on memories of the period’s chaos, upheaval, and terror that she’d heard growing up. Mitchell employs them here not to celebrate them, a la Birth of a Nation, but to cast condemnation on Scarlett — for it is her recklessness that forces several characters to come to her defense through vigilantism.

Gone with the Wind is not without its flaws, but most have only been acquired through the accident of time — period language having become offensive, for instance. The heart of the book is as strong as ever, and the reader who can’t be swept away by the ensembled drama here, particularly Scarlett’s part, because of politics has done themselves a great disservice.

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Man against the mob

“The problem with going along [with the mob] is that it demoralizes you. It makes you a smaller person, inside. You’ll know you shouldn’t have done that, you’ll think badly of yourself for having done it, you’ll feel cowardly, and it will affect your life in other ways. […] That’s what totalitarian movements across history always knew. If you can grind people down, make them agree to the lies….you can make them do anything.”

“You think you’re doing a little thing, but you’re not. You’re diminishing your soul by [going along with the mob]. Because you know you could be something more than the person that just has to hang what Party Headquarters tells you have to hang this week.”

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Caesar’s Last Breath

Caesar’s Last Breath: Decoding the Secrets of the Air Around Us
© 2017 Sam Kean
384 pages

In The Disappearing Spoon, Sam Kean offered a history of early chemistry, as we began to understand the elements that create our world, and the hidden order in their atoms. Caesar’s Last Breath takes on a more intimate subject – the very air we breathe, and the multitude of stories that have erupted from its study, spanning Julius Caesar, volcanoes, and extraterrestrial colonization. Thoroughly entertaining, this mix of popular science and science history succeeds at bringing both the past and arcane equations to life.

Kean begins with a history of the Earth’s atmosphere – or atmospheres, since the early planet went through several before arriving at one suitable to our kind of life. The last big alteration was the arrival of oxygen, which was noxious to most life at the time and prompted a mass extinction. The atmosphere appears again of special interest later in the book, as Kean discusses the growth of meteorology, and the subsequent creation of chaos theory: despite all of the intervening scientific progress in isolating the components of our atmosphere and understanding the laws governing gaseous behaviors, weather has proven all bets are off. 

Science and history are fused in Caesar’s Breath, which takes readers across the globe and across time. We stand in the Senate with the doomed dictator, visit an eccentric moonshiner and tourist host living in the shadow of Mount St. Helens, witness the eruption of gas warfare in 1915, and the even more explosive use of nuclear arms at the Bikini Atoll. The science is interesting in itself, driven as it is by a cast of characters – confidence men, social lepers, dogged engineers, ambitious businessmen, and a rascal or two – but Kean continually connects the scientific enterprise with its effects on human society, both for good and ill: although Kean includes a lot of war and disaster, here too we see the advent of medical anesthesia, and are presented considerable entertainment, like the man who convinced a host of trial patients that living in the same close quarters with cattle could cure their tuberculous.(“Living with cattle is the most delicious thing imaginable!” he said. The subjects disagreed.) 

This is the second Kean book I’ve read and enjoyed, and I was impressed by the way Kean corralled a wide variety of subjects into one coherent narrative, one that doesn’t just rely on chemistry but connects with geology and meteorology as well. Kean’s other books are on stories connected to genetics, and then high crimes and misdemeanors associated with the pursuit of science itself.

Related:
Napoleon’s Buttons
Stuff Matters: Exploring the Marvelous Materials that Shape Our Man-Made World

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Ms. Adventure

Ms. Adventure: My Wild Explorations in Science, Lava, and Life
© 2021 Jess Phoenix
272 pages

Some scientists work in nice, safe labs, with bright lights and sanitized equipment, and their greatest fear is that grant funding will fall through next year. Other scientists hike into the calderas of volcanoes, spend weeks on the open sea far from land, and occasionally fall into Peruvian sewers, covering their Intrepid Explorer pants with a not-so-attractive layer of caca de Cuzco. Jess Phoenix is that other kind of scientist, and here she recounts her global adventures in the service of geology — and her own insatiable curiosity. A mix of travel, adventure, and gritty geological labor, Ms. Adventure demonstrates how exciting and dangerous science work can still be in the 21t century. Although the science content sometimes takes a backseat to Phoenix’s memoir, her travel adventures are not without interest, either from the sheer comedy of falling into a sewer, the drama of cartel gunslingers trying to raid the scientists’ camp, or the behind-the-scenes look at Discovery nature documentaries.

I was drawn to this book immediately by the cover, which accurately captures the extreme environments geologists often work in. Phoenix draws on expeditions throughout her academic and professional career, from her student first experience on a survey (camping in Death Valley, and looking for evidence of its long-gone shallow ocean), to later travels in which she was a fully published and vetted geologist, sometimes the only one present on a given project. Phoenix worked multiple sites across Hawaii and South America, and these constitute the bulk of the book, spanning environments from lava fields, the open ocean, and the soaring heights of Peru. Phoenix and her coworkers are often in danger, particularly when operating around volcanoes: some lava fields are not as old and hardened as they appear, and active volcanoes have a startling tendency to throw car-sized blobs of lava at research teams. Not all of the dangers are from the natural world, though: in Peru the scientists are raided by members of a cartel. The science content is largely centered around volcanoes, which is understandable given how spectacular and dangerous they can be — and how long they’ve fascinated the human cultures exposed to them. Phoenix’ descriptions of lava fields and the ominous sounds coming from beneath the Earth were particularly effective at commanding the reader’s imagination. Phoenix offers a general narrative of her travel experiences that goes into the mundane details, and this can sometimes make the book feel a bit padded, but there are other non-science passage that more than make up for that, particularly her recounting of Discovery filming an episode of her and her team: the producer’s frequent attempts to stage accidents and drama frustrated Phoenix’ hope for a depiction of Real Science, and made me (a frequent viewer of science documentaries) wonder how much of what we see is a total fabrication. Phoenix is at her best when writing on the universal human heritage of curiosity, and how it enriches our lives and drives progress.

This mix of science and travel may lean a little heavier on the travel than it should at times, but takes us to breathtaking places with a guide whose passion for scientific enterprise and physical courage is inspiring.

Quotes:

I was standing on rock-solid proof of our planet’s life. Our world is still one of creation in addition to the destructive side we usually witness when geologic forces are in play. Mauna Loa, the world’s largest volcano, is still active. It had erupted last within my lifetime, before the tragic end of the Challenger space shuttle and the world-changing fall of the Berlin Wall had etched themselves on our global consciousness. I was walking on earth younger than I was, and it reminded me of a true marriage of art and science, the famous lines of eighteenth-century geologist James Hutton: “The result, therefore, of our present enquiry is, that we find no vestige of a beginning, -no prospect of an end.”

Here was the planet, pouring out the same elements contained in stardust, reshaping itself right in front of me. I was a voyeur, witnessing an ancient act too raw and powerful for humans to comprehend. Creation and destruction. Two halves of the same whole. The process would repeat again and again until our world’s fiery core cooled and convected no more.

Staying within the known guardrails of a single discipline or subdiscipline seemed artificial and limiting, an affront to the innate drive to question and explore that led me to science. My ability to ask questions would be the fuel that sustained the fire for knowledge I felt burning hot and tight in my chest, driving me to challenge my own perceptions and the world around me, always in search of answers.

Related:
Phoenix appeared as a guest on the generally-fantastic Ologies podcast, a fun science series covering a staggering variety of specialties.
The Last Stargazers, Emily Levesque. More science meets adventure, but with more science. Also features volcanoes in Hawaii.
Lives in Ruins: Archaeologists and the Seductive Allure of Human Rubble, Marilyn Johnson. More science adventures in demanding locales.

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The Devil’s Company

The Devil’s Company
© 2007 David Liss
371 pages

Benjamin Weaver is in trouble. An ex-boxer who now works as a private detective of sorts in 18th century London, he’s made a name for himself as a man who can get things done, and occasionally attracts job offers for the sort of mischief he has no interest in….like breaking into the East India company’s headquarters and stealing papers. Though he refused that offer, there are powerful men in London and abroad who won’t take no for an answer. As The Devil’s Company opens, we find Weaver being tricked and trapped into the service of a mysterious magnate, who has gained financial leverage over not only Weaver but his friends. Though Weaver has no choice but to work for the mysterious puppetmaster, he’s also no man to passively accept his fate – and laboring to discover who the man is and what he really wants with the Company is the start of a labyrinthine mystery set in the ascendancy of Britain’s commercial empire.  

I have read two previous books in this series and was impressed first by the novelty of the series – business/crime thrillers set in old London, quite different from the usual military or romantic adventures that readers of historical fiction usually get. The earlier books were particularly interesting because of the subjects of the plots themselves – the early coffee trade, or the corruption enabled by paper/fiat currency. The Devil’s Company’s focus on the East India Company and the textile’s trade was a bit less interesting to me, but the core of the mystery was still compelling, with no shortage of twists and plenty of intriguing characters, including several ones that I dearly hoped would visit the business end of Weaver’s fists before the novel’s end. The most remarkable aspect of Liss’s style in the early books was his use of 18th century dialogue, giving the book a sharper historical flavor than most; that continues here. There’s also some subtle social commentary here, and readers familiar with Ronald Reagan’s “A Time for Choosing” speech will recognize parts of it being used, line-by-line, in one character’s speech. It’s not particularly nuanced, though: the author is using the abuses of the Company to mock economic liberalism (real liberalism) when the company existed as a creature of the state and advocated for liberalism only when it was profitable to do so. Liss doesn’t explore that hypocrisy: he only uses the company to argue that we need the state to make corporations behave. (Never mind the fact that corporations have always used the state to advance their agendas, employing lobbyists to create regulation around themselves and leveraging the state to destroy their competition and create monopolies.)

Although the subject here wasn’t nearly as compelling as coffee, I enjoyed it nontheless, and am glad to have gotten back into this series after a..er, ten year gap. Liss’ contribution to historical fiction is unique and absolutely worth reading .

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Eagles in the Storm

Eagles in the Storm
© 2017 Ben Kane
352 pages

Six years ago, a German auxiliary named Arminius used his place of respect within the Roman army to lure Governor Vaurs and three legions into a devastating ambush. Rome began to exact her revenge last year, clearing out German villages connected to rebelling tribes and even kidnapping Arminius’ wife, but the work is not yet done. Two of the battle-standards taken by the Germans – imperial eagles — are still in the hands of Rome’s enemies, and Senior Centurion Tullus is determined to recover them, for the honor of his fallen men….and his personal need for revenge. Eagles in the Storm witnesses the culmination of Tullius’ quest for vengeance, in service of his general Germanicus. Although the action isn’t on grand a scale as Eagles at War, it’s a fitting conclusion to this series. 

As with Hunting the Eagles, Kane splits the book primarily between Arminus and Tullus, with an ocassional foray into the Roman ranks. We find Arminus struggling to keep his alliance together: despite the great success six years ago, many tribal leaders regard Arminius warily, disdainful of his claim to be the only one who can lead the tribes to victory against Rome. They increasingly don’t follow the execution of his plans even after they’ve agreed to, and Arminius’ stores of patient diplomacy appear to have been exhausted by all the work he undertook to make the Teutoberg ambush happen. The action in Eagles in the Storm occurs across several armed conflicts, until the summer begins to wane and both Arminus and Tullius make the same desperate move. Although both protagonists were compelling viewpoint characters in Eagles at War, Tullius was far more sympathetic in Hunting the Eagles, and that continues here, and the reader shares his frustration when Arminius evades him again and again.  The lower-ranks characters are particularly useful in the battle scenes, but here they also provide a little comic relief –as when Piso sneaks into an incredibly punchable officer’s tent and decorates it liberally with dog dung. They’re also how Kane keeps the reader emotionally vested in battles: we know Tullius and Arminius both have to survive the minor scrapes to continue their cat and mouse games, but the redshirt characters don’t have plot insurance.

So ends my introduction to Ben Kane, which proved excellent. It compares favorably to Scarrow’s much longer series: this is shorter, but darker and more intense. I’ll be continuing with him in April, with his Richard the Lionheart series, and some different historical fiction will appear here before — the continuation of David Liss’ series of business/crime thrillers set in 18th century London.

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February 2022 in Review

I read a lot of books in February. Few of them applied to my challenges, though. The good news is that I continue to make progress on my great and worthy opponent, Mount TBR.

Climbing Mount Doom (Base goal: read or discard one book a week)
Week 1: Read Songs of America
Week 2: Read How To Destroy America in Three Easy Steps, Ben Shapiro
Week 3: Read The Authoritarian Moment, Ben Shapiro
Week 4: Read Jewels of Allah and Unmasked.

SCIENCE SURVEY (Base Goal: 12 Books)
….

3/12 so far.

Readin’ Dixie (Base goal: one book a month)
……

Classics Club (Base goal: 10 books)

….

The Unreviewed:
Oh, boy. The two Shapiro books are getting a combined review, my review of Unmasked is pending The Authoritarian Moment because it’s a helpful illustration; and I just haven’t gotten to The Professor in the Cage yet. Jewels of Allah wasn’t as substantive as I’d hoped, and is a very brief history of female activism in Iran predating the Pahlavis and continuing to the present day. Of interest was the author’s argument that the shah’s overnight banning of hijabs, while intended to be empowering, instead isolated women from conservative families, as they avoided participating in society in an immodest state: while the mullah’s hijab mandate was equally offensive from a personal rights view, it allowed these women to fully engage with society, particularly in university attendance, and saw the forging of a uniquely Islamic feminism.

Coming up in March:

Tomorrow is Ash Wednesday and the beginning of Lent, so I’ll be tackling Dante’s Purgatory, as well as finishing a book from an Orthodox source on the psychology of sin.

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Slanted

Slanted: How the News Media Taught Us to Love Censorship and Hate Journalism
© 2020 Sharyl Attkisson
316 pages

I stopped watching television news in 2009, a decision made for me by the overnight obsolescence of my TV set when the industry shifted to digital-only programming.  I didn’t miss it, truth be told;  it was shallow,  and tended toward the sensational even then. It didn’t help that I was increasingly prone to think of the media as nothing more than the handmaiden of the corporate state,  which distracted those it could not deceive.  In Slanted, a veteran reporter who began her career with CNN and CBS shares the discouraging path that the mainstream media has gone down, sacrificing its integrity for the sake of ratings, entertainment value, and ideological purity.  

The core problem, Attkisson writes, is that news corporations no longer assess the facts and deliver the story that develops from them: they begin with a pre-conceived idea and focus their reporting around that.  The preconceived pattern, the Narrative, has certain characteristics; it is one-sided, advances political interests while pretending to be nonpolitical, and relies heavily on withholding information on the grounds that the public (we knuckle-dragging unwashed masses in flyover country) would get the wrong idea were we exposed to all of the facts. Attkisson first noticed this at CBS, when numerous of her stories were tabled or revised into impotency by the higher-ups, motivated by corporate ties or political connections. Sometimes this was innocuous, even risible, as when a story on the corruption of school lunch funding was shelved because Michelle Obama was concurrently promoting better school lunches, and the bureaucrats-in-charge didn’t want to look as though they were attacking her work. Other instances were more serious, like the shelving of a story about dangerous 737 airframes, or another story on the ginned-up panic over swine flu. As the years progressed, Attkisson saw the politicization of news becoming less the exception and more the rule: instead of creating stories for intelligent viewers who wanted to hear and assess both sides of an issue, Attkisson was asked to seek out extreme viewpoints to create more polarizing stories. This unprofessionalism was made worse by increasingly obvious, and fairly uniform, political bias.  The drift of the news into sensationalism was most epitomized by the replacement of feature stories by panels, so that instead of focused dive into the facts of a story, viewers were instead subjected to six or more talking heads bouncing off one another.  

Although the final part of her work addresses the media’s contempt for Donald Trump specifically, Attkisson smartly establishes a nonpartisan case for media bias prior to this, drawing chiefly on criticisms of the media from liberal or progressive sources. She also presents readers with the evidence for their own review: one DailyShow video attacking various thoughtcriminals for their evaluations of COVID circa March-April 2020, for instance, puts the ‘offenders’ statements side by side of those put forth by establishment media or more favored politicians. Drawing on the same data, both came to similar conclusions — that COVID was dangerous chiefly to the elderly, that most deaths (at that time) had been linked to Washington nursing homes, etc. Why would one personality be damned for a statement and another be ignored? More importantly is Attkisson’s focus: she’s not writing about media bias because the media is biased against her; she’s writing against it because journalism itself has been destroyed by this naked embrace of narrative-centered sensationalism. The variety of stories has dwindled, the content of those stories has become increasingly inaccurate (the vetting of facts and sources being a casualty of news that tries to march to twitter’s timeline), and people are increasingly dropping them for nontraditional reporters. Gleaning news from twitter or facebook is worse than from the mainstream media, though: not only is it presented in a more superficial way, but the platforms have taken a page from the journalists’ book and are now actively censoring information that people can see.

Slanted makes for compelling reading, especially for those who believe that a free press is the lifeblood of a free nation. Although any story will carry a bias in the facts it chooses to report on, the one-sidedness of virtually all of our major news outlets and their reliance on cheap tricks to get viewer eyeballs does us no good. Neil Postman was aware of this in the eighties, when he wrote about the adulteration of journalism by television in his Amusing Ourselves to Death, and the problem is far worse now. I don’t know that there’s a plausible solution in the age of social media: at this point several generations of news-entertainers have come up through the ranks of the old news corporations, and those who can remember when their institutions did genuine investigation and nonpartisan coverage are aging out of the industry. Attkisson does provide a list of people within organizations whose personal integrity means they can be counted on for solid reporting, even if their institution as a whole now panders to the lowest common denominator.

Related:
Amusing Ourselves to Death, Neil Postman.
Manufacturing Consent, Edward S. Herman

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Of cyclists, colonial Catholics, and crappy endings

Last weekend I stayed at the Piedmont Hospital in Atlanta, there to be evaluated for admission to their kidney transplant list. Much of my downtime was spent (how else) reading.

How Cycling Can Save the World is a straightforward argument for the promotion of bicycling as transportation, following the Dutch example. Walker is particularly interested in reviving urban cycling’s prospects in Great Britain. which had some support at the time from Mayor (now Prime Minister) Boris Johnson, and he compares Johnson’s efforts with those of Bloomberg’s transport coordinator, Janette Sadik-Khan. Contrary to the book’s title, Walker doesn’t draw much on the environmental appeal of bike transport; instead, he focuses on health, human happiness, and the boons to cities. Preaching to the choir for me, of course, but I have three books waiting (Creating the Dutch Cycling City, Copenhaganize, and Streetfight) on the practicalities of creating better streets and human spaces within American cities.

Next up was Pioneer Priests and Makeshift Altars, which I’d intended to save for June. This is a history of colonial America’s Catholic communities, which were few and hard-pressed. Connor begins with a history of the reformation, particularly as it developed in England, before moving to the creation of Maryland as a hoped-for Catholic refuge during the era of Elizabethan and Jacobean England. English Catholics were more willing to try their luck at home than abroad, though, and Connor details how Maryland was quickly swamped by Puritans – -who, during the coup-by-Parliament that brought William and Mary of the Netherlands to the English throne, made Catholic colonists enemies in their own place once again. Despite the disdain many of the founding generation for Catholics, and the risk that independent states might impose some form of protestantism as the new state religion, many Catholics supported the cause for independence. Connor attributes this to Charles Carroll’s role as a revolutionary leader, as well as the pragmatic determination that it was better to stand side by side of puritanical patriots and have a voice in creating the new nation than to be permanently cast as outsider loyalists. This is a generally-ignored area of early American history, and I’m glad for Connor’s series. I’ll probably be continuing with his books on Catholics in the Civil War, followed by the Catholic experience in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when it was strengthened by mass immigration from Ireland, Italy, Poland, etc.

Called to Serve is another book on Catholics in early America, this one focusing on nuns.

Lastly and very leastly, I picked up John Grisham’s Sooley from the library bookstore. It costs $0.25 there ,and I’d like a refund. I’ve read Grisham’s other sport books before and more or less enjoyed them — particularly Bleachers, with its unique appeal to anyone who’s experience Friday night football in a small southern town. Sooley had promise, introducing us to a sweet kid from South Sudan whose height, talent, and hard work take him to America to play basketball. Within weeks of his arrival, he learns that his family has been dislocated by Sudan’s interminable civil war. Although he wants to return, he’s convinced by his stateside mentors that he can help them far better from the States, where he’s in a position to forward them money and raise awareness for their and other refugees’ plight. Although Sooley struggles both with this and the increasing challenge of playing basketball against other men who are just as talented as he is, he’s breaking out and on his way to glory when the hedonism his new wealth unlocks gets the better of him. I had mixed feelings about the novel before reaching the frustratingly dismal ending (the sentence structure is oddly simplistic, as if Grisham were writing for a younger or duller audience), Grisham’s weak attempt to put a silver lining on his bleak and depressing story reinforced my already healthy disaffection for him as an author.

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Hunting the Eagles

Hunting the Eagles
© 2016 Ben Kane
402 pages

Legio aeterna! Aeterna vitrix!

Six years ago, Rome was humiliated and a tenth of her army destroyed when a faithless auxiliary lured three legions into a boggy ambush in the Teutoburg forest. Centurion Tullus, one of the few survivors of the day, has cursed it since: demoted and barred from Italy, he can only mourn his fallen brothers and destroyed career. A chance encounter with Germanicus, newly appointed commander of the Rhine forces, offers him a chance to do more. Rome must punish the barbarians for their perfidy, and recover the eagles stolen from the men left to rot in Germany’s dark forests and rotten bogs. To avenge the fallen and restore the glory of Rome — this is Tullus’ mission.

As with Eagles at War we experience this summer through both Tullus’ and Arminius’ eyes. While Arminius devotes himself to the thankless task of keeping the German tribes united in their mission to defy Rome’s expansion (difficult, given how many German chieftans are headstrong and want to pursue their own targets), Tullus has the equally haunting mission of helping Germanicus confront a widespread mutiny in the ranks, followed by the dangerous business in German territory. With Tullus are a handful of his men from the now-lost 18th, who give us the infantryman’s perspective as well. We revisit (literally) the battleground of the ambush, as Germanicus wishes to pay his respects to the fallen and study the landscape his adversary so skillfully used. Although Germanicus is far wilier than Varus, Arminius presents no less a challenge.

Eagles at War is one of the best works of historical fiction I’ve ever read, and while Hunting the Eagles isn’t as stellar, it’s a case of shooting for the moon and landing in the stars; it’s still excellent reading. Kane presents us two opposing characters, both wholly sympathetic, and in the case of Tullus allows us to experience his strong bond with his men, as well. This is most effective when Tullus and Germanicus reach the hallowed ground where the dead lay, and Tullus and the others are overcome with grief for those who they had to abandon. It is their grief, distilled into determination for revenge, that allows Tullus and the others to survive Arminus’ continued efforts to destroy the morale of the Roman army and rout it once again. As with Eagles, I especially appreciate the way Kane integrates historical artifacts into the narrative; his characters exist not in a haze of memory and imagination, but are tied down to the real world — in objects of leather and metal, the remnants of which we can see today.

Expect quite a bit more of Kane this year; I have another book in this series, plus two in his Richard the Lionhearted series. Those two will arrive in April for Read of England.

Related:
Simon Scarrow’s own “Eagle” series
, following two soldiers (a centurion and optio) through Rome’s campaigns in Britain, the Rhine, and the East.

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