Towers of Shame – Books

book tower

Here it is, all the books that have been stacking up around here. The ones I didn’t get to this year. I plan on reading them next year, of course this is just the base of the tower as I’m constantly collecting new books that will increase it’s height… *sigh*

I better get to work!

For those who cannot read the spines I’ve listed the titles.

On the left from the top: The Ten Books of Architecture, Reading like a Writer, The Wars of God and Men, A Wizard of Earthsea, The War of Art, Ilium, Lord Darcy, Underworld, Fingerprints of the God, Jesus of Nazareth, The Prince of the Marshes, Books on Trial, God’s Gold, Mister B. Gone, The Wolf of Wall Street, Day of Empire, Evil Genes, Blacklisted by History.

On the right from the top: Camber the Heretic, Mistborn, Saint Camber, Gaia, Across the Nightingale Floor, The Great Upheaval, Death and Burial in the Roman World, The World is Flat, The Human Touch, Atheism, Hypnerotomachia Poliphili, Breaking the Spell, The Works of Josephus, The Works of Philo.

Books I’ve considered writing

Wanting to write the “Great American Novel” might be a one of the most cliche goals you’ll ever come across. But doesn’t it say something about the United States that one of the greatest desires for its citizens is a literary one? Unpack that goal and you’ll discover all sorts of interesting things about the American psyche, such as, writing and creativity are not the province of elites or artists, much to the chagrin of elitists and snobs everywhere.  Everyone and Anyone can write the next great American novel and many of them do.  great authors like Hemingway and John Steinbeck were originally panned for their prose and portrayal of Man. Every student in the United States now reads at least one of their books in school now, and you’ll be hard pressed to find complaints against them.

I too have contemplated sitting down and writing “the book that defined a generation”, but that isn’t the only think I’ve contemplated writing. So, begging your indulgence I’ll share with you the books that someday you’ll sit down and read.

I want to write a couple epic of poems, in the vein of the Iliad and the Aeneid, one about the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans in 70 CE. Like the poems by Homer and Virgil, the first  will center around a few members of the vast crowds, it’ll portray both the Romans and the Jews in the struggle over the city and its fall. There are several problems with this project right now, I don’t how to write verse poetry very well and it can’t very well be in the vein of the epic poets if it isn’t. The solution to this might be to write it in blank verse, like Milton wrote Paradise Lost. Even if I decide on blank verse I don’t know if I should start with this subject, blank verse isn’t easy and I want to do it right. I also need to brush up on my history of the event, at least the basics, much of it will be fiction, as epic poetry is mythology at it’s heart, but I should get names and places right at the very least. This is of course a long term project, one that hasn’t even been outlined yet but it could be really great. A final note, I have to tread very careful with this, if it is ever completed I don’t know if it could be published it might be seen as anti-Semitic, or anti-Christian, or anti-Latin ( I probably don’t have to worry much about the last one). The second one might very well be the first as I need lots of practice with verse, I though I’d take a battle from World War 2 and versify it. The Normandy invasion or perhaps the final assault on Berlin, this one too will be mythologized keeping the places and names accurate while heroifying everyone… Maybe not everyone.

I’ve actually written parts of this next one, but it has been revised and cut up so many times I don’t know if any of what is on paper now will be there when it is done. Imagine an alienated middle aged man. Distant from his friends and family. Trapped in the existential crisis of what his life is about, if anything. Anchorless he wanders through out his life. One morning he is awoken by a phone call from the family physician, his mother is dying, she lies in a hospital bed hanging on to life. He gets up and rushes to go see her, not because he loves her but because she is his mother. On the way there as he pushes through the faceless crowds of the city, he notices a woman, a beautiful woman.  In a world where he sees only shades of gray, this woman is a brilliant white light. she disappears into the crowds and his heart breaks, his continues on to see his mom. Time passes. He meets this woman again. Their conversations are pleasantries he can never remember. All he knows is that he loves her, that she makes life worth living. They see each other, she moves in with him. His life continues to be an endless round of meaningless meetings and wanderings, except for the girl waiting for him at home. He does not know what she does, he has never had the courage to ask, he suspects wild things about her, impossible things. She disappears and he is broken, she returns and he is elated, she leaves again, the cycle repeats. More time passes, his mother is getting worse. He visits her everyday now. One day he wakes up next to this woman, the woman he loves and she stirs next to him, murmuring, the murmers terrify him. She wakes and looks into his eyes and his cannot hold his, he looks away afraid. The phone rings, it is the doctor his mom is not going to make it through the day. He rushes out of the bed, and to his mother’s side. As she lies there fading away, he realizes that the time he has spent with her these past years as she die were the happiest of his life, that he regrets all the time he wasted not being with his mother. He begins to cry. his mother stirs and murmers, the same noises and half words his girlfriend whispered that morning and again he is afraid. The door opens and she is there, the woman he loves beautiful, bright and terrible. He looks into her eyes and knows that she is death, come to take his mother away, he knows he can do nothing to stop her, that his love for this woman doesn’t change the reality of what she is. He begs anyway. Death places her hand upon his mothers chest and looks into his eyes again, this time he does not look away. It is beautiful and meaningless, it is his life. His mom shudders and dies. His girlfriend, Death, walks out of the room. He is alone.  This book is very much in the vein of Louis Celine and Albert Camus, where pictures are painted with words but meaning is never given. I also think that this would make an excellent graphic novel, if I ever write it out or could find an artist to work with.

A piece of high fantasy dealing with the lost continent of Atlantis, also maybe aliens from another planet. Think Stitchin’s work fictionalized (like it isn’t already) and given characters and plots.

A re-telling of the Arthurian legends in a contemporary setting. Keep the grail and Merlin and the Lady in the Lake. Keep the fantasy but put it in 21st century Europe or the United States, even better in South America or Africa. The heroes are insane or genius. I’m thinking like Neil Gaiman’s work with this one.

A fantasy series not using Medieval Europe as a template but rather Native American. Not the bullshit nature love Native American either, that image was created by a PR firm not any other. I’m thinking the mound builders of the Mississippi valley, of course I’d be incorporating the fantasy and myth of this culture as well into the story. I’ve also thought of doing this and putting it in a bronze age Mediterranean setting (Minoan)

There are some more, but they are hardly more than a few ideas on scraps of paper right now. So I guess when they are more firmly shaped I’ll add them here.

I’m Writing about BookMooch

Why? Mostly because it’s a great idea and I love books. BookMooch is a book swapping website. You post books you’d be willing to give away and then when people request them from you you send them to them. You get points for doing this and with those points you can request books you’re interested in from other people. There are other sites which do the same thing (e.g. Swaptree, PaperbackSwap, WhatsOnMyBookshelf, etc… just google book swap) I use BookMooch because it’s free to join and you can’t buy points, you only get points for giving books to other people. There is some cost to you as you’ll be paying for the postage to mail these books out. This isn’t as bad as it sounds though, considering that most of the books you’ll be sending are Mass Markets it’ll only cost you 2 or 3 dollars to send it anywhere in the U.S. Which is a deal when new MM cost between 6 and 9 dollars. I also like it because I don’t have all the room in the world, and books and bookcases take up space, space better spent being filled by things like dressers, or tables, desks, etc… With BookMooch I can get a book I want to read, and then give it away again… Wait that sounds just like my local library, which I don’t have to anything for… hmmm… Ok, well with BookMooch you have the option of keeping the book, no such luck with your local library. The only other problem with BookMooch is that the selection is pretty slim, or you’ll find the book you want but it’s in another country and the owner doesn’t ship internationally… Over-all it’s a good thing, especially if you have books laying around that you aren’t using but don’t want to throw away. Put them up someone will want them and you can exchange them for a whole new set!

7 books that can change your mind

Words are powerful little things. When used wisely they can spark discussion and change, even revolution. Here’s a list of books that when read carefully and considered honestly can change your life. why 7? Because it’s not 10 so I’m not ripping off a late night host and every other damn person on the internets… Yup, I’m completely original! In no specific order, here we go!

7. Getting Things Done by David Allen – If you have heard of the man he’s sort of a guru for tech heads and the IT crowd. Allen’s done a lot of things in his life but know he works on productivity. “Peace of Mind is an empty in-box” . GTD is new age spiritualism without the new age and spiritualism. Every thing in your life can be reduced to a list of tasks, tasks can either be done now or organized to do later. Everything that needs to get done goes in the in-box, process your life until the in-box is empty, viola! Check out the spread in the November issue of Wired or read it here. Also check out 43folders.com to see how others are implementing GTD in their lives.

6. Silent Spring by Rachel Carson – This book originally published in 1962 largely birthed the modern environmentalist movement. Carson was the first to write extensively about the damage humans were causing to the environment. Carson’s message is still needed today in a world rapidly being stripped of it’s resources and beauty to satisfy our needs. If you want a more current treatment of the environmental crisis try Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth or Newt Gingrich’s A Contract with the Earth. Yup, this is a bi-partisan issue and one that must be addressed soon!

5. Understanding Comics by Scott McCloud – Comics can be about more than just pseudo-homo-erotic relationships between spandex clad Men and boys. Scott McCloud uses the genre’s style to explain the who, what, when, where, and whys of comics. An insightful look at just how comics have contributed to storytelling in our culture. After being converted you’ll want to see some of the good stuff, try Neil Gaiman’s Sandman series or Bill Willingham’s Fables

4. The Bible by Dead guys – Have you read it? It’s supposed to be the best selling book of all time. Millions believe it was dictated by God, and contains every answer to every question you might have. So… have you read it? If you believe that it is the word of God, and haven’t read it, why not? Seems like it ‘dbe a priority… Maybe because it’s filled with mostly drivel and the ridiculous? I urge everyone to sit down and read it cover to cover, and then ask yourself could any “divine” being come up with the stuff that is in it? If your God suffers from OCD and is a murderous, misogynistic prick then… yeah, maybe he wrote this one… There are plenty of religious texts to satisfy your curiosity

3. The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin -Written nearly 150 years ago, this book still has the power to drive people batty. Note that these people are not scientists, Among scientists there is no debate over whether evolution happens, nor is there any debate if it is done through natural selection and common descent either, they’ve moved on to much more exciting and esoteric topics since then. No, Darwin’s seminal text gets fundamentalists upset. People who like to believe that the Earth is only about 6000 years old… I’m not going to give their tired arguments any play here. Read the book it’s amazing, and the theory is still spot on, though Darwin didn’t know how… For further reading check out the 29+ Evidences for Macroevolution, any essay by Stephen Jay Gould, the Ancestor’s Tale by Richard Dawkins, or anything by E.O. Wilson.

2. The Blank Slate by Steven Pinker – Pinker is a experimental psychologist and a  vocal advocate for evolutionary psychology, which tries to explain functional traits of the human brain like memory and language as products of natural selection, this is his most famous book. In it he takes the nature vs. nurture debate head on, coming down hard on the side of nature winning out. Environment plays some role in who we are but Pinker shows that the science (mostly twin studies and models) that our genetic make-up plays a much more powerful role in who we become/are. The book is often seen as an attack on free-will which is why it has become so controversial. He discusses somewhat the ethical dilemmas such a beliefs brings up, like is it just to punish someone for being violent when their genes have programmed them such, would eugenics be a good idea, is it right to screen children and people to see if they have unsocial genes, etc… A delicate subject and a honest discussion of what it means to all of us and society if we are much more programmed than we like to think.

1. The Amazing adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon –  If you’ve gotten bored of fiction and don’t like reading sci-fi or fantasy. This book is for you. Chabon’s work straddles the fine line between literature and fantasy. His books all contain an element of the fantastical while remaining firmly rooted in our reality. Chabon won a Pulitzer for this book, if you like it and want more of the same he has other books out or you can try some of Neil Gaiman’s books, though they are more fantastical, or something by Chris Moore.

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