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January 24, 2002

The Scarlet Pimpernel Discovered

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They seek him here; they seek him there;
Those Frenchies seek him everywhere.
Is he in heaven? Is he in hell?
That demmed elusive Pimpernel.

My mother has long been a fan of Baroness Orczy’s works. Over the years, she’s accumulated quite a collection, several of which I’ve found for her in used bookstores. In fact, she has almost the whole Scarlet Pimpernel series. But she was still missing two volumes: Sir Percy Leads the Band and Mam’zelle Guillotine. If you check AddAll, you’ll find the latter for $500 – $1200 or so, which is well beyond anything I can afford.

I’d long dreamed of being able to present a copy of those books to my mother. Last night, the dream came true. I was surfing the web and I thought of checking Google and lo and behold! there they were was in e-text: Mam’zelle Guillotine and Sir Percy Leads the Band. I was delighted, and so was my mother.

By the way, for those who don’t know, the Scarlet Pimpernel (Sir Percy Blakeney) is an Englishman who sets out to rescue people from the murderous Revolutionaries in France. He often leaves behind a copy of the poem quoted above or the sign of a small red flower, the scarlet pimpernel. The books are a lot of fun, especially when Sir Percy (who pretends to be an idle, brainless fop) encounters Citizen Chauvelin, Robespierre’s agent. But I suspect they also give a fairly accurate representation of the spirit of revolutionary France.

Posted by John Barach @ 9:46 pm | Discuss (0)
January 16, 2002

An Unofficial Rose

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Last night I finished reading Iris Murdoch‘s An Unofficial Rose. It’s her sixth novel, and the sixth one I’ve read. Coincidence? Not at all. I’ve been trying to read her work in the order it was published. It’s something I do with a lot of authors. Am I just weirdly compulsive that way, or do other people do the same thing?

An Unofficial Rose is a complicated story, which is typical for Murdoch. Hugh Peronnet’s wife has died after forty years of marriage, and he begins to pursue his old mistress, Emma Sands, for whom he had nearly left his wife once. His son, Randall, dreams of breaking free from his marriage; he has fallen in love with a woman he deems perfect, Emma’s secretary Lindsey. Mildred Finch, a friend of the family, meanwhile, has long been in love with Hugh. Her brother is in love with Randall’s wife, Ann, and she reciprocates that love, but neither is willing to do anything about it so long as she is married to Randall. Hugh’s grandson Penn is infatuated with Randall and Ann’s daughter Miranda. And Miranda? She has plans of her own.

Put like that, An Unofficial Rose could sound like a cheap soap opera, but that would be far from the truth. Each of the relationships in the story — and there are more of them I haven’t mentioned here — sheds light on the other ones and on the various personalities involved.

Murdoch herself was not a Christian, though the book begins and ends with Scripture (“O spare me a little, that I may recover my strength: before I go hence and be no more seen”). Somewhere Murdoch once referred to herself as a Manichaean, in the sense that, though she didn’t believe in the God of Scripture, she did believe in an absolute Good and Evil. But Good and Evil aren’t merely concepts that float somewhere off in space; they are lived out in our concrete lives, in the choices we make, and in particular in the choices we make in our relationships. We often make bad choices for good motives and good choices for bad motives — and many times, we can’t even determine what our real motives are (“But to be understood is not a human right. Even to understand oneself is not a human right”). Nor do we always know what we want. Certainly, we want happiness, but where is happiness to be found? Not every path that promises happiness brings you to that goal, nor does every painful step doom you to a life of misery.

It’s not my favourite Murdoch novel, nor is it a book I’d recommend to everyone, but it is a thought-provoking read. For more on Murdoch’s ethical fiction, you might want to see the articles by Alan Jacobs and Joseph Malikail.

Posted by John Barach @ 11:59 am | Discuss (0)
December 31, 2001

Best Books Read in 2001

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Here are some of the books I enjoyed most during 2001:

Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto EcoAll Things Bright and Beautiful by James HerriotThrough New Eyes by James B. Jordan
A Practical and Theological Commentary by James B. JordanBlessed Are the Hungry by Peter J. LeithartRediscovering the Centrality of the Church
The Unknown Shore by Patrick O'BrianMy Name is Asher Lev by Chaim PotokThe Gift of Asher Lev by Chaim Potok
The Pleasures of God by John PiperFuture Grace by John PiperOut to Canaan by Jan Karon
The Call of Grace by Norman ShepherdThe Hobbit by J. R. R. TolkienThe Aeneid by Virgil, translated by Robert Fitzgerald
Joy at the End of the Tether by Douglas WilsonPeace by Gene WolfeThe Crown and the Fire by N. T. Wright
What Saint Paul Really Said by N. T. WrightThe Lord and His Prayer by N. T. WrightThe Anubis Gates by Tim Powers

I’d also have to add Larry Woiwode’s Silent Passengers, a collection of short stories. Oh, yeah, and then there was also….

Does this describe me? Um … yes. Thanks to Jim for the link.

Posted by John Barach @ 3:29 pm | Discuss (0)

Wolfe on Tolkien

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Here’s an article by Gene Wolfe on The Lord of the Rings, entitled “The Best Introduction to the Mountains“:

It is said with some truth that there is no progress without loss; and it is always said, by those who wish to destroy good things, that progress requires it. No great insight or experience of the world is necessary to see that such people really care nothing for progress. They wish to destroy for their profit, and they, being clever, try to persuade us that progress and change are synonymous.

Posted by John Barach @ 2:40 pm | Discuss (0)

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