Tis the time's plague when madmen lead the blind.
King Lear (IV.1.46)
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www.authentichistory.com/
Michael Pollan: The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals
A delicious read, for anyone who has ever considered health, environmentalism, or ethics in making a conscious choice about the food he or she eats.
Jon R. Luoma: Hidden Forest : Biography of an Ecosystem
Back in Oregon, tramping through the rainy forests of the coast, I remember reading this fascinating book about the life of the forest. Its secrets and stories unfold very much like the events in the life of a very great old person: a hero, a saint, a tireless worker, a quietly devoted family member, an uncommonly marvelous individual. This is the Pacific Northwest rainforest. One of my favorite parts was the story of how life re-established itself on the barren slopes of Mount Saint Helens within weeks of the eruption in 1980 that killed everything in its path. I love the categories of description and analysis in this volume, and also the big concepts about what an old growth forest is and does, which Jon Luoma so skillfully weaves together. (*****)
Edward R. Tufte: Envisioning Information
The discovery of this book occurred on a summer evening at the home of a fellow graduate student in architecture at the University of Oregon in Eugene. Like many of our peers he was intellectually gifted, creative, idealistic, passionate about architecture and design, and ... eccentric. I knew from the moment I saw this book on his shelf that it was a pearl I would need to obtain for myself, and hopefully, pass on to others who love to wander in the country of graphic information design. (*****)
Paul Roberts: The End of Oil
A must-read for all of us whose daily lives and future are collectively tied to the fate of the energy economy. See related entries beginning 6 March 2006, with links to the author's web site and an interview published in Mother Jones magazine in 2004. (*****)
Daniel Helminiak: What The Bible Really Says About Homosexuality
In this brief and readable book, Helminiak takes a thoughtful look at the Biblical scriptures invoked by Christians who feel that homosexuality is sinful and against God's will. In doing so he takes on the larger issue of how people read scripture. For gay people coming from strong religious backgrounds or struggling with issues of faith, or who simply take relgion seriously, this is an important book to read. Christians struggling with the issue of homosexuality would also be advised to look again at the scriptures - with an open mind - using insights gained from this book.
A former Roman Catholic priest, Daniel Helminiak is currently a practicing psychotherapist and educator at the Pittsburgh Pastoral Institute in Pittsburgh, PA. (*****)
george lakoff: don't think of an elephant
A professor of Cognitive Science and Liguistics at UC Berkeley, George Lakoff wants to teach us "how conservatives think" - and how framing ideas and promoting an overarching moral vision have enabled them to dominate government and the current social and political discourse in this country. If the liberal-progressive movements want to regain political influence, win on issues, and provide a meaningful counterbalance to conservative power, they are going to have to learn the lessons of this book - lessons conservatives learned a long time ago - and get busy. Very busy. See my post "Crisis = Danger + Opportunity" for related material. This book is a must-read.. (*****)
italo calvino: invisible cities
As an introduction to the term, every student in my graduate architecture studio received the assignment of analyzing one of italo calvino's city stories and representing it as a conceptual model.
This little book is so engagingly analytical and thought-provoking. It looks at the city as a series of collective experiences, each of them illustrating a particular aspect of the city from a phenomenological standpoint.
The stories, it turns out, are all about one particular city, one which is uniquely celebrated, famous, and centuries-old. Can you guess which one it is? (*****)
Mary Oliver: New and Selected Poems
If your life is getting you down, or you feel cynical about politics, or you wonder if you're just wasting time, or you have lost the ability to see beauty and purpose in things, then go read some of Mary Oliver's poems immediately and find yourself in love with life again.
First, read "Wild Geese" on page 110, which everybody quotes because it speaks to people so clearly and directly. But don't miss her other masterpieces, including "Morning Poem," (page 106) which I once heard read aloud during a morning service at the First Congregational Church in Boulder, Colorado by Rev. Martie McMane. It was such a morning, and such a poem, to restore my soul:
...each pond with its blazing lilies / is a prayer heard and answered / lavishly, / every morning, ...
Go read the whole thing now. And then every other poem in the book. (*****)
John Boswell: Christianity, Social Tolerance, and Homosexuality : Gay People in Western Europe from the Beginning of the Christian Era to the Fourteenth Century
For a scholarly tome this is really a great read, and it's a must-read for gay people and anyone else who wants to understand where homophobia came from in our Western culture, and how it got so entrenched in mainstream Christianity, and how it developed alongside other manifestations of social intolerance against women, Jews, religious and intellectual dissidents, the poor, and Muslims. One important causative factor Boswell identified, which seems so relevant today: " ... the rise of absolute government ... a sedulous quest for intellectual and institutional uniformity and corporatism throughout Europe."
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.: Crimes Against Nature
Excerpt:
"These elected governments used the provocation of terrorist attacks, continual wars, and invocations of patriotism and homeland security to privatize the commons, tame the press, muzzle criticism by opponents, and turn government over to ccorporate control. 'It is always a simple matter to drag the people along,' noted Hitler's sidekick, Hermann Goering, ' ...All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the peacemakers for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country.'" (*****)
Edward R. Tufte: Envisioning Information
The discovery of this book occurred on a summer evening at the home of a fellow graduate student in architecture at the University of Oregon in Eugene. Like many of our peers he was intellectually gifted, creative, idealistic, passionate about architecture and design, and ... eccentric. I knew from the moment I saw this book on his shelf that it was a pearl I would need to obtain for myself, and hopefully, pass on to others who love to wander in the country of graphic design.
C. P. Cavafy: C. P. Cavafy: Collected Poems
The works of the poet C.P. Cavafy(1863 - 1933) are not always my favorite - he wrote in Greek and so many of his poems are painfully passionate expressions of regret and longing for a youth denied. Yet in "Ithaka" he conjures the rich mythic grandeur of Homer's epic and
delivers it up as a kind of manifesto on living life to its fullest. I have always felt the power in these lines and turned to them as an ancient Greek mariner might have to his map of the Cyclades - for guidance through a rock-strewn sea.
John Boswell: Christianity, Social Tolerance, and Homosexuality : Gay People in Western Europe from the Beginning of the Christian Era to the Fourteenth Century
John Boswell was a gay historian at Yale who specialized in Western European civilization from the beginning of the Christian Era through the high Middle Ages. This work takes a a serious look at religious and cultural attitudes toward homosexuality during that period. He tells a richly detailed story about the rise of intolerance in Europe, how intolerance toward gay people was intimately related to intolerance shown toward other groups, and how the Christian church came to develop its strong antipathy toward homosexuality. The most important premise in this book, I think, is that, homophobia in Christianity was a product of social forces which came to a head in the Middle Ages, and therefore homophobia did not follow directy from the early church, or for that matter, from the reading of the scriptures.
Henri J. M. Nouwen: Bread for the Journey : A Daybook of Wisdom and Faith
Henri Nouwen (1932-1996) was the senior pastor of L'Arche Daybreak in Toronto, Canada, a community where mentally disabled men and women, with their assistants, create a home for one another. Nouwen's life and work are firmly rooted in Christianity, but in his writings I encounter a voice which is so expansive and wise that I cannot think of him as belonging to one denomination or one faith. It's that transcendency that feeds me on my own spiritual journey.
Bill Devall: Deep Ecology
I found this book in a bookstore at Dinosaur National Monument in Utah. I had just visited the fossilized prehistoric riverbed where skeletons of dinosaurs were being painstakingly excavated by paleontologists. The revelation I received from that visit is the stuff of a longer post. It's enough to say that I was in a mentally and spiritually receptive mode when I came across this book. Here is an excerpt from the synopsis on the back cover:
"Deep Ecology explores the philosophical, psychological, and sociological roots of today's environmental movement, examines the human-centered assumptions behind most approaches to nature, explores the possibilities of an expanded human consciousness, and offers specific direct actions for individuals to practice."
Adrienne Rich: Dark Fields of the Republic: Poems, 1991-1995
The poetry of California poet Adrienne Rich found its way into sermons I heard at the Metropolitan Community Chrch in San Francisco, from 1993-1998. Rev. Jim Mitulski and Rev. Penny Nixon drew on her work to address the heart: about passion, democracy, the dangerous times we were living in. What has changed since then? The times seem even more dangerous now, and the voice of this poet more desperately needed.
William Carlos Williams: Selected Poems
A colleague and dear friend, Allan Peterkin, gave me my copy of this volume of William Carlos Williams' poetry in 1989. It's a book I always keep with me, and open frequently, because the poems are like unfading flowers, still fragrant with the freshness of their first bloom. Am I just being sentimental? I don't think so. Take a walk in this garden and see for yourself.
Wendell Berry: The Collected Poems of Wendell Berry, 1957-1982
Wendell Berry's poetry is rooted in the earth and in the soul; he is an essential American, one you simply have to encounter. I find I pick through his works, connecting with some and finding others beyond the range of my immediate needs. But the quality of his work is lasting and consistent. As for "The fear of love" - here is a poem that speaks to me in a uniquely powerful way. Its spare beauty and redemptive truth are the qualities that make it special to me. It is one of the few poems I have memorized and carry with me everywhere, like a small personal treasure.
Annie Dillard: Pilgrim At Tinker Creek
Annie Dillard spent a year in a cabin beside Tinker Creek, somewhere in West Virginia, with her solitude, a multitude of cultural, historical, classical and scientific literature, and a keen sensory awareness of everything going on around her. This book is an account of that experience, organized according to the seasons like book of days. Her deep and ecstatic reflections on the phenomenon of being alive to the world in the present moment run through the work like a stream of everchanging, life-giving water.
"The tree with the lights in it" constitutes the pivotal reference, describing a moment of pure experience unadulterated by previous experience or existing ideas - it is hard enough for her to describe it, but the idea of it is exhiliarating. Dillard's book won the Pulitzer Prize for literature in 1975; I read and reread it for its continued power to refresh and renew my own sense of wonder.
walt whitman: calamus
Whitman's poetry is a manifestation of the real and true homegrown grassroots american spirit; whitman was a passionate, sensitive man who worked as a nurse in the civil war and witnessed the emergence of the country from that war; he celebrated himself in "leaves of grass" and extended that celebration to everyone and everything. If he were alive today he would undoubtedly self-identify as agay man; as for his spirit, it is unquestionably queer as much as it is unquestionably universal.
My Junk
Duncan Sheik (music), Steven Sater (book and lyrics): Spring Awakening (2006 Original Broadway Cast)
The score of Spring Awakening is rich and achingly beautiful, each song a project of passionate expression. The play, based on the play of the same name by Frank Wedekind (1891), is set in a 19th century German village, but the themes of adolescent yearning and struggle against the tyranny of the adult world are expressed in the contemporary language of its songs' lyrics. The play, then, deliberately and consciously transcends its historical setting, and the plight of the protagonists becomes universal. In the end, the music is so delicious you will be chewing on and digesting it long after the play is done.
rufus wainwright: want two
Wow I love this lyrically-rich, musically adventurous album sung by a guy with an irresistably sexy croon and a demonstrable love of the piano. "The Art Teacher" is a killer ballad about a buried passion so intense it has no rationale justification - and none is offered - you just listen and feel your body slip down into the river with poor dead Ophelia where you too will beautifully drown. Bravo Rufus
Sweet Afton
Nickel Creek: Nickel Creek
This tune is one of the many gems on Nickel Creek's first album. The tune is by mandolin virtuoso Chris Thile, bringing the bountiful lyrics of Robert Burns to life, such as in this verse:
"Thou stock-dove whose echo resounds thro' the glen, / Ye wild whistling blackbirds in yon thorny den, / Thou green-crested lapwing, thy screaming forbear, I charge you disturb not my slumbering fair."
Nickel Creek is the first album by the trio of the same name, consisting of the wonderfully talented Sean and Sara Watkins, and Chris Thile. My sister Ruth sent me this album and what a great gift it was. I never get tired of listening to this and subsequent albums by Nickel Creek. These artists are tapping a rich vein of American folk music and imbuing it with their own unique combination of youthful clarity and disarmingly mature styling. (*****)
Strange Boy
Joni Mitchell: Hejira
Elektra/Asylum Records 1976
A timeless work of art, packed with the most intimate, sophisticated, delicious lyrics. It’s about existential angst, the rollercoaster emotions of love, wandering, pilgrimage, searching for yourself. I've been listening to this album for decades, and know it like a treasured book of poetry.
(*****)
Vicar in a Tutu
The Smiths: The Queen Is Dead
Sire Records Company
1985
I had an acoustic, poetic and existential revelation the first time I heard this album, a long time ago when Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher ruled the world, and I wondered if I would ever find love. Not only are Morrissey's lyrics exquisite, Johnny Marr's guitar pulls it all together in a mash of riveting, intense, dreamlike sound. You could listen to the music or the lyrics separately and still love this album – together, they are sheer rapture. Can you tell I'm a Smiths fan for life?
(*****)
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