In a couple of weeks its going to be Jacques Barzun's 102nd birthday. I hope Jacques hangs in there because in this degraded epoch of ours where ill educated oafs like Glenn Beck and Patrick J Buchanan are lauded as sages Barzun is a rare link to an age when a person would be ashamed to pontificate on any subject without having a thorough knowledge of history, the classics and several European languages....
Born in France, educated in America, Barzun was for many decades the doyen of the Great Books programme at Columbia University. I have read three books by Monsieur B: Simple & Direct - a sensible and practical guide to writing; The Use and Abuse of Art - an essay which does exactly what it says on the tin describing the uses and abuses of art; From Dawn to Decadence - probably the best history of western civilization from 1500 - 2000 that has ever been written. Let me talk a little more about Dawn to Dec. It's basically a long but fast paced cultural history for the general reader. Barzun's prose is effortless, his learning eclectic, his wit playful, clever and acerbic. It's a book that manages to be both deep and wide ranging and most important of all it, is never dull. If you haven't read From Dawn to Decadence I both pity and envy you. I pity because you're undoubtedly lost in a sea of unknowning, but I envy because you've got a real treat to look forward to. (Hmm, doesn't Mr. T. famously say the previous sentence in a more concise way?)
...
Anyway, Joyeux Anniversaire, Jacques.
67 comments:
Why on earth Texas, though? And why isn't there more evidence of his influence there? All right, I guess there's evidence of every kind of thing in Texas, but he has definitely been overshadowed by the loony fringe.
I'm sorry to report that I know him as a name only. I'll have to correct that.
I'll have to correct it too. I actually have never heard of him.
Also, not that I am at all fluent or anything in French, but I had this corrected for me numerous times at parties in Montreal - the correct term is Bonne Fête.
Actually, I have probably read an essay or two of his in the NYRB, come to think of it. But I still don't have a clear sense of who he was as a writer. He wasn't one of the ones I read because he wrote it, as I would with, say, Elizabeth Hardwick.
He was born in 1907.
No lie, why Texas?
Thanks, Adrian, for the book recommendations, which I’m always looking for. All three of those Barzun books are now on my “To read” list.
On a different note, do you know why Stuart Neville’s The Twelve has a different title in the US? Just curious. I’ll be starting Neville’s book today, just as soon as I finish up the last few pages of another book.
Seana
His wife is from Texas so he went to her hometown for his retirement.
Dawn to Dec is a must read both for the subject matter and the prose. Trust me.
Sheiler
I think you'll like Dawn to Dec. Give it a go. Plenty of used copies around cheap too.
Leo
Thanks for that. I actually didnt know he had a Wikipedia page. I've now corrected it.
Holden
His wife is from, I think, San Antonio.
I dont know why there are two titles unless they thought Belfast was too Irishy.
I actually own A Stroll With William James, now I come to see the list. I don't think I ever got aaround to reading it though.
Hi Adrian,
I read your blog pretty regularly (and very much enjoy it - makes me feel like I learn something new every day) and I haven't seen any mention of your YA books..do you have another blog or spot on the interwebs where you talk about your YA books?
I'm reading them now, on the second one, and liking it quite a lot...I'm not so much a young adult in age any more, but I love the genre and wouldn't mind hearing about the latest news, discussions and such. Thanks.
Vaguely literary OTs:
So this means Obama is Adrian Veidt?
Periodic table of typefaces
Marco, I LOVE that periodic table of font types and have already sent it on to several people (who love it).
Seana
Give him a go and let me know what you think.
Marco
Jesus I love that periodic table of typefaces. I might have to buy it. The one and only thing I share with Stanley Kubrick is my obssession with fonts. Kubrick had whole books of them. I love 'em, although I'm not the biggest fan os his favourite Futura Extra Bold.
Holden
I think there's a secret society of typeface obssessives out there of which I am a card carrying member.
Holden
Then I bet this one will really send you off your rocker.
Jennifer
Nope this is the place for the YA's.
Whats new?
Well I'm working on a new YA at the moment. Should be done by Christmas unless I get the dreaded writer's block before the end.
It's provisionally called Dark Energy (I'm also thinking about the title I Know You Are But What Am I? and several others).
Its about a skateboard punk kid from Las Vegas who moves with his family to Colorado Springs and starts going to a private school there where there are a lot of strange goings on, including a serial killer, witchcraft, insanity and all that good stuff.
Its pretty dark for a YA, but hopefully not too dark.
Marco
I remember that one.
I'm pretty tolerant of other people's taste in fonts, I dont know why Kubrick was so prejudiced against serifs.
Thanks, Marco. That did send me off my rocker. I’m a fontaphile.
Nice little factoid about Kubrick, didn’t know he was obsessive about fonts.
I'm fairly tolerant of other people’s taste in fonts, unless, of course, they’re using Comic Sans – that’s gotta go.
Holden
I think you'll like this article in the Guardian
They later made a documentary out of it.
I actually picked up a great cheap used hardback of From D to D (see? two can play at this abbreviation game) at our local, equally great used bookstore and although I've only read the preface, it looks fabulous. Although since its a whopper of a book, it's a bit of a downer to think of this as a 'distillation' of his thought. Here, by way of contrast, is a distillation of my thought:
...
Thank you.
Actually, there is nothing too dark for YA. People tend to underestimate the teenage psyche. It's 'not dark enough' that you want to worry about.
I don't know what this says about the human race, but it's good for writers.
Fascinating article about Kubrick.
Is this the documentary based on the article?
Seana
I hope you like it. I've read it twice now and on the second read a few years ago I still found something surprising and delightful on every page.
Holden
No that isnt it, although that documentary is pretty good. Scorsese's insights on Kubrick are particularly good.
The one I'm thinking about is called Stanley Kubrick's Boxes. Until recently the whole thing was on YouTube and Google Video but someone has removed it.
Well, I could read the whole thing through and a month from now, find something not only new but totally unexpected in every paragraph. Ad infintum. Sad, but on the other hand, it means that my library probably wouldn't suffer much from being pared down.
Completely OT: Adrian, looks like Seattle / Amazon is looking to make Seattle more of a powerhouse in book publishing/selling/bookery in general.
Check it out:
http://slog.thestranger.com/slog/archives/2009/11/09/amazon-tried-to-woo-literary-agents
Thanks Adrian...new book sounds dark and interesting...look forward to reading another adventure. I picked up Fifty Grand and Dead I May Well Be...so those are awaiting a read once I finish the Lighthouse triology.
YAs are my thing - after years of reading the classics and the required lit for my English degree and then becoming a copyeditor and only reading manuscripts, I found I like the sense of hope in the characters that embody YA lit. Hope and adventure are the best combination in my humble opinion...
Holden, it seems to me I heard that "The Ghosts of Belfast" became "The Twelve" in the UK because of British antipathy toward remembering the Troubles. I heard also that Colin Bateman had to set a television series of his in England rather than Northern Ireland for similar reasons.
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Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/
Oh, and when we sang "Happy Birthday" in French, the salutation was "joyeux anniversaire." This may be the case simply because "joyeux anniversaire" scans like "happy birthday to you." I don't know if the phrase had any currency outside the song.
Finally, I have just returned from my first visit to Texas. Sure, Houston has lots of chicken-fried steak and gentlemen's clubs, but there are surprises, too.
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Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/
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Thanks, Peter, for the explanation. And glad you found surprises in Texas.
From Sheiler, on an older thread: Ding Ding Ding! You're absolutely correct. This means I have to go out and get a lottery ticket, right? Or have a seance? Or put my partner's hand in lukewarm water while she sleeps?
So which of those choices did you end up taking? The lukewarm water one would have been my choice. ;->
Ordered "From Dawn to Decadence" today.
Peter,
My francophone in-laws sing/sang Bonne fete a toi...maybe it's the difference between Quebecers and the French snobs French?
Uh oh, maybe I've sparked something here?
I ate chicken-fried steak before ever wading into the celebratin' ways of the foreigners (hey I went to school for 8 months in Oklahoma before absconding with my wit and psyche).
Holden,
I was so tempted with the lukewarm water trick, but didn't want to personally suffer any consequences sleeping 4 inches away....
I feel completely lame for having chosen convenience over hilarity.
Seana
Well, I think you'll like Dawn to Dec and you could always lend it to someone if the space becomes an issue, although my pbk is quite compact.
Peter
I've never been to Texas. I went to airport at Houston once but never actually to anywhere in the state. I've heard Austin's nice though.
Sheiler
Re the Seattle thing. Somehow I think the authors are still going to get screwed.
Jennifer
Well hopefully you'll like this one. Its got a nice clash of cultures theme and hopefully when its done it should be pretty exciting and interesting. We'll see.
Anon
Hope you like Dawn to Dec.
Oh, I've long since gotten past the point where space is an issue--I mean there's, no space, not that there's no issue. It's a bookseller's curse, or luck depending on your mood.One book more or less isn't going to matter much.
I won't get through this one very fast but I think my old teacher Mary Holmes, who was an art historian, would very much agree with his idea of our part of the cycle being decadent. She was always talking about the exhaustion of our era in the arts. Of course, I'd be very surprised if she hadn't read Barzun, but she wouldn't have been around for this book. I'm very curious about what a new era would look like, but expect it will not happen fast enough for me to see it. It's probably just as well. I don't suppose I'd really understand.
I had hoped to order D to D as a Sony ebook to deal with the space issue but I had to get one of those paper things instead.
I'm not sure how an ebook of this would work, because it's got a lot of really nice little insets. They're text, not illustrations, but still, they fit in in a certain way to the page.
A drive to Austin was on the agenda for Saturday, but we got up too late and visited Galveston instead. We had some good non-Texas food and say remnants of damage from Hurricane Ike. It was my first trip ever to a Western port town in the off-season following a hurricane.
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Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://www.detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/
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Sheiler, which of those two groups do your in-laws belong to? I grew up in an Anglophone enclave among French Canadians. God only knows how that affected my repertoire of birthday songs.
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Detectives Beyond Borders
“Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home”
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/
Peter
My dad was an engineer on BP oil tankers and used to travel to Galveston and Texas City often during the 50's and 60's. I wanted to drive down to Texas when I lived in Denver but on every road trip we never got much past the little piece of heaven that is Taos, NM.
Peter,
They are Pieds-Noirs, French from Algeria who fled Algiers in the late late 1950s for Quebec. My partner was only 7, the youngest of a clan whose father was able to face facts earlier than, say, a million others, and get the family out with all of their belongings.
Some of her family were from Spain and France, but others had been in Algeria since the 1200s.
Anyway, one of the first things that fascinated me about Canada was these enclaves of anglophones in francophone territory and vice versa. We had a place in Mile End in Mtl which is pretty anglo. But french only neighborhoods in Ontario and Labrador? Nova Scotia? Who knew?
Adrian,
Thanks for the book rec. It's come to this admission, that I am going to have to actually read the thing instead of getting it on audio for my long car trips. It seems as if it's the kind of thing that demands to be read. And god knows how much I love to read. But I am this close to needing reading glasses, something I've been able to resist thanks to my audiobook tendencies.
It's a gosh darn slippery slope. Soon I won't be allowed to make slumber party jokes.
Oh so close to being apropos of nothing, but your comment, Sheiler reminded me of great essay of Jane Kramer's from the New Yorker about the Pied Noir and their return--if that's the right word, since most of them had never been there before--to France after being forced to leave Algeria. It was really a neither fish nor fowl kind of experience for them. It's collected in Kramer's book of essays Unsettling Europe if anyone is interested. I always thought she was a fantastic writer.
Sheiler, good call. The only reason I suggested you take the hilarious hand in the water choice was because I wouldn’t be the one who’d suffer the consequences.
Peter, I’m surprised you didn’t take that quick trip (NOT!) across the entire state of Texas to that beautiful vacation spot (NOT!) El Paso.
Started The Ghosts of Belfast this morning and got hooked immediately.
Sheiler
It may be a boy thing but the Patrick Obrian novels narrated by Patrick Tull are terrific for long car rides.
Seana
Jacques, as you'll find, has some iconoclastic/eccentric views too. If I remember correctly he thinks Shakespeare was overrated and is not completely convinced by Darwinian evolution. I found this only added to his charm.
Holden
I think you'll enjoy it.
And if you do why dont you give Stuart a review on Amazon or somewhere?
...
Actually, I wouldnt say no to a review on Amazon either!
I might be the only one to have gotten your reference: Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris.
I'm surprised you're old enough to remember it!
Richard
Sorry, I dont actually remember it, I think I saw parts of it on PBS or somewhere.
Uh, I got it. But unfortunately I never saw it. Unless I did and forgot it...I only mention it because I'm afraid that Jacques Brel and Jacques Barzun have sort of been one and the same entity in my magpie mind till now.
Oh, looking forward to his anti-Shakespeare stance will definitely spur me forward. Shakespeare can fortunately withstand all his detractors. I'd like to see Barzun and Bloom debate it on a panel somewhere. Probably a bit late in the day for that, though.
I actually don't mind someone questioning Darwinian evolution. It is still a theory, after all, despite being debated by all sides for wholly unscientific aims.
Holden, my first college roommate was from El Paso. So was one of my odder former colleagues. But Texas, well, Texas is a mighty big place. I've always had a soft spot for Lubbock because of Buddy Holly. And I asked one of my Houston friends where Texans think the West begins. El Paso, maybe, she said.
================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/
"My dad was an engineer on BP oil tankers and used to travel to Galveston and Texas City often during the 50's and 60's."
We passed signs for Texas City on the way to Galveston. My Houston host does not think it an imaginative name.
Across the water in Galveston, we could see refineries against the night sky.
================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/
"Peter,
They are Pieds-Noirs, French from Algeria who fled Algiers in the late late 1950s for Quebec. ...
Some of her family were from Spain and France, but others had been in Algeria since the 1200s.
Anyway, one of the first things that fascinated me about Canada was these enclaves of anglophones in francophone territory and vice versa. We had a place in Mile End in Mtl which is pretty anglo. But french only neighborhoods in Ontario and Labrador? Nova Scotia? Who knew?"
They did not stay on and become Camus characters, I guess. Apropos of such matters, I wonder what her family might think of Yasmina Khadra's novels about the Algiers of the 1990s.
You'll know that the western sections of Montreal island are, and still were, largely Anglophone, home to me, John McFetridge and many other non-pur-laine Quebecois.
================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/
Has is American education depraved him to the point that he likes golf and baseball more than soccer and rugby?
Marco
Jacques seem like a royal tennis kind of guy to me. Maybe a little petanque.
Peter, I kid you about Texas. I have a soft spot for it, too, being born and raised there. But it's just such a great target. What other state declares in its state constitution that it can secede from the US any time it damn well pleases?
Oh gosh this has been the most fruitful (and fruity) post/commentary spot ever!
Seana, thanks for the book tip. I am definitely going to check out Kramer. The in-laws are a little lost tribe unto themselves and other pieds-noirs in Montreal. And I have only been able to piece together tiny fragments of their experiences because it's so fraught with loss and bewilderment. I can't get them to comment much past declarations of hatred toward all arabs.
But my partner had an early connection with Paris because, while living in Algeria, she won a song-writing contest and had to attend some fashion show in Paris in order to receive her award. She appeared on stage with Coco Chanel to sing it live.
She's definitely more blase and more comfortable about her relationship with France, maybe as a result of this?
Adrian, thanks very much for the nod for Obrien novels + narration rec. It's really important to me to have a good reader when I'm in the car. No worries about the boy quality! I like something that keep me motivated to make the drive. I really have no favorite genre - I like anything well written.
Peter, isn't the patron saint of Canada, Leonard Cohen, also from Westmount?
And, no, no Camus for you.
Sheiler, je suis pure laine Côte Saint-Luc , moi!
================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/
Although I have never read Patrick O'Brian, he definitely seemed to cross genders in popularity when he was at his height. As it was explained to me then, guys liked the excellent nautical terminology and naval battle descriptions, women liked the complex relations between Aubrey and Matarin. These kinds of delineations are always a bit depressing to me--doesn't anybody just like a good yarn?--but that doesn't mean that there isn't some element of truth to it.
Sheiler, I'm glad you're excited about the Kramer book. I do hope that somehow your partners parents will be induced to tell their experience, because it's an important part of twentieth century oral history.
Coco Chanel, huh? Ooh la la!
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