Boathouse Row Philadelphia, PA

Main menu:

December 2024
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031  

Categories

Site search

Links:

Now Reading

Atlantic – Quite an Ocean

In Simon Winchester’s latest book he takes on quite a challenge. How to you tell the story of something vast and multifaceted as the Atlantic Ocean? It is a testimony to Winchester’s skill as a writer that he develops a novel approach and executes it for a very readable and engaging book, Atlantic.
Winchester first choose to view the ocean as a living thing, not too unusual as mariners regularly take this view. But then Winchester hits on the brilliant idea to frame the Atlantic ocean in the seven ages of man. These ages were described in a monologue by William Shakespeare’s character, Jacques, in As You Like It.
These ages are:

  • Infancy – first stirrings of human development on its shores
  • Childhood – crossings and full fledge explorations
  • Lover – the ocean beauty in art and literature
  • Soldier – centuries as a stage for warfare
  • Justice – basis of trade and international law
  • Old Age – crossings are routine and resources no longer inexhaustible
  • Mental dementia and death – climate change and humanity’s change

In each of these stages Winchester mixes the broad perspective with anecdotal stories to enliven the story and provide the reader with interesting facts.
In summary, Simon Winchester has succeeded in taking on the story of the Atlantic.

 

Zero Day – New Baldacci Character

One of David Baldacci’s best. I have really missed the Camel Club and wondered how Baldacci was going to come up with another top story line. In Zero Day he moves on and introduces you to a new character, John Puller of Army CID. In Puller, David Baldacci has created a character every bit as good as Oliver Stone.
Zero Day is a page turner that will keep you guessing as to who are the good guys and bad guys as well as the real story behind multiple murders.

Here is how David Baldacci summarizes the book –

John Puller is a combat veteran and the best
military investigator in the U.S. Army’s Criminal Investigative
Division. His father was an Army fighting legend, and his brother is
serving a life sentence for treason in a federal military prison. Puller
has an indomitable spirit and an unstoppable drive to find the truth.

Now, Puller is called out on a case in a remote,
rural area in West Virginia coal country far from any military outpost.
Someone has stumbled onto a brutal crime scene, a family slaughtered.
The local homicide detective, a headstrong woman with personal demons of
her own, joins forces with Puller in the investigation. As Puller digs
through deception after deception, he realizes that absolutely nothing
he’s seen in this small town, and no one in it, is what it seems. Facing
a potential conspiracy that reaches far beyond the hills of West
Virginia, he is one man on the hunt for justice against an overwhelming
force.

The Extraordinary Life of Monsieur de Beaumarchais

Mr Unger has created one most interesting and readable biographies of recent years. Though a very skilled writer, Mr. Unger had help from Monsieur de Beaumarchais. Even without his connection with the American revolution, the life of Beaumarchais would make for an extraordinary story.  It is a common cliché that a life is stranger than fiction but the life of Beaumarchais is truly one that could not be believed if it were not true.

Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais was born in 1732 the son of a clock maker; a commoner in the aristocratic dominated France. Apprenticed to his father, after a brief period of raucous carousing, the young Beaumarchais quickly showed his mechanical genius by inventing a clockwork escapement mechanism. This escapement mechanism immediately allowed the first watch light enough to be worn on the wrist. It was this invention that first brought him to the attention of King Louis XV and the royal court.

Once in the royal circle, Beaumarchais wasted no time in establishing his genius to the delight of many of the royal court. As a skilled musician and poet he was a delight to royal princesses. However, as commoner who entered the royal circle through superior skills and talent he was envied by many aristocrats by birth and of much lesser talent. Beaumarchais did become a protégé of the great financier, Joseph Pâris-Duverney and through this relationship was able to amass significant wealth and purchase a key sinecure. But as Beaumarchais’ stature rose so did the power of his enemies and resentment of his commoner birth.

In 1764 Beaumarchais gave his court enemies the opening they needed when he spent a year in Madrid establishing a Spanish company for his financial mentor. Upon his return to France Beaumarchais’ life rapidly became very complicated. In his absence his home was in turmoil and he lost the interest and patronage of the royal princesses. In 1770 both Pâris-Duverney and Beaumarchais’ wife die. Pâris-Duverney’s relatives win a large financial suit against him. Also, events in America were heating up. It is now that Beaumarchais retaliates against the ruling class and authors his first literary triumph, Le Barbier de Seville — “The Barber of Seville”.   Throughout the 1770’s Beaumarchais’ fortunes take a number of turns. His court enemies retaliate. He is arrested, thrown in jail for being “too insolent”. While imprisoned Beaumarchais is unable to defend himself in an unjust law suit and is financially ruined. However, via the sharpness of his pen, he is able to exact revenge by exposing the corrupt judicial system. His cleverness and guile comes to the attention of King Louis XVI He successfully serves the new King and foreign minster, comte de Vergennes, as a spy to retrieve incriminating secret documents from a transsexual former French spy in London.

While in London, Beaumarchais forms a friendship with the American, Arthur Lee and is enlisted to help our fight with France’s long time enemy. With the help of Vergennes but as a private citizen, Beaumarchais established a Spanish company to secretly purchase arms and supplies from the French government and supply them to Washington’s troops. Payment for the arms was to come by the returning ships bringing tobacco and other goods back for sale. Beaumarchais was awarded contracts for the arms from Silas Deane, Connecticut merchant and member of Congress. While in sound in principle, in practice it was a financial disaster. In the end Beaumarchais shipped more than $200 million (today’s dollars) on credit including more then 80% of the Continental Army’s entire gunpowder supply! Beaumarchais was to never see of these proceeds as Congress repeatedly dodged the obligation erroneously reasoning the materials as a “gift” from France!

At the close of his arms venture, Beaumarchais again turned to literature and his assault on the aristocracy penning Le Mariage de Figaro –The Marriage of Figaro.  Once again Beaumarchais is imprisoned, this time by the King. However, the King’s move backfires and Beaumarchais’ popularity results in a populous uproar that forces the King to retract his orders. The King also makes financial amends. Beaumarchais’ literary triumphs have made him a popular hero which allows him to survive the multiple insanities that mark the French revolution of the 1790’s.

In summary, Mr. Unger has penned a book worthy of the extraordinary life of Monsieur de Beaumarchais. He has aptly honored a largely forgotten hero of our fight for independence and in the process rewards the reader. 

Powered by ScribeFire.