Wednesday, June 16, 2021

BOOKS WE READ

 SOME SUMMER SUGGESTIONS

We’ve written before about our reading habits and preferences. What’s on a person’s

bookshelf can offer significant insight into that individual’s true nature. Reading informs what we write in this space. Books on public affairs, novels, and memoirs teach us what keen observers see in world events and expand our understanding of the human experience.

In this post, we recommend impactful books we’ve each read recently. Seeing what we read may also help readers better understand us.

Henry: A Mystery with Larger Consequences

I believe by reading we gain access to the lives of others and, perhaps, understand
ourselves  better.  If so, Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland by Patrick Radden Keefe confronts readers with difficult issues. Keefe presents Say Nothing as a mystery in search of answers after the abduction of a mother in Belfast which most laid at the feet of the Irish Republican Army.  However, the entire violent conflict known as The Troubles that consumed Northern Ireland between the 1960s and 1998 provides the backdrop.

Keefe offers up the conflict through the eyes of actual participants in this incredibly tragic loss of life. With access to the participants, many readers might find themselves appalled because no heroes deserving admiration seem to emerge. We see only humans caught up in a vicious conflict with no striking lessons for our species.
I began the book hoping I’d find answers about a conflict I’d read about for much of my life. I wanted explanations for what led ordinary people to engage in such acts of cruelty. Keefe writes the abduction mystery, around which much of the book centers, well and that story engages the reader throughout. If that were the book’s only focus, I could praise it and the writing without reservation.  But, the book leaves me with a greater mystery:  What roads to peace might have been taken without the price of so many lives?                                                  

                 

Rob: Reaching Back for a Consequential

Memoir

People usually talk about recently released books they’ve read or that they’ve finally read an old book they missed along the way, perhaps a literary classic. Sometimes, however, books get released we’d enjoy but never get to. That happened with me and 2011’s An Unquenchable  Thirst: Following

Mother Teresa in Search of Love, Service, and an Authentic Life by Mary Johnson. This memoir of a former nun in the Missionaries of Charity, the Calcutta, India based order led by the late Mother Teresa, explores the tension between the life people may believe they want in youth and the life they may grow into later.

Mary Johnson was an idealistic teenager desiring a life of service and dedication to faith. At 17, she saw a Time magazine cover

story on  Mother Teresa and latched on to the idea of joining the MCs. She realized that dream, living as Sister Donata for 20 years, mostly in New York, Washington, and Rome. Then, in 1997, the year of Mother Teresa’s death, she left the MCs and became Mary Johnson again

While I took some interest in her description of the upstairs/downstairs politics in the MCs, the book’s greatest contribution lies in showing how people grow and change. Mary Johnson took a chastity vow when she joined, but left having had sexual encounters of varying intensity with two other nuns and a priest. She realized the vows she took no longer fit the person she had become or wanted to become. She left the order, later married, and continued her service outside the church.  She described herself as an atheist. She became a different person. An Unquenchable Thirst reminds us life takes many twists and turns. Regardless of our certainty, change is always foreseeable.  


Woodson:   Property and Power over People

Social justice is my primary interest. No books

have given me the clarity for achieving social justice like Capital and  Ideology by world
renowned economist Thomas Piketty and Arguing with Zombies: Economics, Politics, and the Fight for a Better Future by nationally renowned American economist Paul Krugman.

Henry once told me he often reads multiple books simultaneously. My private reaction (which I didn’t share until now) was that only pointy-headed intellectuals would do that. Be careful not to judge others too quickly. Reading these two books at the same time

has been  gratifying. Before Henry says, “I told you so,” let me explain that both concern economics and politics, which could explain why the process can work.

Piketty writes from an historic and global perspective, discussing the late Middle Ages, the Early Modern, and Modern and Contemporary periods. He covers Russia, China, Iran, the United States, and         

numerous countries in Africa and Europe. He focuses on the sacralization of property and how it and money determine the choice of government as much as social movements. Piketty contends that if nations study the corrupting role of property and money in government, and build safeguards against their influence, nations can establish more egalitarian societies. 

Krugman writes about current day U.S. economics and politics and the governing ideologies of the two major political parties. Eerily, he seems to prove Piketty’s point: by ignoring the practices of past societies and their sacralization of property and giving moneyed interests disproportionate influence in our democracy, America now experiences greater inegalitarianism than ever before.

Both books are fun to read and enlightening for those who seek an understanding of how the United States might build a more just and egalitarian society.



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