Thursday, September 30, 2021

Van Gogh's Ear: The True Story by Bernadette Murphy

All I was looking for was a new take on the events when Van Gogh cut his ear.

But a lot of this book goes into details of how difficult it is to get information around a century old event. I did like some of the information but that was not what it looked like from the title. Another thing, I was not looking for anything sensational.

So, if you already know the story from some good sources (Not Lust for Life) than this one has not much to offer.

Van Gogh was a painter with exceptional talent, and it is well established now that he had the mental health issue. Read this sentence again, I'm not saying he was mad. Unfortunately, the patients didn't get as much care and medical support at that time. And it is a surprise that Van Gogh ended up with such an amazing work even with those health issues.

So, next time when you hear a painter gone mad for Van Gogh, you would better come up with a right answer rather than writing things off.

Love 

Monday, September 27, 2021

Japan: The Paradox of Harmony by Keiko Hirata , Mark Warschauer

I wanted to read Hirohito and the making of modern Japan, but I still have to start it and instead I found this one and thought that this would be a good commentary on the modern Japan.

And yes, this is a real good one covering various topics from culture to economy and aging population. The arguments presented in this book are well backed by research and reasoning. It has been a bit critical to many things which has been traditionally followed in Japan as a culture or tradition, but it is not possible to judge the effect of such things in just one book. It would require more volumes, but this will help you understand the basic issues that Japan is facing, and aging is just one of them.

Another thought was that every society is unique, and the rise of Japan was exceptional after the World War. There are things which look a bit like marching backwards but eventually that can't be the only index, and in that sense a lot of progress which came with discipline, subordination, and longer work hours can be maintained with a fresh approach rather than attributing the slow changes to traditional ways.

Worth a read, and don't expect you to be a specialist in economics, culture, or social sciences. Bonus point, I got to know so many new words in Japanese which might be helpful in further readings.

Peace

Monday, September 13, 2021

Ragnarok The End of the Gods by A S Byatt

I was stuck with a lot of changes recently which doesn't mean less time for reading but less intent of reading. On top it I picked up one which is utter rubbish. I'm still reading it and when I'm finished will post it here.

Meanwhile I picked up another one in parallel and this being rather thinner got completed sooner. I've read a few of them on Norse mythology and I do look forward to read some more on the same topic.

Even with less interest in knowing how it all ends, I did pick this up (yes, I can pick the real ones again). This is about Ragnarok but this comes with a thin little girl who is speaking about Norse gods and Ragnarok in a personal narrative. There were some passages where it sounds more of an autobiography or coming of age but it is less of that.

Raganarok is technically known as an end of Norse gods but if there was an end than they were not god. This is a catch phrase but a closer look does reveal the point that they never claimed to be gods. Maybe with some superpowers but never an inhuman existence. Or you can differ on this point as well.

Coming back to this one, it tries to bring all the stories together and ends on Ragnarok. There are not much details of everything here but that was not the target in the first place. Actually, I'm still struggling with the whole idea behind this book but one thing which I felt was that this is not a book about mythology but a scrutiny of author's own thoughts while growing up with the Norse mythologies. It tries to draw some parallels in the stories and the real life but that doesn't mix well.

Nevertheless, if you're looking for a retelling with more human commentary than this is a real good one.

Love!