Category: Book Review

RODRIGUEZ WAS RIGHT

APRIL 27, 2020 – Earlier this month (See 4/5, 4/6 posts) I wrote about the classic, Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe.  I mentioned that Don Simón Rodriguez, the boyhood tutor of Simón Bolívar, El Libertador, had said of Defoe’s classic, “Everything you need to know is in this book.” I’m now three-quarters into the account …

THE PLAGUE AND THE PIMP

APRIL 17, 2020 – Yesterday evening my book club gathered via Zoom.  Up for discussion was The Plague by French existentialist author, Albert Camus, winner of the 1957 Nobel Prize for literature. It had been selected by the physician of our group, the inimitable Ravi Balasubrahmanyan. (Decades ago, I learned to spell his name by …

THE TITAN

FEBRUARY 23, 2020 – Someone in my book club (not I) had the bright idea of choosing a biography of Beethoven by the American scholar/composer/teacher, Jan Swafford. Nearly 1,000 pages long, this “score” is no beach book. I’m only at page 420—with 12 days before our book club meeting. I’d previously read George Marek’s tome about …

MY AMERICAN FRIEND FROM “SOMEWHERE ELSE” (PART II OF II)

JANUARY 17, 2020 – Undaunted, he worked doggedly for admission into another Polish university, less selective than Jagiellonian University, but nonetheless, boasting a top-flight history department.  He labored under the tutelage of a legendary scholar/professor, and then made a second attempt at Jagiellonian University.  He passed. (In a “small world” aside, my wife and I …

TUTSI, HUTU; HUTU, TUTSI; TOPSY-TURVY

JANUARY 8, 2020 – This month’s selection for my book club is Strength in What Remains by Tracy Kidder. It follows the extraordinary geographic and psychological journey of “Deogratias,” a native of Burundi in Central East Africa, who survives horrors and overcomes setbacks that would have crushed any normal person.  His story is replete with …