Since late 2003, I’ve been recording (almost) every book that I have read. At 200-300 books a year, that’s over 5,000 books that I have written up here. These are the most recent; I also record the books I have read each week and each month. These days each review includes the second paragraph of the third chapter of each book, just for fun; and also a purchase link for Amazon UK. (Yes, I know; but I get no other financial reward for writing all of this.)
This WordPress blog replaced my Livejournal in March 2022. I was able to copy across all of my old Livejournal posts; unfortunately the internal links in old posts will still in general point back to Livejournal, and though I was able to import images, I wasn’t able to import videos, so it’s a little imperfect.
Its lamps lit very little. The colourless sheen of the arching, segmented stems, that looked more like plastic than wood or anything living. The faint flurries of the feeding fans or gills or whatever their function actually was. The limited range of the lamps the drone could mount barely cut through the sheer gloom, the curdled soup of what passed for air on Shroud. All was in shades of brown-grey, light and dark. Nothing had invested the energy into manufacturing pigments, because why put on an art show if nobody can see the pictures? Light and dark, and some yellowish tones, like old bone or diseased teeth or mustard gas. The brown of mud or excrement.
Adrian Tchaikovsky keeps doing it; this is yet another gripping story of the encounter between human explorers and a new form of alien life. The human protagonists trek across the hostile surface of a dangerous moon, and we also get viewpoint snippets from the perspective of the globe-spanning alien entity itself, as the two sides gradually come to understand more of each other, and the humans’ masterplan of converting Shroud into a hob of exploitation becomes less and less realistic. It’s really vivid, and Tchaivkovsky plays fair with the reader, with a coherent and credibly built world. Good stuff. You can get Shroud here.
I participated in a great Brian Aldiss centenary panel at Novacon last weekend, with Caroline Mullan, Mark Plummer and Alan Stroud. There was a fair bit of “what did he do” and “what was he trying to do” but we had a fair bit of “what Aldiss should people read” as well, to which the answer is “Helliconia”. A request for a show of hands from anyone who actually understood Report on Probability A produced a sea of people looking around without putting their hands up.
Here we have one of his less celebrated mid-period novels. The second paragraph of its third chapter is:
Directly I faced the Master, I felt some of those emotions—call them empathic if you will—which I have referred to as being unsusceptible to scientific method. Directly he spoke, I knew that in him, as in his creatures, aggression and fear were mixed. God gave me understanding.
Not one of the great Aldiss works, I’m afraid. Published in 1981, set during a global war in 1996, the narrator, who is the US Undersecretary of State, crashes on a Pacific island where the sinister Dr Dart, himself an embittered thalidomide victim, has been carrying on the tradition of H.G. Wells’ Dr Moreau by combining animal and humans through experimentation. Various other human exiles also live on the island.
It’s not so much a sequel to the original Wells novel, more an update to the present-ish day. There are a lot of traps about disability, race and gender to fall into here, and I’m sorry to say that Aldiss falls into pretty much all of them. I’m generally a huge Aldiss fan, but I would hesitate to recommend this even to completists.
I got the American edition, whose title is An Island Called Moreau; the original UK title, in homage to George Bernard Shaw, was Moreau’s Other Island. You can get it here.
This was the sf book that had lingered longest unread on my shelves. Next on that pile is another short Aldiss novel, The Year Before Yesterday.
See here for methodology. Books are disqualified if less than 50% of them is set in Benin.
These numbers are crunched by hand, not by AI.
Title
Author
Goodreads raters
LibraryThing owners
The Viceroy of Ouidah
Bruce Chatwin
1,409
768
It Takes a Village
Jane Cowen-Fletcher
153
948
Instruments of Darkness
Robert Wilson
490
257
A Darkening Stain
Robert Wilson
275
112
Amazons of Black Sparta: The Women Warriors of Dahomey
Stanley B. Alpern
123
69
The Dahomean
Frank Yerby
109
55
Spirit Rising: My Life, My Music
Angelique Kidjo
156
21
The Hand of Iman
Ryad Assani-Razaki
119
15
This week’s winner, The Viceroy of Ouidah, is a 1980 novel about a European slave trader who builds a life for himself in West Africa; it was filmed by Werner Herzog as Cobra Verde, starring Klaus Kinski.
This week’s LibraryThing winner, It Takes a Village, has been overshadowed by the book of the same title published two years later by Hillary Clinton. It is a 1994 children’s book about living in a village in Benin and being looked after by the neighbours.
Of the listed authors, Angelique Kidjo is from Benin; I am not quite sure how much of her autobiography is set there, but I’m giving it the benefit of the doubt. Ryad Assani-Razaki is also from Benin, and my sources seem to agree that The Hand of Iman (original French title just Iman) is set there.
I disqualified a lot of books. Some are about the Benin Bronzes, which however originated in the historical Kingdom of Benin, in what is now Nigeria.
There are also a lot of books about slavery with the ‘benin’ tag in both systems; these however tend to concentrate on the protagonists’ lives after they left West Africa. It’s not at all certain that Olaudah Equiano, the most celebrated example, was even from what’s now Benin (though personally I’m pretty sure he was from West Africa). It seems more likely for Cudjoe Lewis / Oluale Kossola.
The protagonist of the Bruce Medway thrillers by Robert Wilson lives in Benin. I was sufficiently sure of Instruments of Darkness and A Darkening Stain to list them above; I wasn’t quite so sure of the third novel in the series, Blood is Dirt.
Coming next: Rwanda, Burundi, a step away from Africa to Bolivia and a step back again to Tunisia.
Buxton, I am in you, attending Novacon which is just as much fun as I hoped.
But yesterday I hired a car and did a tour of three ancient sites in northern Derbyshire. Derbyshire as a whole has more ancient stone circles than the Netherlands, Belgium and Luxembourg combined (they have none). I reckoned I could take in a few of them and still return the rental car in time for the Novacon opening ceremony.
There is a great website, named Pecsaetan for some reason, dedicated to the ancient sites in and around Derbyshire. It covers a lot more than stone circles, so there is plenty left to look at on future visits. The Peak District seems to have retained a lot of its heritage. I suspect that it is very beautiful as well, but unfortunately the weather yesterday was too foggy to tell.
Arbor Low (and Gib Hill)
I started with probably the best of them, also conveniently the closest to Buxton: the henge and stone circle of Arbor Low, 16 km southeast of the town along the A515. You are supposed to pay a pound into the honesty box for the farmer whose land it sits on. It is described by local enthusiasts as ‘the Stonehenge of the North’; I was a little sceptical, as the photographs that I had seen showed most of the stones as lying horizontal.
But before you even get to the stones, you encounter the vast ramparts of the henge which encloses the stone circle. In ancient times it must have been three metres high and the ditch must have been about the same depth. It would have looked amazing.
And though the stones are now recumbent, they are big, most of them two metres long. They are limestone which apparently explains why they have fallen, due to erosion. Within the circle is a central set of three or four stones which could have been an altar of some kind. Other visitors had left offerings of nuts and acorns on the largest of them.
But the amazing thing about yesterday was the mist sitting over this ancient site. There was a real Barrow-Downs feel about it.
Nearby is a much smaller barrow-mound called Gib Hill. You cannot see much anyway, and you can see even less in the mist, but it is a Stone Age tomb, with a Bronze Age tomb on top, built a thousand years later, but still many thousands of years ago.
Doll Tor (and the Andle Stone)
This was the most difficult to find of the three sites. It is about 11 km due east of Arbor Low, on Stanton Moor, accessible from a lay-by on a small road perhaps 2 km south of Stanton-in-Peak and 1 km north of Birchover. I should note that Stanton-in-Peak appeared to be infested with pheasants. That’s pheasants with a ‘h’.
Luckily Pecsaetan gives explicit and good directions to Doll Tor, which worked even in thick fog when you cannot see to the end of the field you are in. When you get to the Doll Tor circle in a wooded glade, it’s a delightful surprise, almost faery-like. None of the stones is more than a metre in height, but the shape of the circle is clear, and there is a cairn attached to the northern side of the circle.
Again, other visitors have left offerings at the site, including a lot of coins on a flat stone at the edge of the circle.
The fact that it sits in a valley meant that the fog was not as heavy as with the more elevated sites, but it still felt isolated – I think it was the one most distant from other human activity of the three. Magical, but a very different kind of magic from Arbor Low.
On the way across the fields to Doll Tor is the Andle Stone, thought to be a natural boulder (and a big one) but augmented by human activity.
There is an inscription on the other side of it commemorating the Duke of Wellington and local boy William Thornhill.
There are several more stone circles and other monuments nearby on Stanton Moor, and you could easily spend a half day just exploring them. But the fog was a bit treacherous and it seemed better to press on.
I should note that Doll Tor and the Andle Stone are on private land, and there is no public right of access to them.
Barbrook 1 and 2
About 20 km north of Doll Tor and Stanton Moor are the monuments known as Barbrook 1 and 2, on Big Moor. The road takes you past the very well signposted Chatsworth House, home of the Dukes of Devonshire. This site is the easiest to find of the three, though perhaps for that reason it was less atmospheric – lots of dogwalkers, and the audible roar of traffic.
You park at a layby on the A621, four or five km north of where it starts, and there is a clear path to Barbrook 1 and a less clear path to Barbrook 2. Barbrook 1, 500 metres from the road, is a straightforward stone circle with one big stone about a metre high and a small bank around it.
Barbrook 2, 200 metres away, is different. It is a ring cairn, which has been reconstructed to give a best guess at its original appearance. It looks like a sheepfold except that it is sunk into the ground. It’s quite different from any other monument in Derbyshire.
There are many smaller ancient cairns on Big Moor, and you pass maybe ten or twelve on this route.
There is also a Barbrook 3, but it is apparently difficult to locate and not that impressive when you do find it. And lunch at The Grouse Inn in Longshaw was calling.
This would have been fantastic in better weather, but even in yesterday’s fog the Arbor Low and Doll Tor circles were pretty amazing to visit. And there are still plenty more Derbyshire stone circles to explore.
The Papyrus and the Pet Shop Boys
It is a little known fact that the oldest surviving fragment of the New Testament, a papyrus dating from the mid second century, is held by the John Rylands Library in Manchester. When I first visited in 2021, it was in storage, so I anxiously called ahead this time to make sure that I could see it after I landed on Thursday. The person who answered the phone a week ago assured me that it would be on display, but either they were wrong or plans changed, because when I pitched up on Thursday afternoon, P52 was in storage again. You can get a fridge magnet of it though.
However, there was also a temporary display on LGBTQ+ culture, which delightfully had the original manuscript of the Pet Shop Boys’ hit West End Girls and the original typescript of It’s A Sin.
You never know what you are going to find. The John Rylands Library is free to visit, and even without P52, there is plenty there.
(Incidentally, WordPress refuses to publish the lovely Gothic P used by New Testament scholars to designate papyri. Every time I tried to include it in an update to this entry, it refused to upload.)
I first watched The Mysterious Planet in 2007. I wrote then:
The Mysterious Planet was Robert Holmes’ swan-song, from 1986. He wrote some of the best stories of the original Doctor Who run; this is not one of them. It’s the first segment of the infamous Trial of a Time Lord season, with the action of the main narrative (the Doctor and Peri land on a mysterious planet and must prevent the local bad guys from taking over the universe; also confusingly it may or may not be a far future Earth) frequently interrupted by flashforwards to a courtroom where the Doctor is on trial, the main story being presented as evidence for the prosecution.
The trial sub-plot simply does not work. There appears to be no due procedure that makes any sense; the evidence presented by the Valeyard (at least as far as this story goes) doesn’t do much to prove the case (as even the Inquisitor admits). If you simply tune out these deeply embarrassing bits, you are left with a fairly standard story: a couple of decent performances from guest actors, and a couple of very cardboard-looking robots.
When I came back to it in 2011, for my Great Rewatch, I wrote:
I started watching the Trial of a Time Lord season in a rather foul mood. But in fact, rather to my surprise, I found myself warming to The Mysterious Planet – in relative terms, of course; it’s definitely in the lower third of Robert Holmes’ stories, and has a number of plot elements recycled from his previous scripts when he did them better. But there is a sense that the show might be finding its feet again: back to the 25-minute format, and also embedding the season in a narrative arc (which was successful last time it was tried) in which the Time Lords are up to no good; the basics are actually there, and I think it is the production values that let it down as much as anything. (Though I should admit that the plot is also a bit confusing and over-filled.) The Mysterious Planet is a little dull but it’s not actively bad, unlike most of the previous season.
Rewatching it again, I remain more negative than positive, though I liked some of the Holmesian characterisation. The ridiculous trial set-up remains very poor.
Holmes’ life ended sadly early. He died aged only 60 in 1986, half-way through writing the final story of that year’s Doctor Who season. This was the much contested Trial of a Time Lord arc, for which Holmes had contributed the first four episodes and was due to write the final two (but died before starting the last one). A higher-up at the BBC had sent round a brutal deconstruction of the flaws of the first four episodes (generally now referred to as The Mysterious Planet), which clearly deeply wounded Holmes and possibly even contributed to his illness and death. In a career of a quarter of a century, nobody before had been quite so brutal about his writing. It’s painful reading, and the one positive thing I will say is that the account here raises Eric Saward’s reputation in my view, as he attempted (but failed) to shield Holmes and also keep the show on the road. But between the lines it’s clear that Holmes no longer had what he had once had had. Between 1982 and his death in 1986, literally the only non-Who scripts he sold were three episodes of Bergerac and five for a short-lived drama series set in a Citizens Advice Bureau. Brutal though it is, the BBC higher-up’s criticism of The Mysterious Planet is mostly pretty well-founded.
Molesworth is defensive of The Mysterious Planet‘s virtues, but I’m afraid I am with the BBC hierarchy; it’s a turkey.
The second paragraph of the third chapter of Terrance Dicks’ novelisation is:
This is, however, not one of Dicks’ greatest efforts. I’ve noted before how the Dicks/Holmes combination is only rarely successful on the printed page, and this, the last of the sequence, is fairly typical, a faithful recounting of what the viewer sees on the screen without much added. There are some mystifying slips, Peri’s full name being given as “Perpegillian”, for instance. It also fails (as did the original TV version) to establish the Time Lord trial setting convincingly (let alone fit it into continuity).
Nothing to add to that, on re-reading.
So I turned with interest to the latest Black Archive, released last month, by Jez Strickley. Sometimes the Black Archives about Doctor Who stories I did not like much achieve a bit of redemption for me by calling attention to aspects that I had not considered before, and sometimes they at least woo me with the author’s enthusiasm. Which would it be?
I’m sorry to say that of the 79 Black Archives that I have read so far, this was the least penetrable. Strickley has written it as an exploration of his pet concepts, topophilia and topophobia, through the lens of the story, but using many other sources as well. I found it dense and uninteresting, and I gave up after the first chapter. The second paragraph of the third chapter will give you some idea, though I did not get that far.
The life of daleswoman Hannah Hauxwell may be a rare example of Heidegger’s concept of dwelling in practice. Born in 1926, Hauxwell lived most of her life at Low Birk Hatt, a farm in Baldersdale in the North Pennines. In the early 1970s, her life became the subject of a television documentary. Until then, and for a time thereafter, Hauxwell lived frugally on the produce of her farming, managing without electricity and running water. Yet, despite these privations, her love of her home and the nearby Hunder Beck, whose ‘waters sing a song to me’, was unwavering. Reflecting on her life in that remote and, in winter at least, unforgiving setting, she once observed that ‘I know this place will always be loyal to me […] It’s mine […] and always will be […] even when I’m no longer here.’⁴ Hauxwell’s turn of phrase, described by one critic as ‘Wordsworthian’, acknowledges a conception of place which goes beyond the purely material and approaches a bond that may be Heideggerian in nature⁵. ⁴ Hauxwell, Hannah, and Cockcroft, Barry, Seasons of My Life: The Story of a Solitary Daleswoman, p10. ⁵ Hauxwell and Cockcroft, Seasons of My Life, p186.
You see what I mean? Heideggerian, eh?
An unprecedented miss for me in this generally hugely enjoyable series. I believe that the next will be on The Enemy of the World, by Robert Fairclough, who has previously written about The Prisoner; I have higher expectations.
I listened and contained myself with difficulty. Most of these women were rich. The whole wide beautiful world was theirs to wander in and they deliberately stayed in dirty dull London and talked about milkmen and servants! I think now, looking back, that I was perhaps a shade intolerant. But they were stupid – stupid even at their chosen job: most of them kept the most extraordinarily inadequate and muddled housekeeping accounts.
I came across this when researching my list of books set in Zimbabwe, and was sufficiently intrigued by an Agatha Christie book with an African setting to search it out. It didn’t make my list in the end, as less than a third of it is set in what was then Southern Rhodesia, the other settings being London, a ship on the Atlantic, and South Africa. And I don’t think it is classic Christie, but I enjoyed the diversion.
The protagonist, Anne Beddingfeld, is the daughter of a famous archaeologist / anthropologist, her father dies in the first chapter, leaving her free to have adventures on a budget. She gets involved with investigating two mysterious deaths in London; the trail takes her to Africa for mortal peril and romance. Agatha Christie had visited South Africa in 1922, during a political crisis, and clearly she observed and noted her surroundings. There’s some great description and characterisation, especially of the heroine – apparently Agatha Christie’s own preferred title for the book was Anna the Adventuress.
Of course, the whole book is permeated with casual racism – it almost goes without saying, but it must still be said. The plot is utterly bonkers, with a sudden-yet-inevitable betrayal at the end and an unreliable secondary narrator. It’s much closer to the thriller genre than to Christie’s home turf of determined detection. But it was only her fourth novel (after The Mysterious Affair at Styles, The Secret Adversary and The Murder on the Links) and she was entitled to a bit of experimentation. An interesting variation from a familiar writer. You can get The Man in the Brown Suit here.
Current Time Zero, by Justin Richards, by Justin Richards Madame Prosecutor, by Carla del Ponte The Great Hunger, by Cecil Woodham-Smith
Last books finished The Yiddish Policemen’s Union, by Michael Chabon Soundings, by A. Hamilton Gibbs The Enchantments of Flesh and Spirit, by Storm Constantine Sonic Boom, by Robbie Morrison et al Thief of Time, by Terry Pratchett
Next books Doctor Who: Empire of Death, by Scott Handcock The Good Wife of Bath, by Karen Brooks Gitanjali, by Rabindranath Tagore
Even while screaming, part of the Doctor’s mind analysed the problem. They were falling towards something, which most likely meant they were dropping towards a planetary surface. Based on the rate of their descent, he made a guess at the strength of the planet’s mavity. Then he ran that information through a complicated calculation involving the number of seconds they had been in freefall and came up with an estimate that they had so far fallen 30,000 feet.
The Well was my favourite of this year’s Doctor Who stories. I wrote of it:
Midnight is (still) my favourite Russell T. Davis episode, and I must admit I was delighted when The Well turned out to be a sequel, with a real base-under-siege plot and a really scary monster. We had more mind-blowing stuff to come this season, but this was the scariest episode by far.
I was a bit surprised by the news that Gareth Powell had been assigned the job of writing the novelisation – I don’t think he has published any other tie-in literature, instead developing his own complex universes. But it makes perfect sense – Powell’s writing is definitely on the more advanced side of military SF, and The Well is the most military Doctor Who story for years; the Doctor and Belinda even change into military uniform, before the horror part of the story gets going.
And of course it’s a good piece of work. A lot of the appeal of the episode was visual, which can be difficult to translate onto the printed page, but Powell actually uses this for freedom to explore the rather small world of the Well and its visitors a bit more. The story is broken up by brief bios of the military characters, fleshing them out a bit more than we got on screen. The tension of the plot is effectively maintained. I felt pretty satisfied. You can get Doctor Who: The Well here.
Immediately after the war, a commission for transforming the KLA was set up, including representatives of KFOR, UNMIK, the KLA, and the FARK. The commission met approximately 40 times in order to determine the details of transforming the KLA. Three variants were discussed: the transformation of the KLA a) into a National Guard with 14,000 men; b) into a territorial defense with an active reserve, modeled on the old Yugoslavian pattern; and c) a combination of a) and b). KFOR and UNMIK rejected the Kosovar ideas since it was feared they could be a precedent for independence. As a result, the KPC model was actually dictated by the protectorate powers. The ambiguity with regard to the future role of the KPC was accepted by both sides. It is no coincidence that the Albanian name of the organization—Trupat Mbrojtese te Kosoves (TMK)—can also be translated as Kosovo Defense Corps. The question of why KFOR accepted the creation of a thinly veiled KLA successor organization remains open. Some possible answers include the emotional attachment NATO officers felt for the professionalism of their KLA counterparts (German General Reinhardt has, on occasion, noted that KLA commander Hashim Thaci was “like a son” to him). The hope that the KPC might play a useful ‘proxy’ role in combating violent acts by Yugoslav or Kosovo Serb forces may have played a role too. According to a statement repeatedly heard by the authors in Kosovo in early 2001, KFOR was simply interested in retaining some degree of control over the more radical firebrands within the KLA structures—“better in the KPC and under control, than in the hills and on the loose”.
As I work through my books acquired in 2022, there will be quite a few about Kosovo, because I stocked up on the subject in that year for a project that ultimately did not come to pass. This is a very brief start, an analytical paper from the Bonn Institute for Conflict Studies, dating from 2001, so only two years after the end of the conflict and before the debate about Kosovo’s future status shifted decisively in favour of independence.
It does what it says in the title, though the historical part has now been much more comprehensively covered by James Pettifer in The Kosova Liberation Army, and the present to near future part has been completely overtaken by events, starting with the 2001 conflict in North Macedonia which broke out only a few weeks after this paper was published. However it does bust a few myths about the origins and structure of the KLA, which was important to the overall narrative at the time.
In retrospect, the weird thing is that people in the international community were so neuralgic about the future security arrangements of the Kosovo government, independent or not. In my last year at the International Crisis Group (2006), we published a paper advocating a model which was pretty close to the eventual Kosovo Security Force which was founded in 2009. The skies have not fallen.
See here for methodology. Books are disqualified if less than 50% of them is set in Guinea-Conakry.
These numbers are crunched by hand, not by AI.
Title
Author
Goodreads raters
LibraryThing owners
The African Child (aka The Dark Child)
Camara Laye
2,527
758
The Radiance of the King
Camara Laye
787
378
The Hanged Man of Conakry
Jean-Christophe Rufin
1,065
103
The King of Kahel
Tierno Monénembo
247
73
A Dream of Africa
Camara Laye
30
32
The pickings were very thin this week. I disqualified dozens of books which had nothing to do with the Republic of Guinea, often called Guinea-Conakry to try and minimise confusion with the other possibilities. The data were badly contaminated by references to Papua New Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, and Equatorial Guinea (all of which are different countries from each other and from Guinea-Conakry), also confusion with Guiana, and Guinea pigs.
This week’s winner, eventually, is an autobiographical memoir by Guinea’s most famous writer, Camara Laye (Camara is his family name, Laye his given name) about growing up in central Guinea. Two of the other four books on the list are by him as well.
With a slightly heavy heart I disqualified Little Brother: A Refugee’s Story, by Ibrahima Balde and Amets Arzallus Antia, because as far as I can tell from reviews the protagonist leaves Guinea before the half-way point of the book. I was also not sure about The Guardian of the Word, by Camara Laye, which retells part of the Sundiata epic – most of which takes place in what is now Mali, but some in what is now Guinea.
Bubbling under I was pleased to see two books by my former colleague Mike McGovern, Unmasking the State: Making Guinea Modern and A Socialist Peace?: Explaining the Absence of War in an African Country.
Coming next: Benin, Rwanda, Burundi and a step away from Africa to Bolivia.
Non-fiction 8 (YTD 68) The New Machiavelli, by Jonathan Powell The Partition: Ireland Divided, 1885-1925, by Charles Townshend The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien: Revised and Expanded Edition Het lijkt Washington wel: Hoe lobbyisten Brussel in hun greep hebben, by Peter Teffer Wag the Dog: The Mobilization and Demobilization of the Kosovo Liberation Army, by Andreas Heinemann-Grüder and Wolf-Christian Paes The Mysterious Planet, by Jez Strickley (did not finish) Dragon’s Teeth: Tales from North Kosovo, by Ian Bancroft Barracoon: the Story of the Last “Black Cargo”, by Zora Neale Hurston
Non-genre 5 (YTD 37) Our Song, by Anna Carey The Man in the Brown Suit, by Agatha Christie East of Eden, by John Steinbeck Ragtime, by E.L. Doctorow Soundings, by A. Hamilton Gibbs
SF 6 (YTD 104) Burning Brightly: 50 Years of Novacon, ed. Ian Whates An Island Called Moreau, by Brian Aldiss “The Merchant and the Alchemist’s Gate”, by Ted Chiang Shroud, by Adrian Tchaikovsky The Yiddish Policemen’s Union, by Michael Chabon The Enchantments of Flesh and Spirit, by Storm Constantine
Doctor Who 3 (YTD 26) Mean Streets, by Terrance Dicks Doctor Who: The Well, by Gareth L. Powell Doctor Who: The Mysterious Planet, by Terrance Dicks
Comics 2 (YTD 29) The Twist, by George Mann et al Paradise Towers: Paradise Found, by Sean Mason and Silvano Beltramo
6,000 pages (YTD 68,000) 4/24 (YTD 103/270) by non-male writers (Hurston, Christie, Carey, Constantine) 2/24 (YTD 31/270) by non-white writers (Hurston, Chiang) 4/24 reread (“The Merchant and the Alchemist’s Gate”, Mean Streets, Doctor Who: The Mysterious Planet, The Yiddish Policemen’s Union) 189 books currently tagged unread, down 15 from last month, down 78 from October 2024.
Reading now Thief of Time, by Terry Pratchett
Coming soon (perhaps) Sonic Boom, by Robbie Morrison et al Time Zero, by Justin Richards Doctor Who: Empire of Death, by Scott Handcock Madame Prosecutor, by Carla del Ponte The Good Wife of Bath, by Karen Brooks The Spark that Survived, by Myra Lewis Williams The Year Before Yesterday, by Brian W. Aldiss How God Works: The Science Behind the Benefits of Religion, by David DeSteno The Great Hunger, by Cecil Woodham-Smith Gitanjali, by Rabindranath Tagore Amongst Our Weapons, by Ben Aaronovitch An Experiment with Time, by J. W Dunne Camp Damascus, by Chuck Tingle If On A Winter’s Night A Traveller, by Italo Calvino Ness: A Story from the Ulster Cycle, by Patrick Brown Spa 1906, by Drac Say Nothing, by Patrick Radden Keefe The Woman in White, by Willie Collins The Windup Girl, by Paolo Bacigalupi
Full printed extract from third letter (to his fiancée Edith Bratt, 26 November 2015):
The usual kind of morning standing about and freezing and then trotting to get warmer so as to freeze again. We ended up by an hour’s bomb-throwing with dummies. Lunch and a freezing afternoon. All the hot days of summer we doubled about at full speed and perspiration, and now we stand in icy groups in the open being talked at! Tea and another scramble – I fought for a place at the stove and made a piece of toast on the end of a knife: what days! I have written out a pencil copy of ‘Kortirion’. I hope you won’t mind my sending it to the T.C.B.S. I want to send them something: I owe them all long letters. I will start on a careful ink copy for little you now and send it tomorrow night, as I don’t think I shall get more than one copy typed (it is so long). No on second thoughts I am sending you the pencil copy (which is very neat) and shall keep the T.C.B.S. waiting till I can make another.
I’m a bit of a Tolkien obsessive, as you may perhaps have noticed, and this is the primary source for a lot of the stories about his life that I have known and loved for decades. I read all of the History of Middle Earth volumes a few years ago, but even so, it’s quite a delight to read about his writing in his own words. I knew that the process of writing The Lord of the Rings was painful and difficult; I had not realised that it was literally painful, given the extent of his and Edith’s ill health at the point that he was struggling to complete the book; perhaps there is a selection effect in that people in those days instinctively wrote openly to business partners about their medical problems?
He also complains bitterly about the costs of tax and housing – he and Edith moved several times to smaller and smaller places, and only at the end did Merton College provide him with free lodging and partial board, for which he was duly grateful.
His relationship with children and grandchildren seems to have been genuinely warm and loving. There are no letters to his daughter here, but that is presumably accidental, as she is mentioned in passing in other correspondence. He lived long enough to see his grandchildren starting on their careers, which obviously gave him much pleasure.
There are still some surprises. At the end of May 1945, writing to his sone Christopher about the coming end of WW2 in Asia, he says, “as I know nothing about British or American imperialism in the Far East that does not fill me with regret and disgust, I am afraid I am not even supported by a glimmer of patriotism in this remaining war.” There is also some poorly articulated but deep anger at the racist policies of the government of South Africa, where he was born. One of those cases where an icon slightly exceeds one’s hopes.
And there’s his lovely reminiscence of his first encounter with Finnish, in a 1955 letter to W.H. Auden:
It was like discovering a complete wine-cellar filled with bottles of an amazing wine of a kind and flavour never tasted before. It quite intoxicated me.
And I love this namedropping story from a January 1965 letter to his son Michael:
An amusing incident occurred in November, when I went as a courtesy to hear the last lecture of this series of his given by the Professor of Poetry: Robert Graves. (A remarkable creature, entertaining, likeable, odd, bonnet full of wild bees, half-German, half-Irish, very tall, must have looked like Siegfried/Sigurd in his youth, but an Ass.) It was the most ludicrously bad lecture I have ever heard. After it he introduced me to a pleasant young woman who had attended it: well but quietly dressed, easy and agreeable, and we got on quite well. But Graves started to laugh; and he said: it is obvious neither of you has ever heard of the other before’. Quite true. And I had not supposed that the lady would ever have heard of me. Her name was Ava Gardner, but it still meant nothing, till people more aware of the world informed me that she was a film-star of some magnitude, and that the press of pressmen and storm of flash-bulbs on the steps of the Schools were not directed at Graves (and cert. not at me) but at her….
I wouldn’t recommend this to anyone who is not a Tolkien completist; but there are a lot of us around. You can get The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien here. (This is an expanded version, published only a few months ago.)
I have finished the last book on my shelves that I acquired in 2021, but am not blogging it for the time being. It is only two months since I finished off the 2020 acquisitions. I’ll never wear down the pile completely, but at least there are fewer books that have been hanging around unread for many years.
My pile of unread books from 2022 is larger, and also has quite a lot about Kosovo thanks to a project that I started but was unable to finish. Starting off the list are:
Wag the Dog: The Mobilization and Demobilization of the Kosovo Liberation Army, by Andreas Heinemann-Grüder and Wolf-Christian Paes – the shortest book of those that I acquired in 2022 and have not yet read
An Island Called Moreau, by Brian Aldiss – the sf book that has lingered longest unread on my shelves
Dragon’s Teeth: Tales from North Kosovo, by Ian Bancroft – the non-fiction book that has lingered longest unread on my shelves
The enchantments of flesh and spirit, by Storm Constantine – the top unread book of those I acquired in 2022
Madame Prosecutor: Confrontations with Humanity’s Worst Criminals and the Culture of Impunity, by Carla del Ponte with Chuck Sudetic – the top unread book about Kosovo of those I acquired in 2022
The Good Wife of Bath, by Karen Brooks – the non-genre book that has lingered longest unread on my shelves
There are fifty books on the 2022 list, and I tend to get through them at about four every month, so I suspect I’ll be doing a post looking back at my 2022 books and forward to those I acquire in 2023 somewhere around this time next year.
Current The Yiddish Policemen’s Union, by Michael Chabon Soundings, by A. Hamilton Gibbs The Enchantments of Flesh and Spirit, by Storm Constantine Thief of Time, by Terry Pratchett
Last books finished East of Eden, by John Steinbeck Barracoon: the Story of the Last “Black Cargo”, by Zora Neale Hurston Ragtime, by E.L. Doctorow
Next books Sonic Boom, by Robbie Morrison et al Madame Prosecutor, by Carla del Ponte The Great Famine, by Cecil Woodham-Smith
General Favalan: Viv-2 is infected by that most deadly disease… curiosity. She wrongly believes there is more than Paradise Towers has to offer. / But there is nothing that Paradise does not provide.
Another of Cutaway Comics’ Doctor Who-related slipstream graphic stories, these four issues (which I bought as a collection) include, first, a full four part story, “Paradise Found” set a few years after the events of the Seventh Doctor TV series Paradise Towers, but also an eight page prequel, “Paradise Before” explaining (a little) how Paradise Towers ended up that way, and yet more: a spinoff from The Happiness Patrol, “Terra Alpha Blues”. It comes with several DVDs, combining extra stories and commentary both on the comics and about the original series, and I felt it brilliantly captured the spirit of the original story, which I always liked more than was fashionable anyway. You can get Paradise Found here.
‘Lol?’ Katie calls from the sitting room. She’s the only person who stills calls me Lol. It was my nickname in school but, unsurprisingly, it faded from use once people started using LOL as an acronym. I like that Katie still calls me Lol, though. It makes me feel … I dunno. Known. ‘Everything okay?’
I admit that I only bought this because I know the author a bit (I know her sister better). I really really enjoyed it. It’s a romance novel set in Dublin, jumping between student days around the turn of the century and grown-up days in 2019. Quite apart from the excellent and excruciating portrayal of the protagonist’s emotional journey with her love-interest, it also catches the passion of creating music together, along with some clear-eyed commentary on infertility (and on tabloid journalism and social media). I am glad to say that I actually understood the Irish-language joke on page 78 as well. You can get Our Song here.
I am conscious that I’ve been reading a few more romance novels this year, all by people I know; perhaps I’ll broaden that out.
Before I get into this, I was challenged over the methodology of these posts last week by Dilman Dila, who pointed out, quite fairly,
the lists are misleading, especially in relation to the African countries, and only perpetuates systemic and platform / corporate biases against African authors. Eg, the Uganda list doesn’t have Okot p’Bitek and the Kenya list doesn’t have Ngugi, though both names are in the Top 10 of Goodreads list!
All feedback is welcome, and this spurs me to give a bit more detail about what I am doing here.
The lists I publish for each country are of the books which are more than 50% set in that country, and have the highest number of owners on LibraryThing and the highest number of raters on Goodreads, taking the geometric average of the two figures. I will generally do eight books for each country, unless there are very few, in which case I will stop at five. I may not always make it to five in the future, but so far it’s proved reachable every time.
At the early stages, I was listing all of the books tagged with the name of each country on LibraryThing and Goodreads. But I realised that in a significant number of cases, a lot of books get tagged as relevant to country X without the majority of the text actually being set there – sometimes the author has close links, sometimes the plot has a small element set in country X, sometimes it’s just reader ignorance. (You can imagine what I faced with Guinea, which is coming next week.)
This means that my lists differ from those that Goodreads and LibraryThing serve up for each country, which rank books by the number of times a book has been tagged as relevant to country X. I have deliberately chosen a different metric, taking the number of people who have rated (GR) or own (LT) a particular book, as long as more than half of it is set in country X. (You can also dig out the number of people who own a book on Goodreads, or who have rated it on LibraryThing, but it is more effort.)
So I record the extent to which books set in country X have penetrated Goodreads and LibraryThing, ie by and large the Western English-speaking world (though Goodreads has some interesting pockets of support for other languages); but in the relevant entries, I will also note with regret where these do not include indigenous authors and will suggest further reading – as I did with Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o for Kenya.
For Uganda, the Ugandan writer Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi got two books in the top eight, and I’m afraid that the top book by Okot p’Bitek, a combined edition of his poems Song of Lawino and Song of Ocol, scores only 764 raters on Goodreads and 156 owners on LibrayThing, some way below the threshold to make my list.
Often, particularly in Africa, colonialist narratives have prevailed, and I hope that what I am doing is a first step to mapping out where that is worse and where it is better. (I was pleasantly surprised by Cambodia, for instance.)
This is a start, not an end, and perhaps I’ll be able to run a different methodology some time in the future. And don’t let me stop anyone else from looking for an improved version.
Having said that, on to this week’s country, Zimbabwe. Books are disqualified if less than 50% of them is set there.
These numbers are crunched by hand, not by AI.
Title
Author
Goodreads raters
LibraryThing owners
Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight: An African Childhood
This week’s winner, Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight, is a childhood memoir of growing up in a white farmer family in Rhodesia in the dying days of white rule, and what happened after the war was lost. I checked, and although the Fullers started in England and ended up moving to Malawi and then Zambia, that’s well after the halfway point in the book so it definitely qualifies. The LibraryThing winner, The Ear, the Eye, and the Arm, is a children’s science fiction novel set in a future Zimbabwe.
The top book set in Zimbabwe by a Zimbabwe-born author is Nervous Conditions, by Tsitsi Dangarembga, a semi-autobiographical novel about growing up in Rhodesia in the 1960s. The nearest miss – which would have been ninth on the list if I went any further – was Glory by NoViolet Bulawayo, a fantasy satire that is clearly about Zimbabwe.
I disqualified eight books. The Girl on the Train, by Paula Hawkins, is mostly set in England and I don’t know why a number of readers have tagged it as relating to Zimbabwe. The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency, by Alexander McCall Smith, is firmly set in Botswana. The Man in the Brown Suit, by Agatha Christie, has about 20% of the plot in Rhodesia, with the rest in South Africa, England and at sea. The location of King Solomon’s Mines, by H. Rider Haggard, is disputed but in any case less than half of the book takes place there.
More than half of I Will Always Write Back: How One Letter Changed Two Lives, by Caitlin Alifirenka and Martin Ganda, is set in the USA (I found a copy and counted the pages). Cocktail Hour Under the Tree of Forgetfulness, by Alexandra Fuller, seems to be more Kenya than Rhodesia. I awarded A Girl Named Disaster, by Nancy Farmer, to Mozambique a few months back. And the majority of Scribbling the Cat, by Alexandra Fuller again, seems to be set just across the border in Zambia and I counted it in my Zambia list published (belatedly) last week.
This is the first in a run of five African countries (not sure if I have stated this previously, but in principle I am running through the countries of the world in order of population). The next four are Guinea (Conakry), Benin, Rwanda and Burundi.
This is a consolidation of two blogposts from 2021, telling the story of how I identified the parents of a baby found abandoned in a Philadelphia park at the age of three weeks, in 1917. There have been no new developments since then, but I wanted to have a single account of the story in one place. Some names have been changed below; some have not.
In 2020 as the pandemic hit and indoor hobbies became suddenly more important, I sent a DNA sample to Ancestry.com (I had already done so with 23andMe) and waited with excitement for the results. Within a few weeks, I received notification that my sample had been processed, and eagerly checked to see who my closest genetic matches were among Ancetry.com users.
Six of the top seven were easy enough to work out. Three of them were descended from siblings of my mother’s maternal grandmother, an Ulster Presbyterian born near Coleraine in the middle of a family of nine. Another three of them were descended from siblings of my father’s maternal grandmother, who was one of eleven children of a thrice-married Pennsylvania steel broker. One, however, who I will call “Bella”, did not seem linked to either of the other two sets, and so I wrote to her in curiosity.
It became clear after some back and forth that Bella’s brother “Derek” and sister “Patricia” are also linked to me on Ancestry.com. The strength of their relationship to me appeared to be something at the level of third cousin (shared great-great-grandparents) or fourth cousin (shared 3x-great-grandparents). They had joined Ancestry.com to see if they could solve a family mystery: their mother had been found abandoned in a Philadelphia park as a baby. That story is told in a newspaper article from 25 August 1917:
PRETTY WAR BABY IS ABANDONED IN PARK Note on Tiny Girl Says Mother Is Dead, Father Gone Philadelphia’s first known war baby – a pretty, chubby, little girl of three weeks, was found on a bench on a hillside near Sedgley Guard House in Fairmount Park early today. Two women, who found the child, carried it to House Sergeant Maginn, of the Guard House, who sent it to the Philadelphia Hospital. The baby was wrapped in a white blanket and pinned to its spotless dress was a sealed envelope, which contained this note: “This baby was born August 5, of legitimate parentage of refinement and respectability. The mother died in childbirth at the age of 22. The father, a professional singer, travels, but has now gone to the war. There is no one else to look after the child and, being unable to get it into a home, has been obliged to resort to this means. Hoping the dear little baby will get a home, I am, ONE WHO CARES.” Park guards and the police are searching for the woman who is believed to have left the child in the Park, though they believe the story told in the note. The woman who found the child said she believed a woman they had seen near the bench a little earlier had left the child there. She was about fifty years old, had gray hair, and wore a black skirt and a white waist. She carried what they supposed was a baby wrapped in a white cloak. The Child when found, however, wore only its dress and the blanket.
All very dramatic. To jump ahead, the baby was adopted by a Philadelphia doctor and his wife, and grew up to marry her high school sweetheart, who became a university professor in Illinois. They retired to Vermont, where she died in 1987, with no knowledge of who her biological parents were from seventy years before.
As it happens, my grandmother was born in Philadelphia in 1899. But from the DNA, there was no chance that the baby in the park could have been her secret child; in that case, Bella, Patricia and Derek would have been my half-first cousins, and our DNA would have overlapped at around 6% rather than the 1%-ish that was actually the case. (In fact, two of my half-first-cousins on my mother’s side are on the DNA sites, and both score about 8% of overlap with me, which is more than average but within the normal range.)
Also, though this is supporting rather than conclusive evidence, my grandmother’s life is an open book thanks to her somewhat oversharing memoirs, and there is no hint of a secret teenage pregnancy.
Bella, Patricia and Derek, all born in the 1940s, knew nothing more than what is in the newspaper article about their mother’s origins, and were somewhat frustrated by the opacity of the DNA results that they got, and also by not always getting hugely helpful information from others who they had contacted on the site. I corresponded back and forth quite a lot with Patricia, and eventually she agreed to let me look at her own links on Ancestry.com.
She has a lot more close relatives on Ancestry.com than I do – starting of course with her siblings Bella and Derek, and then another five who are all genetically her second cousin or closer. The top two of those five, I quickly realised, were both descended from a couple who I will call Hugh and Peggy, born in the 1890s, who married in 1919 in Philadelphia. The next three were all related to Peggy’s siblings, but not to Hugh. It seemed pretty clear to me. The baby in the park’s mother was certainly Peggy. The baby’s father was definitely not Hugh.
Peggy’s family lived less than a mile from Fairmount Park in Phildelphia, where the baby was found. She is recorded as being a professional musician in the 1910 and 1920 censuses. She and Hugh appear to have had a baby together in 1916, but they did not get married until he returned from the war in 1919. Their marriage did not last, and the 1930 census records that Peggy and their child were living in Philadelphia while Hugh was living with a new wife on the West Coast.
Hugh died in the 1930s, and Peggy successfully applied for a pension as his widow, with dependent child, from the Veterans’ Administration, suggesting that their divorce, and Hugh’s other relationship, may not have been formalised. As noted above, several of Patricia’s DNA connections are descended from their child born in 1916; but as far as I can tell, they had no other children together. (Actually I have no genetic proof that the 1916 baby’s father was Hugh, but he seems to have acknowledged his own paternity.)
Reading between the lines, I speculate that Peggy and Hugh had parted company around the time that their child was born in the first half of 1916, and she and another chap got together towards the end of that year, with the August 1917 baby in the park as a result. But by the time the 1917 baby was born, Peggy and Hugh had reconciled or were about to reconcile. Hugh had just been drafted for the war, and the new baby was surplus to the requirements of the rekindled relationship.
So Peggy took a sad walk to the park that warm August evening – or more likely, perhaps, her mother did, if the reports of the older woman in the area are correct. I find this really heart-breaking: Peggy gave up her baby to a completely uncertain future, for the sake of a relationship which had already failed once, and was destined to fail again.
The note left with the baby said that “The mother died at childbirth at the age of 22. The father, a professional singer, travels, but has now gone to the war.” None of this was true. The mother had not died, was 27 rather than 22, and it was she who worked as a professional entertainer. We’ll get to the baby’s biological father in due course, but I will reveal now that he was an industrial executive who did not go to fight in the war at all – though Hugh, the baby’s stepfather, was about to. To quote G.K. Chesterton’s Father Brown:
“Suppose someone sent you to find a house with a green door and a blue blind, with a front garden but no back garden, with a dog but no cat, and where they drank coffee but not tea. You would say if you found no such house that it was all made up. But I say no. I say if you found a house where the door was blue and the blind green, where there was a back garden and no front garden, where cats were common and dogs instantly shot, where tea was drunk in quarts and coffee forbidden — then you would know you had found the house.”
Since I was not related to Peggy, nor to Bella, Patricia and Doug’s father, that meant by a process of elimination that the father of the baby in the park must be a relative of mine. I originally thought that it might have been quite a distant cousin, who lived in New England and was a travelling salesman, but on reflection I realised that his relationship to me was too distant to explain the strength of the DNA links between me and the siblings.
I worried away at this. My grandmother’s mother had strong Pennsylvania family links; but the limited DNA evidence pointed instead to her Massachusetts-born father’s side of the family. I went back to look at the list of my grandmother’s first cousins, rather than anyone more distant; all descended from my grandmother’s paternal grandparents, a couple who I will call Bill and Sally, born in the 1810s, who lived all of their lives near Boston.
I realised that I had missed one interesting candidate, who I will call “Edward”, son of Bill and Sally’s older daughter. Edward’s older brother “Chris” had moved to California in 1909, so I had ruled him out, but I had somehow failed to notice that Edward and the middle brother “David” had stayed in the East. David spent his whole life in Massachusetts, but Edward moved around a fair bit. He actually died in Philadelphia during the second world war; and, digging a bit further into the records, I discovered that he had also spent a lot of time in Pennsylvania from 1907 to 1917, including, crucially, that he lived in Philadelphia in 1916, exactly when the baby in the park was conceived.
To say that I was excited was an understatement. I realised also that although Edward was not himself known to have had other children, I had identified two of Chris’s great-grandchildren, Edward’s great-great-nephews, on another genetics site, myheritage.com – identified as “Henry” and “Ian” on this diagram.
Patricia needed little persuading to let me upload her DNA sample to myheritage.com. If I was right about Edward being her grandfather, then the link between her and Edward’s great-great-nephews should be around twice as strong as the link between her and me; second cousins once removed, as opposed to third cousins.
On a Saturday morning, my email pinged with a message from myheritage.com. I clicked excitedly to their site to see the analysis. Would it prove my theory that Edward was the father of the baby in the park?
Er, no. Patricia’s link with Henry was actually weaker than her link with me. And her link with Ian was so weak that it was off the scale of measurability. My Edward theory looked to have been completely blown out of the water.
I went back to the drawing board. Specifically, I went back to 23andMe, the website where I had first signed up for this kind of thing. After a bit more digging around, I realised that no less than three other known descendants of Bill and Sally, my great-great-grandparents, were on the site. And we knew that the father of the baby in the park must have been a mature man in 1916. If he was also a descendant of Bill and Sally, there were only seven males in the right age range:
Bill and Sally’s sons, “Albert” and “Brian”, aged 62 and 60 in 1916;
Bill and Sally’s daughter’s sons, Chris, David and Edward, aged 46, 43 and 35 in 1916;
Albert’s son “Frank”, aged 32 in 1916
Brian’s son “George”, aged 23 in 1916.
Luckily four of these had descendants on 23andMe – Chris’s great-great-granddaughter by his eldest daughter, who I’ll call “Jo”; Frank’s great-granddaughter “Kate”, also Albert’s great-great-granddaughter; a great-grandson of Albert by his second marriage, who I’ll call “Lenny”; and me, great-grandson of Brian and great-nephew of George.
There is no need to go into complexity here. It’s pretty simple.
If Chris, David or Edward was the grandfather of Patricia, Bella and Derek, then Jo is their half first cousin twice removed (Chris) or their second cousin twice removed (David or Edward), and their DNA should be closer to Jo’s than to Kate’s, Lenny’s or mine. (Already pretty much excluded as a possibility, by the myheritage.com results from Chris’s great-grandsons Henry and Ian.)
If Frank was the grandfather of Patricia, Bella and Derek, then Kate is their half first cousin once removed and their DNA should be closer to Kate’s than to Jo’s, Lenny’s or mine.
If Albert was the grandfather of Patricia, Bella and Derek, then Lenny is their half first cousin once removed and their DNA should be closer to Lenny’s than to Jo’s, Kate’s or mine.
If Brian or George was the grandfather of Patricia, Bella and Derek, then I am their half second cousin or half second cousin once removed, and their DNA should be closer to mine than to Jo’s, Kate’s or Lenny’s. (Already pretty much excluded, because their links to me should be a lot closer than they are, if this was the case.)
The balance of probabilities already pointed towards Frank. The DNA evidence that we already had weakened any case for Chris, David and Edward on the one hand, or for Brian and George on the other. That left 62-year-old Albert and his son, 32-year-old Frank; and Frank seemed more likely than Albert to have been at a time of his life when he would have been playing the field.
At this point I needed to persuade Patricia, Bella and Derek to all submit samples to 23andMe. Again, they needed little persuading. It took a while to get everything organised, but the results came back in the end:
DNA share with
Jo
Kate
Lenny
me
Patricia
0.63%
1.85%
0.70%
0.86%
Derek
0.42%
2.44%
0.23%
0.62%
Bella
0.86%
1.38%
1.06%
1.23%
For all three of them, the link with Kate was much closer than their links with Jo, Lenny or me. It looked very much like Frank must be their grandfather. As noted above, Kate is their half first cousin once removed; Lenny is their half second cousin; I myself am their third cousin; Henry and Ian are their third cousins once removed; and Jo is their third cousin twice removed.
In general you’d expect the link with Kate to have been a bit stronger, around 3% for a half first cousin once removed, and you’d expect the links with a half second cousin like Lenny to be closer than their links with a third cousin like me, whereas in fact I share more of their DNA than Lenny does. The connection with Jo, their third cousin twice removed, is surprisingly strong as well. But it’s all within the bounds of normal variation.
Another factor elevates this from probability to certainty. 23andMe allows you to do chromosome-by-chromosome comparison. (Since I first wrote this, Ancestry.com has now also rolled out that function.) Very interestingly, Kate shares X chromosome DNA with all three of Patricia, Bella and Derek. We people who have Y chromosomes can only inherit X chromosome DNA from our mothers and not our fathers. (You folks with two X chromosomes have inherited that DNA from both of your parents.) That means that if you share X chromosome DNA with anyone, there cannot be a father-son link in the genealogical link between you, because sons inherit X chromosome DNA only from their mothers.
But Kate’s link with six of the seven potential fathers of the baby in the park does include a father-son connection, which would eliminate any shared X chromosome DNA. Six of them are related to her through the father-son link between Albert and Frank, including Albert himself. The only one of the seven with whom Kate could share X chromosome DNA is her own great-grandfather, Frank. (I myself do not share X-chromosome DNA with any of the other people in the chart, because my link to them all is through my father; my X-chromosomes will be the same as my mother’s.)
(The X-chromosome connection also eliminates one remaining remote possibility, that the baby’s father might have been descended from one of Bill or Sally’s siblings – this was unlikely anyway, since that would have added another one or two steps to the genealogical distance with Bill and Sally’s known descendants, but the X-chromosome link with Kate meant that they had to also be related to Albert’s first wife, who is not related to me.)
So, I was able to solve a century-old mystery. We still don’t know how Frank and Peggy got together, to set in motion the course of events that resulted in the birth of the baby abandoned in the park in Philadelphia. I know that Frank was working in Buffalo that year, as a corporate executive, and also that he visited Washington DC for his business; we also know that his cousin Edward was living in Philadelphia. Perhaps Frank stopped off in Philly to visit his cousin Edward, who was about the same age, and met with Peggy then? (Though Edward was reportedly not close to the rest of his family.) Then again, Peggy was a musician; perhaps she was performing in DC or in Buffalo, and met Frank there? I doubt that we will ever find out.
But we do know for sure who the biological parents of the baby in the park were.
I tend to think, with no evidence at all, that Frank was unaware that Peggy was pregnant with his baby. Though only in his 30s, he was already a wealthy man, and could have made discreet provision for a baby (or indeed an abortion) without anyone finding out about it except his lawyer. It is not difficult to think of scenarios where Peggy did not have Frank’s contact details, though again I tend to think that she made a positive decision to bet on her relationship with Hugh and therefore to keep Frank and his biological child completely out of her family’s future life.
Frank married a woman from Ohio five years later, in 1922, and in due course they had a daughter – Kate’s grandmother. Frank lived most of his life in New York, eventually retiring to the Southern state where his daughter (his younger daughter, as we now know) had meanwhile moved, and where in due course his great-granddaughter Kate was born.
Peggy stayed in Philadelphia for the rest of her life, and as mentioned earlier had no other children (that we know of) after she married Hugh. Her son, born in 1916, married at least four times and had numerous children. He too lived most of his life in Philadelphia, though he went to the West Coast in the 1930s and came back again after the second war. Helpfully, several of his grandchildren are Ancestry.com users, as are some of Peggy’s great-nieces and great-nephews.
This sort of research is really difficult and not cheap, though not eye-wateringly expensive either. We needed Patricia, Bella and Derek to supply DNA samples to two different testing sites, and I think if I had not been related to them myself, it would have taken a lot longer to get to the bottom of the mystery. It would also have been much more difficult if they were not all Americans; we needed a critical mass of not-too-distant relatives who had joined at least one of the DNA testing sites to make the identification possible.
But it’s immensely gratifying to have been able to do this, and in the process I have very much enjoyed and valued getting to know Patricia, Kate and Kate’s parents. In the end, everyone has a right to know where they come from. I have a real job, so I doubt that I will ever make a living out of this kind of work, but it would be really interesting to do it again.
Second paragraph of third story (“Acts of Defiance” by Eric Brown):
I worked all morning on my portable typewriter, and towards lunchtime replaced it beneath the floorboards of my study. Old habits died hard, even though I was no longer on the mainland where the government might swoop unannounced at any time. I had moved to Shapinsay after the death of my wife, fleeing painful memories and the Party both. None of us were free these days, though paradoxically I did feel a little less imprisoned on the island which measured just five miles by four.
The last of the books that I acquired at Novacon in 2021, this is a collection of fourteen short stories which were donated to the convention by their authors – quite a stellar list of contributors. I thought they were all good; the two best for me were “Acts of Defiance” by Eric Brown, in a future totalitarian Scotland where reading dangerous books has been forbidden, and “The Ships of Aleph” by Jaine Fenn, whose protagonist sails over the edge of a flat world and finds himself in a place both familiar and unfamiliar. You can get Burning Brightly here.
This was the top unread book that I had acquired in 2021, the shortest unread book that I had acquired in 2021 and the sf book that had lingered longest on my shelves. That leaves only one book in my 2021 pile, Het lijkt Washington wel: Hoe lobbyisten Brussel in hun greep hebben, by Peter Teffer.
The city, and indeed the planet, have a strange history and an oddly mixed economy.
A very solid and enjoyable Bernice Summerfield novel by Terrance Dicks, bringing her and Chris Cwej to a large city called, er, Megacity, where a huge corporate crime scheme called The Project is bubbling under the surface, and parts of the story are told in the first person by an intellectually enhanced Ogron who is a private eye. It’s not trying to be deep, it’s just trying to be fun, and it succeeds. You can get Mean Streets here (at a price).
That takes me to the end of the Bernice Summerfield novels that I read ten years ago and failed to blog at the time. I’ll jump now to the unblogged Eighth Doctor novels, starting with Time Zero by Justin Richards.
Current East of Eden, by John Steinbeck The Yiddish Policemen’s Union, by Michael Chabon
Last books finished The Man in the Brown Suit, by Agatha Christie Doctor Who: The Mysterious Planet, by Terrance Dicks The Mysterious Planet, by Jez Strickley (did not finish) An Island Called Moreau, by Brian Aldiss “The Merchant and the Alchemist’s Gate”, by Ted Chiang Shroud, by Adrian Tchaikovsky Dragon’s Teeth: Tales from North Kosovo, by Ian Bancroft
Next books The Enchantments of Flesh and Spirit, by Storm Constantine Thief of Time, by Terry Pratchett The Great Hunger, by Cecil Woodham-Smith
Ironically it was one of the most prominent younger radicals, David Lloyd George, who as Chancellor of the Exchequer indirectly recharged the home rule project. The rejection of his 1909 ‘people’s budget’ by the House of Lords – breaking the unwritten convention that the upper house did not interfere with money matters – triggered a constitutional crisis which ended, after two narrow Liberal general election victories in 1910, in legislation to abolish the Lords’ veto power. The 1911 Parliament Act made possible not only death duties, but also Irish home rule. As the Act passed, the prime minister H. H Asquith announced that a third home rule bill would be brought forward. Enraged Tories denounced this as the result of a ‘corrupt bargain’ to keep the Liberals in power with Irish support – the budget was disliked by the influential Irish liquor trade, and home rule was the price of pushing it through. There was probably no deal as such, and the Liberals had in any case, thanks to Labour support, a comfortable majority. ‘A general understanding’ that home rule would follow, it has been reasonably suggested, was ‘surely the natural result of the long history of Liberal commitment’ to it.³ ³ P. Jalland, The Liberals and Ireland: The Ulster Question in British Politics to 1914 (Brighton: Harvester Press, 1980), 29.
I very much enjoyed Townshend’s Ewart-Biggs-Prize-winning The Republic: The Fight for Irish Independence, 1918-1923, so had pretty high expectations here, combined with fairly fresh memories of Ronan Fanning’s Fatal Path: British Government and Irish Revolution 1910-1922. I don’t think you could read The Partition without also having read The Republic, or something similar – the story of how Northern Ireland came to be created is really a sidenote to the much bigger story of Irish independence, and Townshend has sensibly not repeated much from the previous book, which means that some important context is skimmed here.
But it doesn’t matter all that much, because this is a deep dive into archival sources and also (often neglected) contemporary newspaper accounts of the process of the partition of Ireland, which Townshend rightly puts as beginning in 1885 when the election results revealed that Nationalism was dominant everywhere in Ireland except in the north-east, and the question of how, or indeed if, Ulster could be incorporated into a future self-governing Ireland became a real one.
Map of 1885 election results from Wikipedia
One part of the book was completely new to me: the confused and violent situation in Northern Ireland, especially Belfast, as the new government under James Craig was being set up and at the same time under ineffective but visible attack by Michael Collins from the south. There was a real intermixture of Loyalist militias of varying degrees of effectiveness and state support that would hold its own with many of today’s conflicts, including the bloody ethnic cleansing. Nobody comes out of this episode well, including the British government which was wilfully ignorant of events in Belfast, Derry and the border counties.
The last chapter, not surprisingly, looks at the history of the Boundary Commission, which started late and badly. The chairman was a South African judge, but from the imperialist side; the Northern Ireland government refused to appoint its commissioner, so London imposed a journalist who of course leaked proceedings to Craig; and the Irish Free State nominated Eoin MacNeill, the confused academic who had unsuccessfully countermanded the Easter Rising in 1916, by now Minister for Education.
Townshend spends some time wondering why Cosgrave did not instead appoint Kevin O’Shiel, who was an expert on boundaries and constitutions, but I think the answer is clear: MacNeill had the political heft and was actually an elected member of the Northern Ireland Parliament (though he never took his seat), whereas O’Shiel (despite his best efforts) was a mere political adviser. MacNeill, however, was thoroughly outmanoeuvred by the other Commissioners and secretariat, and only managed to exert some control of the process by resigning just before the report was due to be published, thus torpedoing the entire exercise. (I believe another book published this year is even more critical of him.)
Nationalists like to find villains for the crime of partition, but the fact is that Nationalist leaders failed to grasp the fact that the Ulster situation was a very serious impediment for their political project. Townshend doesn’t go into it, but much Nationalist rhetoric and indeed behaviour was intentionally offensive to those who they claimed as fellow citizens. Parnell, as a Protestant landlord himself, rather adopted the zeal of the convert, and no Nationalist leadership figure had credibility among Unionists. In the later stages, I think that Redmond missed a trick here, and in other respects, by refusing to accept a Cabinet position – it would have been tough going, but he would have had the threat of resignation in his dwindling armory. I very much agree with Townshend’s conclusion:
Almost nobody wanted it; but any implication that a better arrangement was possible, and somehow squandered through haste and carelessness, would be misleading. The intensity of Unionist hostility to home rule presented a political challenge of exceptional difficulty. Once Joseph Chamberlain had talked of a separate parliament for Ulster, it would have needed a major reconstruction of nationalist ideas to make a unitary home rule arrangement viable. That adaptation was not made, or even attempted, mainly because nationalists were doomed to believe that any resistance within Ireland to home rule was illusory. Even amongst others, partition was never embraced with enthusiasm. It was a negative concept, connoting at best failure, at worst abuse of statesmanship.
Townshend also looks briefly at why neither power-sharing nor UK-wide federalism could have flown. My own reflection on those points is that nobody ever suggested guaranteed positions in Irish government for the Unionists, at least not until the creation of the Free State in 1922 (when Collins basically gave them what they asked for, most importantly short-term over-representation in the new Senate). And the notion of ‘Home Rule all round’ failed to recognised the asymmetry between Irish demands on the one hand and Scottish and Welsh aspirations on the other. (And indeed between Scotland and Wales. Bear in mind that devolution was rejected by a 4 to 1 majority in Wales in 1979, and scraped through by just under 7,000 votes out of over a million cast in 1997.)
I don’t think this is a book for beginners, but those who already know a bit – even a lot – about the period will find some very interesting new information. You can get The Partition here.
This was my top unread book acquired in 2021, and the non-fiction book that had lingered longest on my shelves. Next on those piles respectively are Burning Brightly: 50 Years of Novacon, ed. Ian Whates, and Het lijkt Washington wel: Hoe lobbyisten Brussel in hun greep hebben, by Peter Teffer.
Jakob: You make it sound as though they’re being kind! I mean, what sort of choice is that – a life in prison or a quick, painless death?
Two more Twelfth Doctor comics, both by George Mann, featuring one-off (well, twice-off) companion Hattie, who is recruited during the first story and then gets to do the second story before going home in time for the next band rehearsal.
George Mann is not my favourite writer, and I found the title story here typically under par – an interesting concept, of a society based on a huge twisted metal structure in space, but let down by an implausibly hidden secret at the heart of it, and also a sudden yet inevitable betrayal at the end. Of course it’s nice to see the Capaldi Doctor doing music, but that was the best thing about it.
The second story, “Playing House”, was a bit better – the Doctor and Hattie encounter a family who are unwittingly storing a disintegrating TARDIS which is dangerously warping their reality. There were still some bits that didn’t really add up, but it hangs together as well as most Who.
The art by Mariano Laclaustra and Rachael Stott is very good.
This is true of democratic leaders as well, but in a democracy it is harder to achieve results. A prime minister is not a president, let alone a prince. He cannot govern by himself, however good he is. He has no separate democratic legitimacy, and government in Britain is collective. The prime minister depends for his power on the support of the members of his party in Parliament, and at any moment they can get rid of him (although the Labour Party is notably more loyal than the Conservative Party and has never got rid of a leader in anger but always waited for them to resign even when the price of leaving them in place is disastrous electoral defeat).
This is a general memoir about the art of government under Tony Blair by Jonathan Powell, who was his chief of staff for the entire 1997-2007 period, and is now the National Security Adviser to Keir Starmer. It’s the second of three books about Powell’s time at the top, the first being about Northern Ireland and the third about war, especially Iraq, so those important subjects are downplayed here.
Powell takes one of Machiavelli’s aphorisms as the anchor point for each of the twelve chapters, but doesn’t let it constrain him; each of the chapters is a fairly disciplined musing of 18 to 36 pages on a particular aspect of governance and power. There is very little here about formal mechanisms of office, apart from the tactics of cabinet reshuffles; there is more about the architecture of Number Ten, and a lot – really a lot – about how awful Gordon Brown was. (For a redemptive take on Gordon Brown, listen to David Tennant’s podcast interview with him.)
Powell is of course defensive about the overall record of the Blair government, and writing just after the 2010 election he doesn’t see the disasters of Brexit and Boris Johnson coming down the road. This makes his admissions of error all the more interesting. One that I had completely forgotten, but that he comes back to several times, so it clearly was traumatic, was the disastrous speech made by Blair to the Women’s Institute in 2000. Part of the problem was that despite the efforts of his despairing staff, Blair was both undisciplined and micro-managing in the process of writing major speeches. Nine times or more out of ten, he got away with it, but on that day in Wembley, he didn’t.
One of the interesting chapters was on the role of spin and the media. It’s clear that no British government will ever undertake the necessary reforms of the media outlined by the Leveson Inquiry (which reported after this book was published). The major media are simply too powerful and politicians too scared of them. It would take a cross-party alliance between government and opposition, prepared to face down bullying and dirty tricks from unaccountable billionaires, and it’s just not going to happen.
One institution that Powell doesn’t have much time for is the monarchy. The Queen comes up twice, once in the aftermath of the death of Princess Diana, where Blair intervened to tell the clueless Royals what to do; and again when Blair and his team are invited to the royal barbecue in Balmoral – but Powell and his partner are shunted off the scene, because the Queen did not want an unmarried couple visibly present. It’s unusual and frankly refreshing to find a memoir from the top of the British government that treats the Royals with anything other than awe-struck deference. Again, this was published in 2010, with more than ten years of the Queen’s reign left to go. (One wonders what other monarchy stories Powell was persuaded to leave out.)
Anyway, this was a lot more interesting than I had expected, and I’ll look out for the other two books in the sequence. Meanwhile, you can get The New Machiavelli here.
I realised to my dismay that I had skipped Zambia back in August, when it should have been between Malawi and Chad. I had done all the calculations, just failed to write the post and skipped from its neighbour to the more northern country. I’ll restore it to the correct order in my list of countries at the end of the post.
See here for methodology. Books are disqualified if less than 50% of them is set in Zambia.
The Eye of the Elephant: An Epic Adventure in the African Wilderness
Delia Owens
3,249
221
The Garden of Burning Sand
Corban Addison
3,575
152
Beautiful Blackbird
Ashley Bryan
788
603
The Africa House: The True Story of an English Gentleman and His African Dream
Christina Lamb
832
254
This week’s winner, Mrs Pollifax on Safari, is the fifth in a series of novels about a grandmother who gets recruited by the CIA for a series of unlikely missions, in this case preventing the assassination of the President of Zambia. (Who in real life died in 2021, aged 97, though he had given up power after losing elections thirty years earlier.) I read a couple of them when I was a teenager, but not this one.
The second placed book on my list, The Old Drift by Namwali Serpell, won the Arthur C. Clarke Award in 2020, and worthily so in my view. It is the top book set in Zambia by a Zambian writer.
I am not completely sure about Beautiful Blackbird, by Ashley Bryan, but it is heavily marketed as being based on a Zambian folk tale, so I have included it.
I disqualified a bunch of books. Several were by Alexandra Fuller, who has spent a lot of her life in Zambia; but looking through the summaries of her memoirs, as far as I can tell Scribbling the Cat is the only one where the majority of the book is set in the country, and I disqualified Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight, Cocktail Hour Under the Tree of Forgetfulness, Leaving Before the Rains Come and Travel Light, Move Fast. All great titles though.
Wilbur Smith’s When the Lion Feeds seems to be mainly set in South Africa, or at least as much there as Zambia. Into Africa: The Epic Adventures of Stanley & Livingstone by Martin Dugard includes the territory of what is now Zambia as part of the story, but I think less than half. The same – I think, but I have not checked fully – for Out of Darkness, Shining Light, by Petina Gappah, which is about the transportation of Livingstone’s remains to the coast, and I think is more in what’s now Tanzania.
A couple more covered more African countries than just Zambia, including Dead Aid: Why Aid Is Not Working and How There Is a Better Way for Africa by Dambisa Moyo and China’s Second Continent: How a Million Migrants Are Building a New Empire in Africa by Howard W. French.
Normal service will be resumed next week with Zimbabwe, followed by Guinea (Conakry), Benin and Rwanda.
Second paragraph of third story in The Casuarina Tree (“The Outstation”):
Now the prahu [boat] appeared in the broad reach. It was manned by prisoners, Dyaks under various sentences, and a couple of warders were waiting on the landing-stage to take them back to jail. They were sturdy fellows, used to the river, and they rowed with a powerful stroke. As the boat reached the side a man got out from under the attap awning and stepped on shore. The guard presented arms.
Second paragraph of third chapter of The House of Doors:
‘I have read your book, Mr Willie,’ said Ah Keng.
I enjoyed both of the previous books that I read by Tan Twan Eng – The Garden of Evening Mists and The Gift of Rain. Like The Gift of Rain, his latest, The House of Doors, is mainly set in Penang, which is a place of fascination for me as it is where my grandparents met and my father was born. As I started The House of Doors, I realised that it rather depends on knowledge of Somerset Maugham, one of many well-known writers whose works I had never read, so I got hold of The Casuarina Tree, his collection of short stories set in Malaysia, and finished it before I finished The House of Doors (it is slightly shorter).
The Casuarina Tree, published in 1926, is not one of Maugham’s best known books – it’s not in his top twenty according to Goodreads or even in his top forty, according to LibraryThing. But it is set in Malaya after Maugham’s visits there in 1921 and 1925, six short stories of between 34 and 45 pages each, with a prologue and afterword. They are all about expats with dreadful secrets, whose character flaws may become public or may remain hidden, with the moral depravity of the English brutally exposed as a result of contact with the human and physical geography of Malaysia.
The most successful of the stories is “The Letter”, based on the real case of Ethel Proudlock who shot and killed her English neighbour who, she claimed, was attempting to rape her. But they are all effective, brutal vignettes of colonial life.
Supposedly Maugham became persona non grata in Penang because too many of the episodes that the stories are based on were recognisable. That sounds like a marketing myth to me – they may just not have liked him very much. Anyway, you can buy The Casuarina Tree here, though it’s easy to find for free on the internets.
There is one person who pops up both in The House of Doors and in my grandmother’s memoirs of Penang a few years later, the lawyer Hastings Rhodes, who was the state prosecutor in Ethel Proudlock’s trial in 1911 and then hosted my grandmother for dinner just after she and my grandfather got engaged in 1927. She reports that “Hastings Rhodes drove me home and professed to be heart-broken at my engagement, but I took that with several grains of salt.” He was recently divorced, and the same age as my grandfather, and died unexpectedly in 1929.
The House of Doors is about Lesley Hamlyn, living in an unsatisfactory marriage with her husband in Penang in 1921, and hosting her husband’s old schoolfriend Willie Somerset Maugham and his secretary/lover Gerald Haxton, while also looking back on her own friendship with the Chinese revolutionary Sun Yat-Sen ten years before, and coming to the realisation that both she and her husband are emotionally involved with Chinese men. There is a framing narrative set in South Africa, and Ethel Proudlock’s murder trial gets a look in too.
There is a lot here, and I didn’t think that Tan Twan Eng juggled the balls of plot and character as well as in his other books. When a story is based on real events, authors sometimes let their imagination get fettered by the historical record, and I felt that had happened here. Oddly enough Maugham, the person about whom most is known, comes across as the most well-rounded of the characters, while Lesley, the ostensible protagonist, felt a bit flat to me. But other people seem to like it, so perhaps I was just in the wrong mood. You can get The House of Doors here.
In Gweedore the crisis was exceptionally severe. A total collapse in the demand for seasonal laborers—the “tattie-hokers” who went en masse to harvest potatoes on Scottish estates—had left most families without a supplementary income, forcing them to buy goods on credit from local shopkeepers. Some of these acted as the district’s bankers—the hated “gombeen men,” who were regarded by the community as money-grabbing usurers. They, too, were refusing further loans. From Dublin a certain amount of aid was being organized by two influential private charities; in London a group of Quakers who had provided relief during the Great Famine stepped in again. One was led by a gentle, white-whiskered philanthropist named James Hack Tuke, who set off for Donegal at the beginning of March.
On 6 May 1882, the newly appointed Chief Secretary for Ireland, Lord Frederick Cavendish, arrived in Dublin for his first day in the job. In the evening, as he was walking from Dublin Castle to his official residence in Phoenix Park, Thomas Henry Burke, the Permanent Under Secretary who also had an official residence in the Park, spotted him from his own carriage and dismounted so that the two could have a chat as they covered the last few hundred metres to their homes on foot.
They never made it. Seven members of The Invincibles, an extremist Irish nationalist group, surrounded them and stabbed them to death with surgical knives. They had been planning to attack Burke for weeks, and did not even know who Cavendish was, but did not want to leave the red-bearded chap alive as a witness. The attackers were driven away in a cab whose driver rejoiced in the nickname “Skin-the-Goat”; he pops up in person in Chapter 16 of Ulysses as the keeper of the cabmen’s shelter at Butt Bridge where Stephen Dedalus and Leopold Bloom get their heads together before going back to Bloom’s house for cocoa. (That’s not the only reference to the 1882 murders in Ulysses; James Joyce would have been three months old at the time, but they cast a long dark shadow.)
With all due respect to Lord Mountbatten and Kevin O’Higgins, the Phoenix Park murders were the most dramatic political assassinations ever to take place in Ireland – the victims were the British government minister responsible for Irish affairs, and the most senior civil servant in the Irish administration. On top of that, Cavendish and his wife Lucy were very close to her aunt and her aunt’s husband, who happened to be the prime minister, William Ewart Gladstone; Cavendish, whose father was the Duke of Devonshire, had been Gladstone’s private secretary for several years, and more or less ran the Treasury between the Liberals winning the election in 1880 and his appointment to Ireland in 1882. As for Burke, he was the most visible and most senior Catholic in the Irish government, and it was not until twenty years after his death that another Catholic got the job of Permanent Under Secretary.
The timing of the murders could not have been more disastrous in the delicate dance of British policy and Irish nationalism. The dominant Nationalist leader Charles Stewart Parnell had been released from prison only a couple of days before, and Cavendish had been sent to Dublin by Gladstone with a mandate to try and find reconciliation with the Nationalist Party and the Irish Land League, which had mounted a highly successful civil disobedience campaign against the (often absentee) landlords and against the British state, bringing attention to the dire economic situation of Irish tenant farmers. They had introduced a new word to the English language, after a land agent in County Mayo who was ostracised by the local community, to the extent that local shopkeepers refused to sell anything to him or his household: the unfortunate Captain Boycott.
The immediate effect of the murders was cataclysmic. Parnell’s reaction to the news was that he must resign from politics entirely, though he was dissuaded by Gladstone among others. Nationalist politicians condemned the murders, but of course for the English (and Scottish and Welsh) public, there was a seamless connection between Nationalist parliamentary activism and the assassinations. And in fact it turned out that several of the Invincibles were also senior officials in the Irish Land League. Several years later, The Times published letters apparently from Parnell which seemed to endorse the murders, though these were dramatically proved to be forgeries.
Superintendent John Mallon of the Dublin Metropolitan Police narrowly missed being on the scene of the murders himself, and pursued a dogged investigation of the crime. From good old human intelligence, he already had a good idea who the leading members of the Invincibles were, and interrogated them all until two of them confessed, one of them James Carey, the leader of the gang. The other five Invincibles were all hanged, including the two who had actually carried out the stabbing. The getaway driver, Skin-the-Goat, was imprisoned for sixteen years but emerged in time to make his appearance in Ulysses.
There was a grim postscript to the grim story. Carey, the informer, was given a new identity by the British government and sent off to make a new life with his family in South Africa. On the boat he made friends with one Patrick O’Donnell, a Donegal man from Gweedore. When they arrived in South Africa, O’Donnell saw an account of the Invincibles trial in an English newspaper which included a recognisable portrait of Carey, even though he had subsequently shaved his beard off. O’Donnell, who was politically motivated but seems not to have had any direct connection with the Invincibles, realised that his new friend on board was in fact the notorious informer, went back to the boat and shot Carey dead. (Most of the passengers seem to have brought their own guns with them.) He was convicted of murder and hanged. Carey’s fate was then used by Arthur Conan Doyle in the fourth, and worst, of the Sherlock Holmes novels, The Valley of Fear.
Julie Kavanagh is best known as a historian of ballet, but she has turned in a great piece of work here, not only going to the well-plumbed depths of British official sources, but also delving deep into the Invincibles and their structure, as far as one can trace it given the relative lack of written records and the mutability of some of the protagonists’ names. One unusual source that she uses extensively is the correspondence of Queen Victoria, who was deeply interested in the Irish situation, and of course hostile to the Nationalist agenda. There is one odd glitch where she starts to explore why O’Donnell was tried in London rather than South Africa, but fails to put in the actual reason why it happened that way. Otherwise this is a very readable account of a very dramatic (but nowadays overlooked) historical event. You can get The Irish Assassins here.
One last note relating to my Cambridge days. The unfortunate Lord Frederick Cavendish and his wife Lucy had no children. She dedicated the rest of her life (another four decades) to the promotion of girls’ and women’s education. Forty years after she died, her great-niece, Margaret Braithwaite, was one of the founders of a new Cambridge college for postgraduate women students, especially those from under-represented and non-traditional backgrounds; and the new college was named after Braithwaite’s great-aunt. During my not very successful tenure as Deputy President of Cambridge University Students Union, I was assigned Lucy Cavendish College as one of my liaison responsibilities. I always vaguely wondered who it was named after, and now I know.
This was my top unread book in the rapidly dwindling pile of those acquired in 2021. Next up is The Partition: Ireland Divided, 1885-1925, by Charles Townshend.
Yet just as the books of the Tanakh reveal the process of creative responses to disappointment when they refocus prophecy, rethink the afterlife and steadily enrich their meditation on God’s purposes, there is much to recover from the history of second-century Christianity. It is a period in which Christian communities recovered from their trauma and reshaped themselves for new circumstances. We can gather enough fragments of evidence to show how radically diffetent from the first-century Christian groups the later Christian Church came to look: it created a canon of Scripture, credal statements and an institutional clerical ministry for its community life. The closing of the canon involved the exclusion of much of the apocalyptic literature which had formed the matrix of Judaism in the time of Jesus and his first followers; but the process was slow, and Christians never quite forgot this body of texts, or the climate of thought that it had created.
I enjoyed two previous books by Diarmaid MacCulloch, his magisterial History of Christianity and his collection of essays on the Reformation, All Things Made New. I’m sorry to say that this left me rather cold and I abandoned it after fifty pages. The problem is that the Bible itself is not about silence as such, and delving for what is said and meant about silence seems to me to be looking for something that isn’t really there; still more so when we get to the early Christian church and many patristic and earlier writings that I am unfamiliar with. MacCulloch is entitled to write the book that he wants to write and that his core readership wants to read. You can get Silence: A Christian History here.
This was my top unread book acquired in 2022. Next on that pile is The Enchantments of Flesh and Spirit, by Storm Constantine.
Current Shroud, by Adrian Tchaikovsky East of Eden, by John Steinbeck
Last books finished Mean Streets, by Terrance Dicks Burning Brightly: 50 Years of Novacon, ed. Ian Whates Our Song, by Anna Carey Paradise Towers: Paradise Found, by Sean Mason and Silvano Beltramo The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien: Revised and Expanded Edition Het lijkt Washington wel: Hoe lobbyisten Brussel in hun greep hebben, by Peter Teffer Wag the Dog: The Mobilization and Demobilization of the Kosovo Liberation Army, by Andreas Heinemann-Grüder and Wolf-Christian Paes Doctor Who: The Well, by Gareth L. Powell
Next books Doctor Who: The Mysterious Planet, by Terrance Dicks An Island Called Moreau, by Brian Aldiss “The Merchant and the Alchemist’s Gate”, by Ted Chiang
This is the start of my new project, to read at least one book by each of the winners of the Nobel Prize for Literature who was not a white man, in order. I am bracing myself for Kristin Lavransdatter in a couple of rounds, but the process starts gently with Selma Lagerlöf (1858-1940) of Sweden, who in 1909 became the tenth winner but the first woman, and also the first Swede, to get the award, “in appreciation of the lofty idealism, vivid imagination, and spiritual perception that characterize her writings”
Purity and simplicity of diction, beauty of style, and power of imagination, however, are accompanied by ethical strength and deep religious feeling… what makes Selma Lagerlöf’s writings so lovable is that we always seem to hear in them an echo of the most peculiar, the strongest, and the best things that have ever moved the soul of the Swedish people. Few have comprehended the innermost nature of this people with a comparable love… Such an intimate and profound view is possible only for one whose soul is deeply rooted in the Swedish earth and who has sucked nourishment from its myths, history, folklore, and nature. It is easy to understand why the mystical, nostalgic, and miraculous dusk that is peculiar to the Nordic nature is reflected in all her works. The greatness of her art consists precisely in her ability to use her heart as well as her genius to give to the original peculiar character and attitudes of the people a shape in which we recognize ourselves.
Perhaps it comes across as a little defensive of the Swedish Academy for having chosen one of their own. By contrast, Lagerlöf’s own speech is attractively humble, regretting that her late father was not present.
Anyone who has ever sat in a train as it rushes through a dark night will know that sometimes there are long minutes when the coaches slide smoothly along without so much as a shudder. All rustle and bustle cease and the sound of the wheels becomes a soothing, peaceful melody. The coaches no longer seem to run on rails and sleepers but glide into space. Well, that is how it was as I sat there and thought how much I should like to see my old father again.
I was first put onto Lagerlöf by my distant cousin Frederic Whyte (1876-1940), who wrote about her in his 1926 memoir A Wayfarer in Sweden. On his recommendation, as it were, I read and enjoyed Gösta Berling’s Saga and The Wonderful Adventures of Nils. Of her other books, The Emperor of Portugallia had the most raters on Goodreads and Jerusalem the most owners on LibraryThing, and both are short, so I decided to read both (but was only partially successful, as I will explain).
The second paragraph of the third chapter of The Emperor of Portugallia is:
Det var Erik i Fallas hustru, som skulle bära barnet till dopet. Hon åkte till prästgården med den lilla flickan i sina armar, och Erik i Falla själv gick bredvid kärran och körde. Den första vägbiten ända fram till Duvnäs bruk var ju så dålig, att den knappt kunde kallas för väg, och Erik i Falla ville vara försiktig, då han hade det odöpta barnet att köra för.
It was the wife of Eric of Falla who was to bear the child to the christening. She sat in the cart with the infant while Eric of Falla, himself, walked alongside the vehicle, and held the reins. The first part of the road, all the way to Doveness, was so wretched it could hardly be called a road, and of course Eric had to drive very carefully, since he had the unchristened child to convey.
Published in 1914, five years after Lagerlöf had got her Nobel Prize, it is about a tenant farmer who is devoted to his daughter; but when he falls on hard times, she goes to Stockholm to work. It becomes obvious to everyone in the village that she has become a sex worker in the city; her father at first is in denial, and then suffers a mental breakdown, believing himself to be the Emperor of Portugallia and his absent daughter his princess. There is a somewhat glurgy ending, but the rest is interesting enough. It is exactly the sort of thing that the Swedish Academy would have had in mind in celebrating the pious and honest people of the countryside, oppressed by the landowners but supported by the Church. I did not think it was especially deep, but there is nothing very wrong with it. You can get The Emperor of Portugallia here.
Having (as I thought) finished Jerusalem, and checking out the plot points on Swedish Wikipedia, I was alarmed to realise that I had only the first of the two parts of the novel, published respectively in 1901 and 1902. (I also had intended to read the earlier book first, but I got that wrong too.) None of the English translations available in ebook format seems to include the second part of Jerusalem – I suspect that they have all been scraped from Project Gutenberg, which has only the first half. So my review is of the first half of the book only.
The second paragraph of the third chapter of Jerusalem, is:
– Vad ska det där bli till? sade mor Märta.
“What’s all that for?” asked Mother Martha.
It’s another portrait of a changing society in rural Sweden, which I did not find as compelling as The Emperor of Portugallia – too many people with similar names, and the narrative skips through a couple of generations perhaps a little too easily. But the last few chapters, showing a fringe Christian cult gaining control of most of the population and then brainwashing them into moving from Sweden to Jerusalem, are well done. In the second volume, which I wasn’t able to get hold of, apparently they get to Jerusalem and have a really hard time. Claes Annerstedt’s Nobel ceremony speech, quoted above, raves about Jerusalem, but I think more about the second part than the first. You can get the first part of Jerusalem here.
The rural Swedes moving to Jerusalem are a genuine historical episode; they joined up with the American settlers whose legacy is the very pleasant American Colony Hotel to the north of the Old City.
Anyway, I think that in retrospect, there were much more interesting things going on in literature in 1909 than Selma Lagerlöf, but she is a logical enough laureate if you’re interested in the kind of literature that the Swedish Academy was – bearing in mind that the previous laureates were Sully Prudhomme, Theodor Mommsen, Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson, Frédéric Mistral, José Echegaray, Henryk Sienkiewicz, Giosuè Carducci, Rudyard Kipling and Rudolf Christoph Eucken.
Next in this sequence of mine is the winner of the Nobel Prize four years after Selma Lagerlöf – Rabindranath Tagore, who got the award in 1913. I shall be reading his poetry collection Gitanjali.