What’s Hopper been reading lately? Why the scarcity of
book reviews at this site?
Well, something shocking’s happened. For the first
time in nearly twenty years, I went ten days WITHOUT READING ANYTHING!
Yeah, my unshakable sickness confined me that
week-and-a-half to the wasteland that is TV. Hard to read when you’re coughing
up a lung every three minutes and can’t get comfortable in any position. So instead
of science fiction, military history, philosophy, or any other literary
weirdity, it’s been Impractical Jokers,
the occasional Tucker Carlson, and Yankee games with my oldest daughter.
That being stated, I have read stuff outside that
ten-day period.
I did a second-run through of Homer’s Iliad June 15 to July 10. Not as
earth-shattering world-shaking as when I first read it (and reviewed it, here).
As a matter of fact, instead of morbid fascination and admiration, I felt
morbid disgust. Went from, “Wow, imagine if men like this still populated the
earth” to “Thank God men like this do not populate the earth, at least in large
numbers.” The cruelty, the taunting, the shoulder shrugging at gore, the placing
of honor, bravery, and courage on a pedestal with love, kindness, and mercy as
a footstool, well, it was off-putting to say the least. Sure, there is a place
for honor, bravery, and courage. But it must be – has to be – tempered with
those values Christ taught and emphasized.
Still, though, America 2018 could use a pinch of the
Homeric. Or perhaps a whole tablespoon.
After making my way 44 percent through PKD’s Exegesis, I had to put it on hold.
Extremely interesting, this “garage philosophy” of a great, if perhaps mentally
troubled, science fiction writer. So much so that I went and purchased a copy of
it, with a self-promise to pick up where I left off at page 400 sometime in the
near future. And I also plan to do a short post on what I’ve gleaned from his
visions and explanatory noodlings in the next couple of days. If you come here
for the weirdness, you’ll get plenty o’ it in that post. I’m actually excited
thinking about what I’m going to write regarding The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick. I know I’ll enjoy it.
Been doing a drunken-walk through the Bible, too. I
have a couple of versions of the Good Book in my possession; each one yields a
different perspective. Right now I’m using a Protestant “Men’s Devotional”
Bible, and in the past three weeks I’ve read through the Gospel of Mark, the
Letter to the Ephesians, Deutero-Isaiah (that’s the second half of Isaiah,
believed to be written by someone other than Isaiah), and now half-way through
the Acts of the Apostles. Interesting, fulfilling, and uplifting, as always.
One of my dreams is to become a Biblical scholar before shipping off this
mortal coil. I’m probably about ten percent of the way there now.
Finally, a few days ago I started Napoleon as Military Commander, a book I picked up for myself as a
gift at the end of tax season a few months ago. Why the interest in Napoleon?
See here. Since mid-March I put away an 800-page biography of the French ruler
and a 120-page examination of the battle which finally deposed him, Waterloo.
I’m reading this 280-page military history as a prelude to resuming my study of
the Civil War, which I’ll probably get to in the fall.
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