Dreaming
in German by Claudia Poser
This
is the best book I have read in years. It is a memoir of the author's
experiences from Communistic East Germany, West German, and America
as they evolved into the 21st century from post WWII. This
life story is seamlessly related in a style and method that makes you
lament the end of the book.
Excerpts from Dreaming in German:
“The
stories about war did nothing to make me feel confident that I could
handle such a catastrophe. They left me certain that you needed luck
to survive. But luck I already had. I was alive now, after the war,
in a time when the world had just learned a lesson it could never
forget. Nationalism had been exposed as a curse. Everyone had learned
war brought no glory, only misery. I hoped that would be enough.”
“I
tried to turn back, but I no longer fit and the home I longed for had
vanished along with the child I had been.”
The
Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt's New World by Andrea
Wulf
Alexander
von Humboldt was an exceptionally brilliant, insightful man. He was
painstakingly thorough in his research, and he delivered his
monumental message two centuries ago. This one of a kind scientist
pioneered his research with an original approach. He saw the need for
an ecological balance between nature and mans ever encroaching
plunder of new frontiers.
I
loved the book’s aspects of discovery, enlightenment, and
consciousness. Andrea Wulf delivered Humboldt’s message which the
world desperately needs to heed now. This huge volume captivated my
attention all the way through and I was sad to see it come to an
end...it is memorable!
Author
Andrea Wulf writes of Alexander Humboldt:
"During
much of his long life, he was the nexus of the scientific world,
writing some 50,000 letters and receiving at least double that
number. Knowledge, Humboldt believed, had to be shared, exchanged,
and made available to everybody. Humboldt ‘read’ plants as
others did books – and to him they revealed a global force behind
nature, the movements of civilizations as well as of landmass. No
one had ever approached botany in this way."
"Humboldt
talked of ‘mankind’s mischief … which disturbs nature’s
order’. There were moments in his life when he was so pessimistic
that he painted a bleak future of humankind’s eventual expansion
into space, when humans would spread their lethal mix of vice,
greed, violence and ignorance across other planets. The human
species could turn even those distant stars ‘barren’ and leave
them ‘ravaged’, Humboldt wrote as early as 1801, just as they
were already doing with earth."
The Owl of Minerva by
Gustav Regler
Gustav Regler was an exceptional
intellect with a brilliant mind. He was a compassionate humanitarian,
politically just and publicly empathetic.
Many events impacted this man’s life
beginning with his mother introducing the Bible into her bed-time
stories. He wanted to trust and came away with memories of his
foolish heroism in WWI. He wished he could talk to one of the dead
and was conscious of the utter finality of their end. He was
imprisoned because he would no longer endure the war.
Hitler’s fascism of the 1930s which
he found frighteningly lethal drove him and his social conscience to
communism.
Joe Stalin’s twisted and oppressive
degradation of the Soviet people drove him away from communism to
fight Franco’s fascism in Spain, and ultimately he was imprisoned
in a concentration camp in France for being anti-fascist.
He and a shipload of anti-fascist
refugees from the camps in France were shipped off to the U.S. and
refused entry…Mexico took them in.
The following are quotes from The
Owl of Minerva.
Regler
to his wife: “We could each think our own thoughts, and we
would not let this mad, merciless century drive us apart.”
Regler about his wife:
“It is the only
temple that has any link with the cosmos." She loved the Mexican
pyramids because they were not graves but altars speaking to Heaven.”
Regler relates how the Russian
Communists went to absurd extremes to destroy Regler, his wife, and
their adopted home in Mexico.
This is a powerful book of an
extraordinary man’s struggle through the tribulations of the 20th
century. I have read it twice.
Gustav Regler wrote many books.
Another of my favorites by him is A Land Bewitched: Mexico in the
Shadow of the Centuries. I
recommend that you read the Owl of Minerva first.
Steppenwolf by
Herman Hesse
This is a novel
originally published in 1927 is a stand alone classic...memorable
and unforgettable. My favorite line: “Not for everybody.”
Erich Fromm, a prolific
twentieth century author with and immense collection of profound
essays and books too long to list here...a pleasure to read and
ponder.
One of my favorite quotes: “Modern
man, if he dared to be articulate about his concept of heaven, would
describe a vision which would look like the biggest department store
in the world, showing new things and gadgets, and himself having
plenty of money with which to buy them. He would wander around
open-mouthed in this heaven of gadgets and commodities, provided only
that there were ever more and newer things to buy, and perhaps that
his neighbors were just a little less privileged than he.”
The
World As I See It
and
other essays
by
Albert Einstein
Physically
the book is relatively small, but intellectually it is a giant. I
positively loved this compilation of essays with accompanying
commentary that give insight into one of the world's most profound
thinkers.
All
of mankind needs to listen up and be aware of Einstein's scholarly
advise.
This
book is one of my favorites and the messages within are intense.
I
recommend “The World As I See It” only to those who are
interested in a harmonious world of peaceful coexistence.
In
the introduction to this collection Neil Berger, Associate Professor
Emeritus of Mathematics, University of Illinois at Chicago wrote in
August of 2010:
Einstein
characterized himself as a supporter of cultural and social Zionism,
but not political Zionism, thus attempting to stay true to his
distrust of nationalism. He wanted the Jews to “solve
the problem of living side by side with our brother the Arab in an
open, generous and worthy manner.”
Einstein
did not have the unquestioned support of the Jewish community in
America, and his backing of the Zionist movement was criticized by
many who felt that Jews should assimilate to society in America.
The
economic and social essays of Einstein reflect his almost wholesale
adoption of the current socialist and anti-capitalist views of the
1930s. They were based primarily on his notion of “surplus value of
labor.” These views are currently out of favor with the pro-market,
capitalist economists of today.
Quote
from Albert Einstein:
“This
topic brings me to that worst outcrop of the herd nature, the
military system, which I abhor. That a man can take pleasure in
marching in formation to the strains of a band is enough to make me
despise him. He has only been given his big brain by mistake; a
backbone was all he needed. This plague-spot of civilization ought to
be abolished with all possible speed. Heroism by order, senseless
violence, and all the pestilent nonsense that goes by the name of
patriotism—how I hate them! War seems to me a mean, contemptible
thing: I would rather be hacked in pieces than take part in such an
abominable business. And yet so high, in spite of everything, is my
opinion of the human race that I believe this bogey would have
disappeared long ago, had the sound sense of the nations not been
systematically corrupted by commercial and political interests acting
through the schools and the Press.”
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