Thursday, July 28, 2022

My Favorite German Authors

 

My Favorite German Authors

Magic Yucatan, A Journey Remembered by Lilo Linke

Magic Yucatan was written just two years after WWII when the world was still licking its war wounds. The author was a young lady with exceptional literary talents coupled with extraordinary easy-going but inquisitive social-minded insight.

EXCERPT ABRIDGED:

CHAPTER ONE CARNIVAL

I fell in love with Yucatan the moment I set foot in Mérida, its capital. For three months I had been traveling through the interior of Mexico, pushing east all the time. It was an enchanting journey, and in more than one place I felt tempted to stay. But there was always the thought of Yucatan driving me on.

I had intended to travel the last lap by sea in one of the small steamers that ply the Gulf of Mexico. But someone said, "You will be late then for the Mérida carnival."

I had never heard of it, but it now seemed imperative that I should not miss it. I took the next 'plane, and in little over an hour I was in Mérida.

The carnival overflowed the airport. Children in fancy costumes —devils, angels, bullfighters, pierots—or some regional Mexican dress were scurrying about under the very noses of the 'planes. From the terrace groups of society girls waved to us, their faces modeled by Hollywood, their dress a sleek version of the Yucatan costume. A band played, or were there two? Flowers were everywhere, in the girls hair, in barrel-like vases on the floor, or flying through the air, aimed at no one in particular. And if more color was needed, the large mural in the waiting-hall lusciously supplied it.

It was all laid on a background of white—the white of the walls, of the airport building, the dresses, the clouded sky, the flat dusty land. A breeze blew in from the not-too-distant sea, enough to make the flags flap at their poles and let the girls shift-like dresses cling to their bodies trembling with laughter and gentle agitation. The tropics for once had a May morning freshness, at least at this early hour.

For a while all this confused me pleasantly. Then the porter, a young half-breed, raised my small suitcase stiffly to shoulder height, and asked, "Where to?"

"I don't know," I said foolishly. "I forgot to inquire."

He plopped the case down and I stiffened to meet his rebuff. But he merely pushed back his cap the better to be able to scratch his head.

"Well," he said, "well . . ." His smooth face suddenly twisted into the folds of paternal worry.

He motioned me to sit down and wait. In a few minutes he returned. "Okay, he said, with the relish of all Mexicans using American slang. It was a joke they shared with their visitors. The few taxis had left by now.

"Carnival. Everything upside down"; the porter shouted to make himself heard above the din of the brass band.

He pushed me and my bag into a station wagon and slammed the door behind me without leaving me time to tip him. A gardenia was lying at his feet. He picked it up, stuck it behind his ear, and grinned at me in farewell, a little cocky and entirely at ease.

He had given instructions to the driver, who took me to a luxurious villa and in turn departed without waiting for tip or fare. A blonde, elegant woman addressed me in fluent English with the grace of a hostess welcoming an expected guest. We climbed a broad flight of stairs, and she showed me a room with damask-covered furniture, adjoined by an American-styled bathroom. Did I want an iced lemonade? I could have a shower or bath any time of the day or night. Lunch would be ready at noon.

I stepped out to the balcony overhanging the garden. Palm trees rustled overhead, imitating the steady swish of rain; through it cut excitedly the clatter of a windmill. Its peculiar noise was to become the leitmotiv of my stay in Mérida. A metal wheel on a grid, the Yucatan windmill has none of the comeliness of the old Dutch mills. They are the symbol of abundance, while the Yucatan mills suggest the dry rattle of a parched throat, "Water, water, give me water!"

That morning, however, I was too happy to listen to it for long. I had arrived in fairyland. And not the least of its wonders was that no one had to carry buckets if I wanted a bath; that the turning of a tap would bring me hot or cold water from an apparently unlimited supply. After the primitive weeks on horseback such sudden ease was magic.

At twelve a bell tinkled and I went downstairs. A large table was laid with old-fashioned silver and delicate china. Orange blossoms looked cool in a glass bowl, ice-cubes floated on the lemonade in the crystal Jug, and fruit piled up on a plate, oranges, bananas, mangos, grapes, a blaze of gold.

My hostess seemed to be the only person in the house. She set dish after dish before me; tomato soup, a steak, mixed salad, ice cream and fruit. When she brought the coffee, she apologized for the simplicity of the arrangements, the poverty of the meal. Both the servants were gone to see the carnival procession in the center of the town, and the three children had also stolen away. Her husband was out on business, but would be back in the afternoon. He would be at my service, if I needed help or advice.

Mérida and the carnival were not what they used to be, she complained, as she walked to and fro. It was now an affair of the common crowd, not, as in the old times, a magnificent show put up by the rich, the decent people. Most of the wealth had been senselessly destroyed in the revolutions. She twisted her mouth in a grimace of contempt and walked out.

Thus I was brought down to earth again. Before long I discovered that Yucatan was like this: enchantment and grim reality always side by side, often even intermingled. It was this contrast which gave its unique, its unforgettable flavor to the entire journey.

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 Germany, and America as they evolved into the 21st century from post WWII. This life story is seamlessly interconnected 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."

Gustav Regler was an exuberant activist with exceptional intellect and 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 Hermann Hesse

This is a novel originally published in 1927 it is a stand alone classic...memorable and unforgettable. One of my favorite lines: “Not for everybody.”

Photo credit: By Unknown author - [1] [2] Dutch National Archives, The Hague, Fotocollectie Algemeen Nederlands Persbureau (ANEFO), 1945-1989, CC BY-SA 3.0 nl, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=20450793


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.”

John Grimsrud's author's page

Thursday, July 14, 2022

Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World by Jack Weatherford

 Book Review - Five Stars

Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World relates history that impacted the lives of most all civilizations. The book is well-written, excellently edited, and magnificently researched.

I was immediately attracted to the book about Genghis Khan and the Tartars.

In 2002 my wife and I were in Europe for our yearly bicycle tours. We went to the public library in Eibergen, Netherlands, for internet access, and there at the library we met and befriended many of the refugees from a nearby camp. They were all a captive audience. The government had confiscated their identity credentials and issued them temporary identity cards. Among this group was a young man from Uzbekistan who happened to have a passport stamped as “Tartar.” He was a brilliant multilingual tour guide, but his wife got in trouble with the government, and they fled for their lives. This intriguing story is too big to present here. We have kept in contact.

EXCERPTS:

Genghis Khan’s innovative fighting techniques made the heavily armored knights of medieval Europe obsolete, replacing them with disciplined cavalry moving in coordinated units. Rather than relying on defensive fortifications, he made brilliant use of speed and surprise on the battlefield, as well as perfecting siege warfare to such a degree that he ended the era of walled cities. Genghis Khan taught his people not only to fight across incredible distances but to sustain their campaign over years, decades, and, eventually, more than three generations of constant fighting. In twenty-five years, the Mongol army subjugated more lands and people than the Romans had conquered in four hundred years. Genghis Khan, together with his sons and grandsons, conquered the most densely populated civilizations of the thirteenth century.

Genghis Khan conquered more than twice as much as any other man in history. The hooves of the Mongol warriors’ horses splashed in the waters of every river and lake from the Pacific Ocean to the Mediterranean Sea.

The majority of people today live in countries conquered by the Mongols; on the modern map, Genghis Khan’s conquests include thirty countries with well over 3 billion people. The most astonishing aspect of this achievement is that the entire Mongol tribe under him numbered around a million, smaller than the workforce of some modern corporations. From this million, he recruited his army, which was comprised of no more than one hundred thousand warriors—a group that could comfortably fit into the larger sports stadiums of the modern era. In American terms, the accomplishment of Genghis Khan might be understood if the United States, instead of being created by a group of educated merchants or wealthy planters, had been founded by one of its illiterate slaves, who, by the sheer force of personality, charisma, and determination, liberated America from foreign rule, united the people, created an alphabet, wrote the constitution, established universal religious freedom, invented a new system of warfare, marched an army from Canada to Brazil, and opened roads of commerce in a free-trade zone that stretched across the continents. On every level and from any perspective, the scale and scope of Genghis Khan’s accomplishments challenge the limits of imagination and taxed the resources of scholarly explanation.

John Grimsrud's author's page

Saturday, July 2, 2022

Doings of Dudley Doolittle 7th Edition - Strength of Hercules

Doings of Dudley Doolittle: This is the name I use in the sometimes hilarious, outrageous, or cynical short stories posted monthly.

A fictitious name will be used in most of the stories. It is there to protect the identity of the guilty.

These true stories are over half a century old or more.


Doings of Dudley Doolittle 7th edition 

This interesting story wouldn’t have happened without the love of my life, wife Jane. She is so much fun to be with and lightens and brightens my life with her cynical and witty Swedish humor. She even laughs at my jokes and loves me. As I say: “I am not the one who married the Norwegian.”

By 1972 with our five year plan completed, Jane and I were a team of two revved up by youthful exuberance, the sky was the limit with no dull moments.

We disposed of all unnecessary belongings, sold our houses, cars, and business. We sailed away on our just launched 46-foot sailing yacht Dursmirg. Our destination was just south, where the wind blew us, when the spirit moved us, and the price was right.

Long story short: Living aboard Dursmirg in the 1970s during the Arab oil embargo years made us into genuine sailors. Our sailing rowing dingy became an essential element in our procurement of fresh seafood, free for the taking. We lived out of the sea. Onshore excursions for shopping and recreation were by bicycle. Our new lives were people powered, going with the tide, not against it.

1978 Jane and John, Flamingo Apts.

We purchased a handyman special apartment in St. Augustine, Florida, the most economically depressed place in America at the time.

Again long story short: One day while working at our apartments renovation project a plumber wanted the building water shut off. The building was 190 feet long, three stories tall, and had 26 units plus a duplex. The shut off was a two-inch ball valve. I got the shutoff key and handled it to the plumber, then pointed out the valve. He took the 6 foot “T” handled key and gave it all the effort he had. Then he exclaimed: “It won’t budge.” My wife Jane took the key from him, and without strain turned the valve.

A fringe benefit of our new life style...we were physically fit, and it really felt good. We were happy.

A leap ahead: After two plus years of pandemic restrictions, Jane and I made our first venture out of town to visit our daughter Grisel, now 38 years old, and her husband. They live and work in Playa del Carmen on the Caribbean coast. Grisel and her husband both work in tourist related jobs. Grisel took every opportunity to increase her knowledge base becoming certificated in therapeutic treatments from health and beauty to massage. Her husband Juan is a multilingual licensed chauffer and tour guide.

During our visit Grisel insisted on giving us full body massages. I was impressed with our little girl’s physical strength. Grisel was not just strong, she was “wonder woman” powerful! No one is going to push her around.

Reflecting on these experiences of strength led me to another memory from back in the 1950s when I ran into a high school classmate in Lake Nebagamon, Wisconsin.

Paul Siciliano and I were always friendly with each other. He was easygoing and unpretentious. I asked if he would like to go for a boat ride and he said: “Sure.” We zipped across the lake powered by a 60 hp, three-cylinder Scott Atwater, the fastest boat on Lake Nebagamon at the time.

We docked at my parents cabin. I had just purchased a York barbell set. It was sitting out on the patio. Paul was interested, and I asked if he would like to try it. He said “Yes.” I put 170 pounds on it. Paul pressed it over his head with ease. I was amazed and asked if I should increase the weight. He said “Yes.” Next I increased the weight to 190 pounds. This was a challenge for him but straining the bar went up and perceptively bowed under the strain. Incredible!

I didn’t want to cause him bodily injury. That was enough.

Paul casually mentioned his relative Angelo Siciliano, who changed his name to Charles Atlas and became famous with his body building programs. His advertisements beginning in the 1930s appeared in 10 cent comic books.


To refresh my memory of Charles Atlas I read about him in Wikipedia. Reading of Charles Atlas brought back not only fond memories of Paul but recollections of reading those comic books

Link to INDEX of Dudley Doolittle Stories

John Grimsrud's author’s page.