Category Archives: Library

WWW: Wonder

I’ve read a lot of Robert Sawyer’s scifi, and enjoyed most of it, but this conclusion to a trilogy (and, indeed, the first two books, Watch and Wake), takes the prize.

It’s a bit preachy, as others have said, but the AI’s achievements, particularly the takedown of a dictatorship, justifies most of it. Sawyer’s usual liberal politics and Canadian ethnocentrism also are pretty well balanced this time out. And no Texan could complain very convincingly about his Texan main character, or the amusing way he handles her sometimes skeptical encounter with Canadian culture.

The ending also surprised me, which is always delightful in a novel, not so much for the content as for the unexpectedness of its leap. We can only hope that the tale’s singularity, and particularly Sawyer’s AI, is a reliable forecast of our future, in addition to being enjoyable entertainment.

Still-life with Quince, Cabbage, Melon and Cucumber

One of the benefits of reading Dr. Dalrymple is discovering things like this circa 1600 painting by the Spanish priest Juan Sanchez Cotan (I had to Google it but the Brit doc gave me the cue). It’s in an essay on the tiresomeness of recent atheist best-sellers by Hitchens, Dawkins and others.

Dalrymple counts himself as an atheist but is educated enough (and tolerant enough) to understand that the religious (insofar as they don’t try to impose their beliefs on others) don’t deserve vilification or confusing meanness for wit. This “… picture is a visual testimony of gratitude for the beauty of these things that sustain us….a permanent call to the contemplation of the meaning of human life.”

The essay is in Dr. D.’s 2008 book Not With a Bang But a Whimper: The Politics and Culture of Decline. In it he doesn’t condemn modern abstract art as meaningless claptrap (which I believe it is), but he does laud realist painters (mostly long vanished in the West’s cultural decline) as alone inspiring serious reflection on reality.

The Apple monopoly, or antitrust 101

Used to be that Microsoft was the bugbear of all right-thinking Web users and little Apple the oh, so righteous darling. Well, when it comes to ebooks, Apple is no longer little and certainly not righteous.

Comes a lawsuit that’s been long overdue, arguing that Apple is colluding with traditional publishers (HarperCollins, Hachette, Macmillan, Penguin, and Simon & Schuster) to keep ebook prices artificially high. It’s been quite noticeable for a long time now at Amazon, when a paperback sells for $8 or $9  and an ebook for $16. Time to take a big righteous bite out of the wormy Apple.

Via Kindle Review.

Pray for global warming

“If we fall into a Dalton, let alone a Maunder, we may again see those picturesque post cards of snow enshrouded Christmases.  So pray for global warming, friends.”

But before you assume the position (whichever one you favor), read it all.

Masada at Masada

A model of the ancient Jewish fortress of Masada at, where else, Masada itself. Of course the model depicts Herod’s intact palaces at the mountain’s north end. They’re ruins today, and explained well here, and rather more completely in this good book bringing all of the archaeology up to date.

Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain at Fredericksburg

Only fair to include this Mort Kunstler painting of Col. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain (bareheaded with pistol) in the Union defeat at Fredericksburg in December, 1862 since I posted the other, Rebel, one.

Chamberlain, of course, was one of the heroes of Gettysburg, the following July. The stand (and concluding charge) of his Twentieth Maine Infantry Regiment on Little Round Top has long been called key to the 1863 Union victory.

More Capt. Israel

Just can’t get enough of this guy. I suppose the menorah’s a sort of fusion-cannon? And the shield, of course, stops bullets, shells and missiles? Just so.