
Back issues can be ordered here (Volume 37.3). More about this particular edition can be found here.
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![]() Happy to announce that my essay about being mildly addicted to smelling books (and why they smell so good, particularly older ones) has been published in Room, Canada's oldest literary journal by and about women. This volume was the "Geek Girls" edition, and I'm pleased to be counted among such good company. Back issues can be ordered here (Volume 37.3). More about this particular edition can be found here.
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One word that caught my attention this week was savant, "a man of profound learning." I protest that only men can be profoundly learned! Rudery! The same definition is also in the new Scrabble Dictionary, which is a little disappointing. We're just beginning to hear the sarsar of Montreal again . . . and I'm admittedly not really looking forward to it. This week marks the 75% mark of the reading the Scrabble Dictionary! Short and sweet thanks to the many re- words this time. Humans do a lot of things, and then they do them again. Super profound, I know. ![]() The Quiet American by Graham Greene is an emotionally complicated anti-war novel exploring the dangers of being innocent and idealistic. Thomas Fowler is a reporter on the French war in Vietnam; despite being a seasoned and hardened journalist and insisting that he does not take sides, Fowler becomes knowingly involved in the death of Alden Pyle, a young American CIA agent who does not understand the complexities, dangers, and consequences of the time and place. Fowler’s good intentions to stop Pyle’s good intentions are further muddied by the fact that Pyle has stolen Fowler’s mistress, Phuong. Greene’s style of writing is eminently readable, with realistic prose and fast-moving scenes of high tension and mystery. Many aspects of Fowler’s life correspond to Graham Greene’s: Greene worked as a war correspondent in French Indochina for two newspapers, from March 1951 to June 1955, he didn’t have a high opinion of the French, he had a longstanding relationship with a mistress, as well as with many prostitutes, he questioned the existence of God, and he had a wife whose Catholicism influenced her to deny him a divorce despite their long separation. While I am careful to separate author from narrator (correlation does not equal causation), it is clear that Greene’s life experiences influenced this work. I have seen myself, as a spouse in a U.S. Foreign Service family, the effects of idealism in developing countries where an American’s desires, goals, and potential to influence are similar to those of Alden Pyle. The pursuit of a utopian ideal often supersedes taking the time to step out of one’s cultural frame of reference and examine what is best for the native people rather than enforce the imposition of high-minded principles—many of which simply do not translate to the local culture. At the same time, having been—and perhaps still being—very idealistic myself, I recognize the fundamentally good desire to relieve suffering. How that is accomplished, however, and the dangers inherent in trying to exert control over another culture, is addressed magnificently in The Quiet American and is still a pertinent discussion for anyone volunteering for or wanting to contribute to a foreign country. Greene, Graham. The Quiet American. New York: Penguin, 2004. |
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