Monthly Archives: March 2010

Favorite Literary Works -Nassim N Taleb

Shared by JohnH

Links to full list.

I am often asked by journalists for a list of my “favorite
books” –I don’t know what “favorite” means for a
journalist. I treat books as friends; you miss them when you don’t
see them for a while. Perhaps the best test of one’s appreciation for
a novel is whether one craves it at times, enough to reread it.
Rereading a novel is far more enjoyable than reading it for the first
time. Many I have read more than twice, some (like Il deserto dei
tartari, un taxi mauve, Paulina 1881,…
), more than five times.

Up to the age of 25, you read wholesale & in a mercenary way,
to "acquire" a possession, to build a "literary
culture", & do not tend to re-read except when necessary.
After 25, you lose your hang-up and start re-reading –and it is
precisely what you re-read that reveals your literary soul, what you
like.

As with friendship: you do not judge friends, you do not mix
business & friendship; I even physically separate literature from
more functional books (different libraries; I feel I am corrupting
literature by having scientific or the philistinic "nonfiction"
in the same area).

Books written after c. 1900

  • Dino Buzzati Il deserto dei
    tartari (
    As a child, I viewed the world into two types of
    people: those who read the deserto and were therefore
    marked by it, and the rest. Francois Mitterand, who was not my cup
    of tea, seduced me when on the literary panel Apostrophes
    he went on and on passionately talking about the book –“j’ai
    été marqué par ce livre”, he said, his eyes gleaming).

  • Albert Cohen Belle du seigneur
    (A Proust, but with a Levantine soul and personal manners, and
    aggressively heterosexual. )

  • Valdimir Nabokov Marenshka,
    his (first?) novel, when he was an exile in Berlin, before he became
    complicated. I reread & reread the final scene.

  • Patrick Modiano Villa triste
    (“Je m’attachais à elle comme un noyé”).

  • Graham Greene The End of the
    Affair

Rahul Gandhi a better leader than Obama: Taleb: India Today – Latest Breaking News from India, World, Business, Cricket, Sports, Bollywood.

Shared by JohnH

HatTip to Dave Lull.

Rahul Gandhi is a better leader than Barack Obama, feels philosopher economist and risk engineer Nassim Nicholas Taleb. “He is aware of the problems and he is looking at the right problems. Obama is surrounded by people who don’t know there is a problem.”

In the capital last week to deliver a talk at the India Today Conclave, Dr. Taleb expands on what he thinks are the ‘right’ issues to look at – anything which strengthens what he calls ‘ robustness’ in an economy or society.

Robustness is simply an ability to survive hard times. It could be an economic crisis, a natural calamity or even climate change.

That is why he is impressed with Rahul Gandhi. In their interaction, he says, Gandhi talked about suicides by debtridden small farmers, and rural poverty. “He understands the India model. “And his advice to the man widely tipped to be a future Prime Minister of India? “Look at your small farmers, strengthen your artisans. Concentrate on robustness.” Debt is anathema to Dr. Taleb, an American Greek Orthodox Christian of Lebanese descent.

Debt – and the failure to recognise the problem of debt – is one of the reasons he is upset with Obama. “The United States is a bankrupt state,” he declares.

Today's Pic: Rare Black Penguin – Intelligent Travel Blog

Shared by JohnH

!!! HatTip to Soumen Sarkar.

Today’s Pic: Rare Black Penguin

By

Janelle Nanos

on March 3, 2010 4:45 PM

| Comments (43)

UPDATE: Andrew Evans gives us his report from the field after the jump
SECOND UPDATE: There’s been more black penguin sightings by our readers.

black-penguin-resize.jpg When Andrew Evans sent us this photo of a rare melanistic penguin that he spotted during his travels, I became intrigued. So I decided to call up Dr. Allan Baker, an ornithologist and professor of Environmental and Evolutionary Studies at the University of Toronto and head of the Department of Natural History at the Royal Ontario Museum, to learn more about melanism in birds. I got him on the line before he had the chance to look at the photos, and suffice it to say he was slightly flabbergasted at what he saw: “Wow. That looks so bizarre I can’t even believe it. Wow,” was his first response. Then he made me swear on a stack of National Geographic magazines that the image was real.