Book Review: LE RIVAGE DES SYRTES (The opposing shore)
Until I read this book, Buzzati’s “Il deserto dei tartari” was my favorite novel, perhaps my only novel, the only one I cared to keep re-reading through life. This is, remarkably a very similar story about the antichamber of anticipation (rather than “the antichamber of hope” as I called Buzzati’s book), but written in a much finer language, by a real writer (Buzzati was a journalist, which made his prose more functional) ; the style is lapidary with remarkable precision; it has texture, wealth of details, and creates a mesmerizing athmosphere. Once you enter it, you are stuck there. I kept telling myself while reading it: “this is the book”. It suddenly replaced the “deserto”.
A few caveats/comments. First, I read it in the original French, but I doubt that the translator can mess up such a fine style and the imagery. Second, the blurb on Amazon says Gracq received the Goncourt prize for it. Julien Gracq REFUSED the Goncourt, he despised the Parisian literary circles and by 1951 decided to stay in the margin. He stuck to his publisher José Corti rather than switch to the fancy Gallimard after his success (as Proust did) (or other publishing houses for the fakes and the selfpromoters). Third, this book came out a few years after Buzzati’s “deserto”, but before Buzzati was translated into French. I wonder if Gracq had heard of the “deserto”; the coincidence is too strong to be ignored.
The Opposing Shore
www.amazon.comThe narrator of this story, Aldo, a world-weary young aristocrat, is posted to the coast of Syrtes, where the Admiralty keeps the seas constantly patrolled to defend the demarcation between two powers still officially at war. This book won the Prix Goncourt.
Category Archives: Books
Boyd Tonkin: US election was a good night for the geeks – and a Tunbridge Wells cleric – The Independent
Which brings us to the celebrated bird whose shadow falls over his book, the “Black Swan”: those extreme, outlier events that defy augury, and which Nassim Nicholas Taleb hunted down in his book of that name. Silver’s Bayesian recipes work best in data-systems where Black Swans can never strike. Indeed, it was notable how, after Superstorm Sandy hit with all its Black Swan fury, the FiveThirtyEight blog sought to deny that this rampant outlier of a tempest could sway many voters at all.
It would be an error to set up Taleb simply as the nemesis of Silver. The latter seeks to help us make better forecasts. The former, as his forthcoming book Antifragile will argue, offers ways to think and act that embrace risk and surf uncertainty, whatever the strength of any prediction. Nonetheless, I would love to see the pair debate. What are the chances of that?
via Boyd Tonkin: US election was a good night for the geeks – and a Tunbridge Wells cleric – Features – Books – The Independent.
HatTip to Dave Lull
The Fractalist: Memoir of a Scientific Maverick: Benoit Mandelbrot
NNT reviews The Fractalist: Memoir of a Scientific Maverick
HatTip to Hristo Vassilev & Dave Lull
“I have never done anything like others”, Mandelbrot once said. And indeed these memoirs show it. He really managed to do everything on his own terms. Everything. It was not easy for him, but he end up doing it as he wanted it.
Consider his huge insight about the world around us. “Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a straight line”, wrote Benoit Mandelbrot, contradicting more than 2000 years of misconceptions. Triangles, squares, and circles seem to exist in our textbooks more than reality—and we didn’t notice it. Thus was born fractal geometry, a general theory of “roughness”. Mandelbrot uncovered simple rules used by nature and men that, thanks to repetition, by smaller parts that resemble the whole, generate these seemingly complex and chaotic patterns.
Self-taught and fiercely independent, he thought in images and passed the entrance exam of the top school of mathematics without solving equations; he was both precocious and a late bloomer producing the famous “Mandelbrot set” when he was in his fifties and got tenure at Yale when he was 75. Older mathematicians have resisted his geometric and intuitive method—but the top prize in mathematics was recently given for solving one of his sub-conjectures…
via The Fractalist: Memoir of a Scientific Maverick: Benoit Mandelbrot: 9780307377357: Amazon.com: Books.
Nassim N Taleb’s review of Fighting to Save Main Street from Wall Street and Wall Street from Itself
5.0 out of 5 stars A Real Person in Washington: guts & thruth, September 26, 2012
By N N Taleb “Nassim N Taleb”
This review is from: Bull by the Horns: Fighting to Save Main Street from Wall Street and Wall Street from Itself Hardcover
I don’t have time for a full review for now; all I have to say is that we have the account of a person who says it the way it was, revealing the types of truths that don’t fit the New York Times and others pawns. When history is written, this will be used, not the spin by the bankers’ slaves and soldiers Geithner, Rubin et al. Bravo Sheila!
via Amazon.com: N N Taleb “Nassim N Taleb”‘s review of Bull by the Horns: Fighting to Save Main S….
HatTip to Dave Lull
NOTES, AFTERTHOUGHTS, BIBLIOGRAPHY…
Implies the finished work will be a hefty 450 pages!
NOTES, AFTERTHOUGHTS, BIBLIOGRAPHY. The only part of the book that felt like work. May still have mistakes.
www.fooledbyrandomness.com/notes.pdf
via NOTES,….