Friday, August 7, 2020

I choose to share a question from my good reads page and response.

 Mike 7 hours, 26 min ago

Cassandra was the heroine in Greek mythology who could predict the future, yet her predictions were never believed. Is Gary Floyd a modern day Cassandra? What will it take for a critical mass to learn that globalization is not a panacea? Is he a voice crying out in the wilderness, a prophet, or a madman? Or all of the above?

Gary J.Gary 45 minutes ago 0 votes
This is most interesting now going into a pandemic where almost every other country has shut down all its travel. The supply chains are breaking down, And ordinary citizens find no one they can turn to for help. Instead, they are watching their elites bicker about nothing.
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15240837Gary J. I will also say the one thing that surprises me is that the government would ever do anything to try to keep people safe as they did initially but as I speak it appears they are facing a decision to either do their job and actually not make as much money off the stocks or to sacrifice the teachers and it appears the teachers are expendable. That really doesn't surprise me. 

Great advise

 I absolutely love this quote probably the best writing is always the ones where the little voice in the back of your head is asking am I saying too much, am I stepping out of line, and then you just say the heck with it and go with it.


Monday, August 3, 2020

Thomas Wolfe and the 1936 Nazi Germany: Writing History in the Present


I have often said that writers, back in the old days, engaged in the times they lived in. Unfortunately, too often this skill is lost on younger writers. By doing so, they left a superior record of the history they witnessed. The person I’m choosing to focus on, tonight, is Thomas Wolfe. Wolfe did spot on depictions of New York City in the 1930s. He always had a keen eye for detail that he would bring to Nazi Germany.



For whatever reason Wolfe’s books sold incredibly well in Germany. According to Germany economic policy he was unable to get his money out of the country. He often travelled to Germany, where he lived like a king on his German royalties. Wolfe was in Germany for the 1936 Olympics. His descriptions of what he saw were first rate.

 



“Meanwhile, through those tremendous banner laden ways, the crowds thronged ceaselessly all day long. The wide promenade of Unter den Linden was solid with patient, tramping German feet. Fathers, mothers, children, young folks, old-the whole material of the nation was there., from every corner of the land. From morn to night they trudged, wide-eyed, full of wonder, past the marvel of those banner laden ways. And among them one saw the bright stabs of color of Olympic jackets and the glint of foreign faces: the dark features of Frenchmen and Italians, the ivory grimace of the Japanese, the straw hair, and blue eyes of the Swedes, and the big Americans, natty in straw hats, white flannels, and blue coats crested with the Olympic seal.”

 

Wolfe being a product of South and of his times didn’t have much use for African Americans. Still, he had a different opinion of Jesse Owens. He actually took pride in his accomplishments.

“And there were great displays of marching men, sometimes ungunned but rhythmic as regiments of brown shirts went swinging through the streets. By noon each day all the main approaches to the games, the embannered streets and avenues of the route that the Leader would take to the stadium, miles away, were walled in by troops. They stood at ease, young men, laughing and talking with each other-the Leader’s bodyguards, the Schutz Staffel units, the Storm Troopers, all the ranks and divisions in their different uniforms-and they stretch in two unbroken lines from Wilhelm-strasse up to the Brandenburger Tor. Then, suddenly, the sharp command, and instantly there would be the solid smack of ten thousand leather boots as they came together with the sound of war.”



“It seemed as if everything had been planned for this moment, shaped for this triumphant purpose. But the people-they had not been planned. Day after day, behind the unbroken wall of soldiers, they stood and waited in a dense and patient throng. These were the masses of the nation, the poor ones of the earth, the humble ones of life, the workers and the wives, the mothers and the children-and day after day they came and stood and waited. They were here because they did not have money enough to buy the little cardboard squares that would have given them places inside the magic ring. From noon until night they waited for just two brief and golden moments of the day: the moment when the Leader went out of the stadium, and the moment when he returned.”

When Wolfe wrote these passages, he knew that his time, in Germany, was coming to an end as he would not be welcomed back after it was published. There’s a wonderful scene of a Jewish person trying to get across the border and being able to get his money out of the country.



“At last he came-like a wind across the field of grass was shaken through that crowd, and from afar the tide rolled up with him, and in it was the voice, the hope, the prayer of the land. The Leader came by slowly in a shining car, a little dark man with a comic-opera mustache, erect and standing, moveless and unsmiling, with his hand upraised, palm outward, not in a Nazi wise salute, but straight up, in a gesture of blessing such as the Buddha and Messiahs use.”

Wolfe did not live long enough to see if his prediction was true, which it no doubt would have been. He died of a brain hemorrhage at 39. He left a huge pile of papers which were put together and made into four books.





Sunday, August 2, 2020

Future Writing

Been absolutely hard at work to the follow up to Liberté. I've got the scaffold all designed and now I've got to come up with some filler. https://www.amazon.com/Libert%C3%A9-Days-199…/…/ref=sr_1_14…