Categories
Books Nonfiction Reviews

Review: The Lies That Bind

By Kwame Anthony Appiah (2018)

This is wonderful, just so clear and wholesome in a discussion of a subject – identity – which can of course be pretty fraught.

It belongs to that rare class of writing where the language is so crisp and readable, you barely notice you’re being lead to some really philosophically interesting places. I particularly like his take on meritocracy, which is an idea that exercises me a lot. He does talk quite a lot about himself – but then he’s had such an interesting life and background, I hardly blame him.

Categories
Books Nonfiction Reviews

Reviews: Modern African History

The Scramble For Africa by Thomas Pakenham (1990) & The State of Africa by Martin Meredith (2005)

The Scramble For Africa. This is just fascinating – surely one of the strangest few decades in history. Other than the pretty horrific behaviour of the colonists – who, perhaps Brazza excepted, were tremendously low-rent graspers and cheats (as well as plain brutal) – what most strikes me is how shoestring the whole business was. Regions the size of France “claimed” by a few dozen troops, etc. I’ve actually read this before – but the weird format (it’s all chronological, rather than by area) meant I struggled to piece together the whole arc of regions like the Congo. So I only read the central Africa sections in sequence this time, about half the book.

Categories
Autobiography/autofiction Books Knausgaard Reviews

Review: My Struggle #2

A Man in Love By Karl Ove Knausgaard (2013)

I’m still really liking this, the mixture between the boring day-to-day and unexpected intensity is if anything even more pronounced and is still doing it for me.

I do feel like I need a bit of break from Karl Ove though – there is one heck of a lot of childminding in this one.