Sunday, May 11, 2008

Maybe the Dry Cleaners Are Just Sans-culottes

The travails of being a member of the Legion of Honour.

For everyday use, chevaliers and officiers wear a special hue of deep red thread sewn in a thin stripe from the buttonhole to the outer edge of the lapel, while commandeurs wear a silver thread. The thread and other legionnaire pins are sold at a store near the Palais Royal in Paris.

These threads might get some attention in France, but are harder to decode in New York. “Every time I take a suit to the dry cleaners they try to snip them off,” said Paul LeClerc, the president of the New York Public Library and a chevalier. “It’s very expensive thread if you have to go all the way to Paris” to get it.

Felix Rohatyn, the financier and former ambassador to France, said his silver commandeur lapel thread also posed problems. “Sometimes if I leave it on and send it to the cleaners, it comes back with the thing off because they thought it was a laundry mark,” he said.
Only France's orders of chivalry could get such sympathetic coverage in the New York Times.

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Blowback

Not everyone's happy about Gregory Levey's memoir, Shut Up I'm Talking, about working for the Israeli Mission to the U.N. (I wrote about it before.)

The Jewish Week News reports:

Ben Harris, Levy’s predecessor and now a reporter for JTA, writes in a book review: “It’s not hard to read Levey’s memoir as a colossal act of betrayal.”

Harris writes that Levey portrays Israel’s diplomatic efforts as “ferociously inept and staffed by such insipid characters that no one should ever wonder why Israel seems incapable of convincing the world of the basic justice of its cause.”

But Levey defends his book, saying it was a “humorous take” about his experiences.

“I was just trying to bring light and humor to a situation that too often is taken too seriously,” he said. “It’s my own personal story and all I meant to do was to entertain. Everything in the book is true. Every incident is true, at least as I remember it. None of this should be taken negatively at all.”

The Sunday Serial

I've been a big fan of the New York Times' Sunday Serial since Scott Turow started writing for it in April 2006.

The latest is by Colin Harrison, a writer with whom I was not previously familiar. And from the second paragraph he's showing a virtue of the serial as a form: its ability to be absolutely topical, because of the shorter lead time compared to a book.

While they'd attempted this a bit in the past, I don't believe they've done it to this level of immediacy.

It all began the second Friday in April, a sloppy, cold day. People had finally stopped discussing Eliot Spitzer’s many complex urges. Oil had just hit $112 a barrel, but no one was shocked. People were getting worked up about the Olympics in China. The stock market, so recently up after being so recently down, was down again, and everyone I knew was hoping that the Fed’s quasi-legal voodoo might actually work, so that we wouldn’t all be sucked into a giant, cheap-dollared vortex of recession, inflation and coast-to-coast foreclosures. Then again, many of the folks in my firm had been slyly loading up on gold for months and no doubt counted themselves smart for betting against the American economy. Me, I’d done nothing to prepare for the fiscal apocalypse. All I wanted was to go home and have dinner with Susan.
I haven't liked (and therefore haven't read) the last two Sunday Serials. This one has grabbed me from the beginning.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Top Unread Books On Librarything

The rules:

Bold what you have read, italicize books you’ve started but couldn’t finish, and mark yellow books you hated. Add an asterisk* to those you’ve read more than once. Mark red those on your to be read list.

(the numbers (x/y) are x=(the number of people who've tagged the book "unread") and y=(the number of times the book has been added to Librarything)
  1. Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke (236/9048)
  2. Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy (211/8957)
  3. One hundred years of solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez (183/11981)
  4. Crime and punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky (176/10692)
  5. Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte (162/12144)
  6. Catch-22 a novel by Joseph Heller (158/10893)
  7. The Silmarillion by J.R.R. Tolkien (155/8794)
  8. Don Quixote by Miguel De Cervantes Saavedra (152/6662)
  9. The Odyssey by Homer (136/10961)
  10. The brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoyevsky (136/7179)
  11. Ulysses by James Joyce (135/6258)
  12. Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert (132/6269)
  13. War and peace by Leo Tolstoy (132/5955)
  14. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte (124/13771)
  15. A tale of two cities by Charles Dickens (124/7463)
  16. The name of the rose by Umberto Eco (120/7709)
  17. Moby Dick by Herman Melville (119/7723)
  18. The Iliad by Homer (117/8729)
  19. Emma by Jane Austen (117/8954)
  20. Vanity fair by William Makepeace Thackeray (115/3827)
  21. Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez (114/7123)
  22. The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood (110/4810)
  23. The Canterbury tales by Geoffrey Chaucer (108/6167)
  24. Pride and prejudice by Jane Austen (108/18301)
  25. The historian : a novel by Elizabeth Kostova (108/6453)
  26. Great Expectations by Charles Dickens (106/8595)
  27. The kite runner by Khaled Hosseini (106/13582)
  28. The time traveler's wife by Audrey Niffenegger (105/11416)
  29. Life of Pi : a novel by Yann Martel (105/12699)
  30. Guns, Germs, and Steel: the fates of human societies by Jared Diamond (104/7497)
  31. Atlas shrugged by Ayn Rand (102/5988)
  32. Foucault's pendulum by Umberto Eco (101/5621)
  33. Dracula by Bram Stoker (100/6875)
  34. The grapes of wrath by John Steinbeck (99/7817)
  35. A heartbreaking work of staggering genius by Dave Eggers (97/6454)
  36. Frankenstein by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (97/9130)
  37. Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf (97/5565)
  38. Reading Lolita in Tehran : a memoir in books by Azar Nafisi (96/4406)
  39. Middlemarch by George Eliot (96/4160)
  40. Sense and sensibility by Jane Austen (96/8596)
  41. The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (95/5172)
  42. Memoirs of a Geisha by Arthur Golden (94/11623)
  43. The sound and the fury by William Faulkner (94/5047)
  44. Brave New World by Aldous Huxley (93/12425)
  45. Quicksilver (The Baroque Cycle I) by Neal Stephenson (92/3526)
  46. American gods : a novel by Neil Gaiman (92/10333)
  47. Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides (91/8875)
  48. The poisonwood Bible : a novel by Barbara Kingsolver (91/7463)
  49. Wicked : the life and times of the wicked witch of the West… by Gregory Maguire (90/8909)
  50. A portrait of the artist as a young man by James Joyce (89/6649)
  51. The picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde (89/7168)
  52. Dune by Frank Herbert (89/9225)
  53. The satanic verses by Salman Rushdie (88/3252)
  54. Gulliver's travels by Jonathan Swift (88/4861)
  55. Mansfield Park by Jane Austen (88/5363)
  56. The three musketeers by Alexandre Dumas (87/4128) (in abridged version)
  57. The corrections by Jonathan Franzen (84/5066)
  58. The inferno by Dante Alighieri (84/5874)
  59. Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens (83/4381)
  60. The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand (83/5798)
  61. To the lighthouse by Virginia Woolf (83/4608)
  62. A clockwork orange by Anthony Burgess (83/6757)
  63. Tess of the D'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy (83/4736)
  64. The amazing adventures of Kavalier and Clay : a novel by Michael Chabon (83/5963)
  65. Persuasion by Jane Austen (82/6481)
  66. One flew over the cuckoo's nest by Ken Kesey (82/5916)
  67. The scarlet letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne (82/7748)
  68. Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe (82/4440)
  69. Anansi boys : a novel by Neil Gaiman (81/6540)
  70. The once and future king by T. H. White (81/4294)
  71. Atonement: A Novel by Ian McEwan (80/6970)
  72. The god of small things by Arundhati Roy (80/5512)
  73. A short history of nearly everything by Bill Bryson (79/6268)
  74. Oryx and Crake : a novel by Margaret Atwood (78/3978)
  75. Dubliners by James Joyce (78/5534)
  76. Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson (78/5386)
  77. Angela's ashes : a memoir by Frank McCourt (77/6353)
  78. Beloved : a novel by Toni Morrison (77/5524)
  79. Collapse : how societies choose to fail or succeed by Jared Diamond (76/3825)
  80. The hunchback of Notre Dame by Victor Hugo (75/2522)
  81. In cold blood : a true account of a multiple murder and its… by Truman Capote (75/5478)
  82. Lady Chatterley's lover by D.H. Lawrence (73/3169)
  83. A confederacy of dunces by John Kennedy Toole (73/6063)
  84. Les misérables by Victor Hugo (73/4695)
  85. Watership Down by Richard Adams (72/6258)
  86. The prince by Niccolo Machiavelli (72/6369)
  87. The amber spyglass by Philip Pullman (72/6647)
  88. Beowulf : a new verse translation by Anonymous (72/6351) (have read previously, but want to read newer Seamus Heaney translation)
  89. A farewell to arms by Ernest Hemingway (71/5125)
  90. Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenance : an inquiry into… by Robert M. Pirsig (71/5559)
  91. The Aeneid by Virgil (71/5060)
  92. Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson (69/4629)
  93. Sons and lovers by D.H. Lawrence (69/2563)
  94. The personal history of David Copperfield by Charles Dickens (69/4314)
  95. The road by Cormac McCarthy (67/5108)
  96. Possession : a romance by A.S. Byatt (67/4128)
  97. The history of Tom Jones, a foundling by Henry Fielding (67/2133)
  98. The book thief by Markus Zusak (67/3556)
  99. Gravity's rainbow by Thomas Pynchon (66/3263)
  100. The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells (66/3048)
  101. Tender is the night by F. Scott Fitzgerald (66/3132)
  102. Candide, or, Optimism by Voltaire (65/5085)
  103. Never let me go by Kazuo Ishiguro (65/4321)
  104. The plague by Albert Camus (65/4614)
  105. Jude the obscure by Thomas Hardy (65/2947)
  106. Cold mountain by Charles Frazier (64/4163)
  107. Doctor Zhivago by Boris Pasternak (64/2092)
  108. As I lay dying by William Faulkner (64/3766)
  109. The shadow of the wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon (64/5195)
  110. Underworld by Don DeLillo (64/2613)
  111. Northanger abbey by Jane Austen (64/4521)
  112. The English patient by Michael Ondaatje (64/3334)
  113. The divine comedy by Dante Alighieri (63/2834)
  114. Ivanhoe by Sir Walter Scott (63/2526)
  115. Bleak House by Charles Dickens (63/3130)
  116. Everything is illuminated : a novel by Jonathan Safran Foer (63/4567)
  117. The house of the seven gables by Nathaniel Hawthorne (62/2052)
  118. The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin (62/2673)
  119. A people's history of the United States : 1492-present by Howard Zinn (62/3839)
  120. The portrait of a lady by Henry James (62/2894)
  121. White Teeth: A Novel by Zadie Smith (62/4320)
  122. The confusion by Neal Stephenson (61/2803)
  123. Snow falling on cedars by David Guterson (60/3780)
  124. The elegant universe : superstrings, hidden dimensions, and… by Brian Greene (60/2791)
  125. The age of innocence by Edith Wharton (60/3128)
  126. The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov (60/4187)
  127. Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood (60/3212)
  128. Midnight's children by Salman Rushdie (60/3486)
  129. Mark Z. Danielewski's House of leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski (60/3405)
  130. The idiot by Fyodor Dostoyevsky (59/3657)
  131. Midnight in the garden of good and evil : a Savannah story by John Berendt (59/3692)
  132. A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court by Mark Twain (59/2386)
  133. Swann's way by Marcel Proust (59/2491)
  134. For whom the bell tolls by Ernest Hemingway (59/4107)
  135. Uncle Tom's cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe (58/2886)
  136. Moll Flanders by Daniel Defoe (58/2028)
  137. Pattern recognition by William Gibson (58/3226)
  138. Invisible man by Ralph Ellison (58/3977)
  139. Cloud atlas : a novel by David Mitchell (58/3184)
  140. The good earth by Pearl S. Buck (57/3139)
  141. Walden by Henry David Thoreau (57/2996)
  142. Silas Marner by George Eliot (57/2350)
  143. The bonesetter's daughter by Amy Tan (56/2420)
  144. Labyrinth by Kate Mosse (56/1748)
  145. The thirteenth tale : a novel by Diane Setterfield (56/3620)
  146. Naked lunch by William S. Burroughs (55/3291)
  147. The system of the world by Neal Stephenson (55/2237)
  148. A passage to India by E.M. Forster (55/3192)
  149. Cat's eye by Margaret Atwood (55/2859)
  150. Twenty thousand leagues under the sea by Jules Verne (55/2852) (in an abridged version)
  151. The plot against America by Philip Roth (54/2828)
  152. Infinite jest : a novel by David Foster Wallace (54/2222)
  153. The mill on the Floss by George Eliot (54/2169)
  154. Tropic of cancer by Henry Miller (54/2359)
  155. The phantom of the Opera by Gaston Leroux (54/2418)
  156. Baudolino by Umberto Eco (54/2406)
  157. The histories by Herodotus (53/2906)
  158. Lord Jim by Joseph Conrad (53/2159)
  159. The known world by Edward P. Jones (53/2066)
  160. Notes from the underground by Fyodor Dostoyevsky (53/2892)
  161. The Bhagavad Gita by Anonymous (52/3036)
  162. Utopia by Thomas More (52/2793)
  163. The island of the day before by Umberto Eco (52/2168)
  164. The last of the Mohicans by James Fenimore Cooper (52/2317)
  165. Far from the madding crowd by Thomas Hardy (52/2429)
  166. The woman in white by Wilkie Collins (51/2484)
  167. Paradise lost a poem in twelve books by John Milton (51/2447)
  168. Of human bondage by W. Somerset Maugham (50/1994)
  169. The mayor of Casterbridge by Thomas Hardy (50/2189)
  170. Son of a witch : a novel by Gregory Maguire (50/2159)
  171. The Robber Bride by Margaret Atwood (50/2508)
  172. Light in August by William Faulkner (49/2358)
  173. Unfinished tales of Numenor and Middle-earth by J.R.R. Tolkien (49/2632)
  174. Women in love by D.H. Lawrence (48/1873)
  175. The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio (48/2166)
  176. The moonstone by Wilkie Collins (47/2218)
  177. Mason & Dixon by Thomas Pynchon (47/1551)
  178. The Gormenghast trilogy by Mervyn Peake (47/1297)
  179. Villette by Charlotte Bronte (47/1977)
  180. The return of the native by Thomas Hardy (46/2040)
  181. The life and opinions of Tristram Shandy, gentleman by Laurence Sterne (45/2006)
  182. Absalom, Absalom! by William Faulkner (45/1920)
  183. That hideous strength : a modern fairy-tale for grown-ups by C. S. Lewis (44/1938)
  184. The Gulag Archipelago, 1918-1956; an experiment in literary… by Aleksander Solzenitsyn (44/1833)
  185. The man in the iron mask by Alexandre Dumas (43/1167)
  186. The ultimate hitchhiker's guide by Douglas Adams (43/0)
  187. The glass bead game (Magister Ludi) by Hermann Hesse (42/1818)
  188. The mysterious flame of Queen Loana : an illustrated novel by Umberto Eco (41/1651)
  189. Sister Carrie by Theodore Dreiser (40/1495)
  190. The tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu (39/1410)
  191. Nicholas Nickleby by Charles Dickens (38/1414)
  192. The ladies of Grace Adieu and other stories by Susanna Clarke (37/1103)
  193. The ground beneath her feet : a novel by Salman Rushdie (36/1214)
  194. Vellum by Hal Duncan (27/493)
  195. Freedom & necessity by Steven Brust (26/494)
  196. The kite runner by Khaled Hosseini (19/0)
  197. Life of Pi : a novel by Yann Martel (17/0)
  198. The Kor'an by Anonymous (11/0)
  199. The Mabinogion by Anonymous (8/0)
  200. The sketch book of Geoffrey Crayon, gent by Washington Irving (7/0)
(via the LibraryThing Blog and Writing Grandma's Book with an updated list of books from LibraryThing)

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Cardinal Dulles and the Holy Father

I hadn't seen this anywhere until today, from Intentional Disciples":

The Pope is going to make a personal visit to Cardinal Avery Dulles in his bedroom while in Dunwoody seminary. It was not on his schedule. Cardinal Dulles is too ill to attend any of the events but no one deserves a private visit more.
Sherry also links to the text of Cardinal Dulles' final McGinley Lecture which he delivered recently.
(via Christ Our Hope, which was kind enough to also link here, and which I have side-barred.)

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

An Internship Gets Out of Hand

Gregory Levey gets in over his head as an intern for the Israeli Consulate at the United Nations:

On an excruciatingly slow August day in New York City, a resolution was coming up for consideration, apparently, at the U.N. General Assembly. ... "You should go," one of my superiors said to me. "It won't be a big deal. Just take notes." ... I went to the meeting hall and took my seat at Israel's place... Although I didn't recognize him, the Italian representative greeted me and shook my hand. Then he leaned in and said, "So you know, the vote is definitely going to happen today after all."
Check out what happens next...

His book (the above is from a Salon excerpt) defintely looks like an interesting read.

More on the Youth Rally

From For God, For Country and For Yale:

The hosts were drawn from TV personalities and news broadcasters. They either were completely unfunny or unaware. A news anchor from a local TV station turned to the priests and seminarians in the front and asked them on the main microphone if they were going to vote for Obama or Hillary. She was promptly booed by the entire crowd. Suddenly flustered, she tried to laugh it off by saying she respected the separation of Church and State. She was then booed once more by the entire crowd.
He's also been sidebarred.

Monday, April 21, 2008

Not really news

Via the New York Times, Gothamist picks up on the fact that Cardinal Egan may depart soon. It's just Canon Law folks, there's nothing secret about it.

Can. 401 §1. A diocesan bishop who has completed the seventy-fifth year of age is requested to present his resignation from office to the Supreme Pontiff, who will make provision after he has examined all the circumstances.

Tweaking the Paleo-cons

Richard John Neuhaus tweaks the noses of those who would call him a Neo-con.

Permit me a brief word on the several events. The first was not on the official program. It was the news conference on the plane coming over. The first question, not surprisingly, was about the sex abuse crisis. Benedict’s response might be described in other contexts as a preemptive strike. [Emphasis mine.]

Was Maureen Dowd really being clever?

That seems unlikely.

Joseph Bottum notes that Obama's friend is really a professor of education, which is something less than a professor of English. (I prefer my Ayers A.J. actually.)

(direct link to original Dowd column)

I must say I've been enjoying reading Bill Kristol in the Times.

The Cheese Shop


My favorite cheese shop in Manhattan isn't a shop at all... it's this tent at the Tucker Square Greenmarket. The folks who sell there are from the Bobolink Dairy. Tucker Square is named for Richard Tucker. He was a cantor and Metropolitan Opera singer. (And I bet he didn't wave his arm in the air...)

Pope's Visit to New York City

I was lucky to get tickets for the Youth Rally at St. Joseph's Seminary when Pope Benedict visited the city. I took the 1 train up to the end of the line and then the 1 and 7 buses out to Dunwoodie. I walked up Seminary Ave... arriving in the opposite direction from most everyone else who arrived via group buses that stopped at Yonkers Racetrack and then shuttle buses taking them up the hill. This puzzled the police on guard duty, who asked me how I got there...


Seminary Ave. was the Pope's motorcade route, I believe, and yellow ribbons (the Vatican color) were on the trees. So was this hand lettered welcome sign.

I watched most of the events from the top of the hill. This gave me a great view, but it meant I couldn't really hear. Luckily the Pope's great speech was posted online. I followed along on my phone. The wonders of modern technology. I was compensated, also, by being somewhat in the shade. Many of the folks down below got sunburned.


At the end the Pope came up and drove right in front of where I was standing, only about fifteen feet away. This picture was as he drove further on. An exciting (but tiring day.)

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Confraternity of St. Peter

I've sent in my membership application for the Confraternity of St. Peter, run by the FSSP.

They also have a cool page just for English-speaking members.

And they have lapel pins... like any excellent organization.

Papal Politics

Excerpt from the Joint Communiqué of President Bush and Pope Benedict XVI
(my emphasis)

The Holy Father and the President devoted considerable time in their discussions to the Middle East, in particular resolving the Israel-Palestinian conflict in line with the vision of two states living side-by-side in peace and security, their mutual support for the sovereignty and independence of Lebanon, and their common concern for the situation in Iraq and particularly the precarious state of Christian communities there and elsewhere in the region. The Holy Father and the President expressed hope for an end to violence and for a prompt and comprehensive solution to the crises which afflict the region.
This is probably one of the places in the world the Pope can have the most impact by something other than simple suasion, given the Maronite power in Lebanon. It's interesting to see him flex his muscle there.

Grace Leigh's Blog Is Excellent

Visit it here and it's been added to the sidebar.

Report: Cardinal Levada for New York

So says Kreuz.net, but that seems very unlikely.

For one thing at 71 isn't he too old?

Hayes was 51. Spellman was 49. Cooke was 47. O'Connor was 64. Egan was 68. Though that's not too many data points and they do seem to be trending a bit older. But Spellman and Hayes were both dead by 71.

(via)

Saturday, April 12, 2008

The Man Who Saved Winchester Cathedral

He worked underwater six hours a day for five years to shore up the structure's foundation.

(via)

McCain's Loyalty

Slate reprints the touching story of John McCain's loyalty to his friend Morris Udall, even when nearly everyone else had fallen away.

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Late, but worth it

The Fall 2007 issue of Modern Age has arrived in what is now the spring of 2008. It was worth the wait though.

The issue, presumably the last of the 50th anniversary issues is bursting with interesting articles. The theme of the issue is "Conservative Reflections on Neglected Questions and Ignored Problems".

So far I've read with interest James Kurth on "The Tragic Death of the Hapsburg Empire" and Catesby Leigh on "Building More Value into the World We Build". The latter, describing conservative approaches to architecture, was an excellent complement to Dino Marcantonio's recent lecture on traditional Catholic architecture.