Worthwhile Books
Books have to be heavy because the world's inside them. - Cornelia Funke
Friday, April 17, 2026
Final Thoughts on Kindle Unlimited
Thursday, April 2, 2026
Breaking Bread with the Dead by Alan Jacobs
He begins by explaining why our thinking has become so thin.
Because of the deluge of information pouring into our minds via screens, we must, of necessity, practice a form of informational triage. We
simply cannot read everything so we choose those subjects which are immediately
interesting, and topics which are generally written from the point of view of
those with whom we agree.
There is no time to think about anything else. This preoccupation
with the present, with no regard for history or past ideas, leads to a “lightweight”
existence that is easily toppled by life’s hard knocks. Jacobs believes that
reading old books (and grappling with their ideas) can give us a stability that
is not easily shaken by each current event or recent mode of thinking.
Jacobs encourages us to read older books with a generosity
toward the author, which means that instead of writing them off for being
racist, sexist, white or male, etc., we need to be gracious toward them and give
them more of your attention than you may at certain moments feel that they
deserve – because you hope that something good will come of it. At the very
least you hope for an expansion of your own understanding.
He writes, I believe that any significant increase in
personal density is largely achieved through encounters with un-likeness. When
we read something that startles us (or with which we disagree) we are naturally
tempted to close the book. But if we disregard all past authors for differences
we have with them, our pool of candidates for our attention will get smaller
and smaller. Eventually we get a nicely
manageable collection of ideas, all of which are more or less the same. But
this limited understanding of the world leaves us impoverished.
G.K. Chesterton’s argued that when we ignore the history and
ideas of the past, we do so at our own peril. If the modern man is indeed the
heir of all the ages, he is often the kind of heir who tells the family solicitor
to sell the whole damned estate, lock, stock, and barrel, and give him a little
ready money to throw away at the races or the nightclubs. (from his essay: On Man – Heir of All Ages)
I learned a lot from this book, but while reading, I had to
practice what Jacobs preached. Although I sometimes disliked his disdainful tone,
I kept going because his main emphases are ideas that are very important to me.
If only he had been as generous to those with whom he disagrees (who are still
living) as he is with writers of the past.
Thursday, March 19, 2026
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is one of those stories that
I knew I should read, but didn’t think I could because of the 14th Century Middle English.
I noticed that Grace Hamman had covered the book on her podcast, “Old Books
with Grace," and decided to read along
with her, which was a great way to work my way through the book. I
found a simplified (but not dumbed-down) kindle version by Marie Borroff
(1923-2019, Lit professor from Yale) for 55 cents. I listened first to Grace’s
half-hour introduction to each chapter, and then read the chapter. Hamman’s rich
commentary and Borroff’s lovely translation made it a delight.
The story takes place at Christmastime in the court of King
Arthur. While he and his men are feasting, a huge green knight appears and
challenges them to a "Christmas game" of chopping off each other's heads. If Arthur is unsuccessful, he must come to the green knight “in a year and a day” to have his own head cut off. King
Arthur’s nephew, Sir Gawain, begs to take the king’s place in the match. The
rest of the poem recounts his adventures.
I enjoyed this book so much that I bought the Simon Armitage
version on Audible (the version Hamman used on her podcast) and look forward to re-visiting it in the future.
Has anyone else tried to read this? Any thoughts?
Friday, March 6, 2026
Latest Audible Haul
Thursday, February 19, 2026
Metamorphoses by Ovid
Friday, February 6, 2026
D. E. Stevenson quote on the Art of Living Well
Friday, January 23, 2026
Old Herbaceous by Reginald Arkell
He is in
his eighties when the story begins, sitting by his cottage window looking over the
gardens he used to tend. He wonders that gardeners who earn more than he ever
did somehow seemed to care less about making things look their best. He never
felt that he was just a paid man working for a wage. He felt that the place was
his – and so it was, in a manner of speaking…. People said that big gardens
were finished; that everything belonged to everybody and nothing to anybody. He
didn’t believe that. The world started with a garden and a thing that had been
going all that time wouldn’t end so easily.
Old Herbaceous is not
a “Christian” book by any means. The narrative makes it clear that Pinnegar is not a
church-goer (much to the chagrin of a long line of village vicars), but there
are many episodes of grace that make it a delight. First there is his adoptive
mother. Then the school teacher, Mary Brain, who teaches him to identify and love wild flowers. Then there is Mrs. Charteris. And the elderly lawyer, Mr.
Billiter. Pinnegar’s life is an uphill climb all the way, but these men and
women demonstrate a kindness and generosity that fortify him for the challenges.
The writing
is delightful. As a young boy, Herbert enters a bouquet in a flower show. While he
waits for the judges to make their decision, he sees the most lovely, laughing
lady – not a day over eighteen. Young Herbert stood in the center of the tent
with his mouth wide open and promptly fell in love, for ever and ever, amen.
Later, when he leaves school and needs employment, he is hired by this lady and her husband to work as an under-gardener. He knew much more than she did about plants, but she reveled in teaching him their Latin names; and, so, his puppy love develops into an enduring friendship that is one of the mainstays of the book.
Not only is this a gardener’s memoir of his work and relationships, but it is also gives a glimpse of what it was like to live through various historical events, including two world wars. As WWII approaches, we read: Of course, it had all happened before, but Mr. Pinnegar, now nearing seventy, wasn’t quite the man he had been twenty-five years ago. In those days he had taken on every job that was going – carried the village on his shoulders; even found it in his heart to laugh when they dug up the flowers and planted potatoes along the borders. But not this time. He began to feel a fierce resentment against everything and everybody mixed up in this mad endeavor to the destroy the gracious pattern of the world he had known…
This is easily
one of the sweetest books I’ve ever read, but not sickeningly so. Plenty of
pathos and sadness balance out the moments of charity and beauty. Best of all,
you don’t have to know a thing about gardening to love this book.
Blessings,







