Stuart Austin

Mostly about books...

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    September 2010
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Tag: Factual

Leith Hill Tower

Yesterday we walked up to Leith Hill, situated to the south west of Dorking in Surrey. The hill reaches 294 meters (965 ft) above sea level and is the highest point. The books say that it was on the summit of Leith Hill in 851, that Æthelwulf of Wessex, father of Alfred the Great, defeated the Danes who were heading for Winchester, having sacked Canterbury and London. It seems a bit unlikely that two big armies would choose a pointy little hill to fight on but what do I know?

On the summit of Leith Hill is an 18th century Gothic tower, with panoramic views northwards to London and the English Channel to the south. Richard Hull of nearby Leith Hill Place (once home to the composer Ralph Vaughan Williams) built “Prospect House” in 1766, later to become known as Leith Hill Tower, with the intention of raising the hill above 1,000 ft (305 m) above sea level.

The tower is 19.5 meters (64 ft) high and consisted of two rooms “neatly furnished”, with a Latin inscription above the door announcing that it had been built for not only his own pleasure, but also for the enjoyment of others. Hull provided visitors with prospect glasses, similar to a small telescope, through which to survey the extensive views towards London and the English Channel, each some 25 miles away, and thirteen counties on a very clear day.

When he died in 1772, at his request he was buried under the tower, however, following his death, the building was stripped of its contents, doors and windows, and fell into ruin. As a result the tower was filled with rubble and concrete, and the entrance bricked up. In 1864, Mr Evelyn of nearby Wotton House decided to reopen it, but the concrete made this difficult, and so the additional turreted side-tower was added to allow access to the top of the tower.

The tower was fully restored by the National Trust in 1984. This restoration included the removal of rubble and concrete, fitting safety features such as a handrail along the narrow staircase and converting the lower portion of the tower into a national trust shop. Leith Hill Tower is open to the public, with a comprehensive display explaining the history of the tower and giving opinions and memories of local people. Unfortunately it closes at 1700 and we were too late so we didn’t manage to ascend the 180 odd steps and instead went to a charming pub in Ockham at the bottom of the hill.

Piss poor day for blogging

Guido Fawkes has, over the Hague/Myers issue, has shown the political blogosphere at its most pathetic. His feeble defence is that all he was doing was questioning whether taxpayer should be funding the salary of someone who might be having a relationship with his boss, and as evidence he alleged that they had once shared a hotel room. As a result a young man loses his job and the Foreign Secretary and his wife are forced to issue the most personal of statements, detailing miscarriages and a declaration on the state of their marriage. Iain Dale covers the issue really well here.

And these two were running the country?

There is an amazing revelation from Tony Blair’s autobiography, A Journey: My Political Life – US link/UK link, in today’s Daily Telegraph:

The former prime minister’s memoir discloses that a “maddening” Mr Brown effectively blackmailed him while he was in No 10. He suspects the then chancellor of orchestrating the investigation into the cash-for-honours scandal. The pressure on Mr Blair to step aside became so great that he admits he may have become reliant on alcohol as he faced coup attempts from Mr Brown’s supporters. He discloses that he began drinking every day and needed the “support” that alcohol provided.

It is amazing that this horrific individual, Gordon Brown, became our Prime Minister for the next three years until being unceremoniously booted out by the public in the last election. A little more democracy would go a long way sometimes.

More on the Spirit Level Delusion

I have written about these two before but had to write again after listening to Tim Harford. Harford is the Financial Times’ Undercover Economist, and has looked at the furor over the Spirit Level’s statistical analysis. The original book, The Spirit Level – US link/ UK link, purported to explain that almost everything – from life expectancy to depression levels, violence to illiteracy – is affected not by how wealthy a society is, but how equal it is – That societies with a bigger gap between rich and poor are bad for everyone in them – including the well-off. There have been numerous methodological complaints about the books premises and evidence best expressed in The Spirit Level Delusion – US link/ UK link.

Harford starts out by asking why some countries were excluded from the original book that disagreed with the evidence and the interviewee, Kate Pickett, has few answers – claiming “inadvertent errors” for example! Also he complains about the lack of multivariate analysis and the fact that the entire book, The Spirit Level – US link/ UK link, is based on bivariate analysis without controlling for other variables. Harford also complains about the lack of data in the book. To this the writer claims nobody would understand them if they did. Harford audibly scoffs! Finally Harford makes the point that correlation is not causation and there may be many other explanations. The writer has little answer to his questions and I feel Harford has thoroughly fisked The Spirit Level – US link/ UK link as to its value, especially as a policy tool. The end of the interview is so full of wool it is funny! And Kate Pickett is caught lying. You almost feel sorry for her… But not quite!

Out of America by Keith Richburg

I am reading Out Of America – US link/UK link at the moment. I first heard of this book when it was first released back in the nineties but was unable to buy it as I was living in Central Africa. Then I forgot about it and just remembered it a few weeks ago. What a great and brave book it is.

In Out Of America – US link/UK link, Keith Richburg takes the reader on his extraordinary journey that sweeps from Somalia to Rwanda to Zaire (now now as Congo) and finally to South Africa. He shows how he came to terms with the divide within himself: between his African racial heritage and his American cultural identity. Richburg was an experienced and respected reporter who had paid his dues covering urban neighborhoods in Washington D.C., and won praise for his coverage of South-east Asia. But nothing prepared him for the personal odyssey that he would embark upon when he was assigned to cover Africa. In the book he shows how he came to terms with the divide within himself: between his African racial heritage and his American cultural identity. Are these really my people? Am I truly an African-American? The answer, Richburg finds, after much soul-searching, is that no, he is not an African, but an American first and foremost. To those who romanticize Mother Africa as a black Valhalla, where blacks can walk with dignity and pride, he regrets that this is not the reality. He has been there and witnessed the killings, the repression, the false promises, and the horror. He concludes following his horrific experiences:

Thank God my nameless ancestor, brought across the ocean in chains and leg irons, made it out alive, he concludes. Thank God I am an American.

The conclusion is even more moving because of Richburg’s experiences of American University education during the Seventies – the height of the ”Black Studies” experiment. And especially so given the rise of Obama who came up through that, almost, separatist ethos.

Alive or dead? No real preference…

The philosopher Galen Strawson has a new piece in The Philosopher’s Magazine on a subject near to my heart:

If, in any normal, non-depressed period of life, I ask myself whether I’d rather be alive than dead tomorrow morning, and completely put aside the fact that some people would be unhappy if I were dead, I find I have no preference either way.

Read the whole thing for some really interesting thoughts.

The Ground Zero Mosque debate

I think Ron Paul nails it here:

“The justification to ban the mosque is no more rational than banning a soccer field in the same place because all the suicide bombers loved to play soccer.”

I am not religious but I do like religious buildings and some of the Mosques I saw in Iran and Iraq are awesome. So Mosque-builders build me a Mosque just make it as pretty as you can. The mosque below was in Yazd, Iran.

Tim Butcher on Henry Morton Stanley

I really enjoy Tim Butcher’s books and now he has written a great piece in the Telegraph about Henry Morton Stanley. Stanley has always been a hero of mine – I even named my son after him! I love his derring do, his courage, his sheer bloody-mindedness, his self re-invention, and especially the fact that he is slowly being airbrushed out of history. Tim has written a great piece trying to reverse this historical deletion process. It is full of great writing :

What to make of Henry Morton Stanley? In short, was he a hero or a brute? He might have stood a little over 5ft tall and had a tiny head (when I tried on his explorer’s hat at the Royal Geographical Society it perched on the back of my cranium like a kippa), but in the context of modern African history and, indeed, the entire European colonial project, Stanley was a colossus.

The whole thing is well worth a read and I congratulate Tim on the piece.

Prairie Chapel Ranch

I really want a ranch like George W’s. He has a 1,583 acre ranch in unincorporated McLennan County, Texas, located seven miles northwest of Crawford. The property was acquired by President George W. Bush in 1999 and was known as the Western White House during his Presidency. George W spends vacation time at the house where he has also entertained dignitaries from around the world.

The ranch gets its name from the Prairie Chapel School which was built nearby on land donated by mid-19th century German immigrant Heinrich Engelbrecht from Oppenwehe, Germany, who owned the land that now comprises the Bush ranch. Engelbrecht also donated land for the nearby Canaan Baptist Church AKA the “Prairie Chapel”. A prized souvenir from the ranch is a gray Under Armour athletic shirt emblazoned with a Texas star encircled by the words The President’s 100-Degree Club. In order to qualify a visitor must run 3 miles, or bike for 10, when the thermometer hits triple digits. When he was president, Bush used the ranch for vacations, meetings, and entertaining foreign dignitaries. In the less formal setting, dress code for meetings called for an open collar and no tie. Guests were typically treated to meals of Southwestern cuisine. When not holding meetings or briefings, Bush spent his time mountain biking, jogging, fishing, bird hunting, and clearing brush.

The myth of the “loner”

I am a relatively solitary person. I do not have a large social circle. I basically spend all my free time with my wife and kids. I haven’t been out for a few beers in a very long time – certainly more than a year – and I am not sure I miss it. I really only have one close friend that is not part of my immediate family. He lives in France so we don’t get together so much these days. But, and it is a big but, I am really very happy. I am fine spending time alone with a good book, or even with a very bad book, or just going out on my bike. So it is with annoyance that I read yet another newspaper piece describing someone as a “loner” as if that was some sort of explanation for their actions. The latest one is the murdered British spy; apparently his friends have described Gareth Williams as a ‘gifted loner’. That is pretty much the headline in today’s Daily Telegraph and the writers seem to imply that Williams’ status as a loner explains what happened to him in some way.

Another report in The Times today claims that bondage gear and equipment associated with sado-masochism were removed from the 30-year-old’s London apartment by police looking for clues. And further details of Williams have continued to emerge as friends described him as an extremely bright, quiet and determined man. His childhood friend Dylan Parry, 34, said that Williams was:

“Academically gifted but socially naive and could be easily led. He was the kind of person who found it difficult to engage with people on a normal level.”

It really riles me that someone’s lack of social interaction is used as a marker for weirdness. And that idea forms a sort of mood-music within so many news reports with serial killers, murder victims, criminals, etc. being uniformly described as “loners”. I am sure there are plenty of perfectly successful yet solitary accountants, lawyers, bankers, and even journalists if the papers ever took time to look.

A really good book that explores these issues is Party of One: The Loners’ Manifesto – US link/UK link by Anneli Rufus. When I first saw this book I wished, at first, that Anneli Rufus hadn’t chosen the word “loner” for her title, linked as it is with inevitable prefix “crazed” in so many news stories of murderers on the loose. But that’s exactly her point: Rufus is determined to rescue the word — and more importantly, the reputation of the people the word accurately describes — from the misinterpretations and calumnies heaped upon it, and us, for so long. It’s an uphill fight, but it’s definitely worth the effort. This book isn’t one of the many attempts to offer introverts “coping skills” or networking tips for surviving with our sanity in an extroverted world. Instead, it’s more of a call to extroverts out there to understand whom you’re dealing with … or more correctly, whom they’re not dealing with … and what we’re all about.

To do this, Rufus covers a wide range of history and popular culture, showing how introverts have carved out places for themselves and learned to live with at least some degree of peace, despite the constant tug of “caring” people crying, “Come out of your shell and live a little!” It may seem paradoxical for a loner to tell other loners “We’re not alone,” but in this instance, it’s a surprisingly comforting message. Rufus’s chapter on crime may be the most important, and the one with the widest implications outside the introvert community (so to speak), because it’s here that she tackles the myth of the murderous loner and attempts to salvage the word from those who, she argues, misuse it so terribly.

Loners, she says, are people who *want* to be alone, and who enjoy their solitude. But many of the criminals who have been tagged as “loners” don’t fit that description at all. Many of them have been marginalized from society, and want to strike back at it. They want to impress others, and be accepted by those whose approval they crave. Or, like Mark David Chapman, the “pseudoloner” who killed John Lennon, they simply crave attention. There’s no such thing as an “attention-seeking loner.” There are other criminals, she argues, for whom the “loner” label doesn’t even remotely fit, and she roundly criticizes the police profilers and news reporters who use the term so sloppily. Timothy McVeigh, the Oklahoma City bomber, for example, wasn’t a loner at all, though he’s often described that way. Neither were the Columbine High School shooters, or Ted Bundy, or John Wayne Gacy, though all of them have been called “loners.”

Her point is an important one, if one many may dismiss as mere semantics. And it ties into her other important chapter, on raising loner children. If parents believe — as many apparently do — that any child who prefers to play by himself is liable to grow up to become a mass murderer, and therefore needs to be “cured,” or “trained” out, of his introvert personality, life for that child is simply going to be hell. Though my situation growing up was hardly as extreme as some of the stories told here, I nevertheless sympathized completely with children made to act more extroverted than was comfortable for them. Loner children recognize they’re different, Rufus writes, but don’t know why, or what about them needs defending. If their parents are convinced there’s something “wrong” with the introverted child, and try to “fix” it, they will create wounds that may never close.