There’s something about 3: They say bad/good things come in threes. Some things
in my life have been in threes: My favourite science fiction authors: Asimov,
Clarke and Crichton (an ACC instead of an ABC). The books that shaped my views
on society: The Lord of the Flies, 1984, Brave New World. My views on
cosmogony so far have been largely influenced by Arthur C. Clarke’s Rama series
and Orson Scott Card’s Ender Quartet. Now, I have a third to add to that: Neal
Stephenson’s Anathem.
I have just finished reading Fever Pitch by Nick Hornby. To those who don’t
know, Fever Pitch is about Nick’s obsession with Arsenal. For those who don’t
know what Arsenal is: nothing to see here, please move along, folks. I haven’t
read of a lot of football literature, but as an Arsenal fan, it gave me a
peephole into a world long since gone: the world when Arsenal were the
equivalent of Stoke City of the last few seasons - the ogres of football. No,
honestly. The way Nick described Arsenal and the Highbury crowd reminds me of
the Potters in every way - the siege mentality, the general dislike from other
fans, the media, the shit football…
One thing to note before you start reading this: I haven’t written anything in a
long time. I’m just gonna ramble. Note 2: I started writing this before
Echoes and some of the stuff meant to be here ended up there, so not much
rambling! :)
Recently I started reading Robert Jordan’s The Wheel of Time series. Each
book is well written, and the characters strong and memorable, the tales
themselves grand. The series itself vies with the Mahabharata, considered by
most Indians to be the greatest epic. One thing I noticed time and again is the
number of similarities, echoes, as it were, of tales from elsewhere, books and
movies. By itself, it might seem like a weakness, but no! It is a strength, for
each echo strengthens the feeling that the tale is your own experience long
forgotten, from a different life perhaps, for it is familiar and yet strange.
Perhaps like the feeling Birgitte Silverbow has for the memories of each of her
adventures with Gaidal Cain.
Over time, I have changed my position regarding the existence of god(s). From
apathy (‘Don’t know, don’t care’), to disbelief (atheism) to doubt
(agnosticism). I have heard many accounts of god(s), from the ‘universe, then
god’ (like the ancient Greeks’) to ‘god, then universe’ (most other accounts),
from single god (Christianity, Judaism, Islam) to many gods (Hinduism, the
Egyptian pantheon). The problem exists, in my opinion, specifically in the proof
(or lack thereof) of the existence of gods. For the purposes of this article,
let us consider a few things as given:
It has been a long time since I first read the novels which affected me the most
strongly: Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre, Crime and Punishment, War and
Peace, Great Expectations, David Copperfield, One Hundred Years of
Solitude, The Picture of Dorian Gray, Ivanhoe and Gone with the Wind. The
first two I read when I was ten years old, or thereabouts; the last, Gone with
the Wind, three or four years ago. Since then, I’ve read a few books, but none
which created impressions as deep as they have. So much so, that I’d come to
doubt whether I would meet anybody as kind and as good as Melanie Wilkes, or
anyone as terrible as Dorian Gray. I felt that I wouldn’t meet any love as
strong as the love between Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff, or the love for
Scarlet that Rhett had. Women like Jane Eyre, or Countess Natasha Rostova, or
Agnes Wickfield, or Scarlet O’Hara are rarely met with. But a lot of things
changed when I decided to correct a mistake that I had made, since I had never
got a chance to read Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables, having read The Hunchback
of Notre-Dame years ago as an abridged version (curse those monstrosities, they
rob us of a great deal!). So when I chanced upon a Penguin Classics edition of
Les Misérables, a 1976 translation by Norman Denny, I seized it without a
second thought.
Jurassic Park and The Lost World are movies that almost everyone I know have
seen. These movies prompted me to read the novels, and, out of curiosity and
knowing that novels always contain more detail than movies, I did read them,
laying my hands on a second hand copy of Jurassic Park, and later on The Lost
World. Thus did I start reading books by Crichton, on of my favourite authors.
It did shock (and dishearten) me to learn that he died on November 4, 2008, due
to cancer (I learned it only a week after, when I checked the Wiki article on
him).