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'I was half-insane with anxiety': how I wrote myself into a breakdown [03 Jan 2020|07:00am]

After exhausting himself with work, author Benjamin Myers was sent over a literal edge and into the River Derwent. He recalls his recovery and hunt for a cure

Last summer, in the midst of promotional chaos surrounding my new novel The Offing, I cancelled my own London book launch and instead drove to the Chatsworth estate in Derbyshire, a place I had never previously visited, and jumped in the river right in front of the very big house. It was not entirely an act of self-destruction or a plea for help. (No one knew I was there, the river was only five feet deep and I’m no Virginia Woolf.) It simply seemed like a more obvious thing to do than trying to persuade members of the public to buy my book, and an act more broadly in keeping with the spirit of the novel in question and my writing life in general.

Out in the middle of the bracing River Derwent, with one foot hovering over a deeper, much darker, metaphorical void, I reached beneath the first rock I came to and pulled out a large crayfish. I held the creature aloft, as if it were a totem or trophy. Lobster features significantly in The Offing and here was its freshwater cousin, so it must mean something, I thought. Something Very Important.

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How the Brain Lost Its Mind review – beyond hysteria [03 Jan 2020|07:30am]

In this study of psychiatry and neurology, Allan Ropper and BD Burrell ask: does mental illness reside in the brain or the mind?

The history of medicine abounds with oddball characters and bizarre events. Yet few figures are quite as eccentric as the French neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot and few episodes reach the levels of absurdity displayed in his demonstrations of “hysterical” women being hypnotised in Paris in the late 19th century.

Charcot had begun so promisingly. Early in his career he made groundbreaking discoveries in multiple sclerosis and Parkinson’s disease, thereby earning himself the epithet “father of neurology”. But he became fixated on “hysteria”, a catch-all diagnosis that Victorian doctors applied to unconventional behaviour that defied medical explanation.

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From Geoff Dyer to Nietzsche: the best books to inspire wanderlust [03 Jan 2020|08:00am]

Rob Doyle chooses his favourite books about the will to travel, including famous female flâneurs and Henry Miller’s holiday in Greece

I almost never read books that sit in the travel writing section of a bookshop, yet many of those I love share a sense of place – in particular the mystique of places beyond wherever one happens to be from. How nice to be a reader of books, so that one can indulge a lifelong wanderlust without even bothering to get out of bed.

One lustful and wandering writer who did get out of bed was Henry Miller. For those in need of literary vitamin D to counter the winter gloom, I recommend his sun-blessed The Colossus of Maroussi. At the onset of the second world war, Miller found himself in Greece – a period of his life that left him spiritually transformed. Reading his account of those few months is like bathing in supernal light. Everything resplends. He doesn’t even bother to chuck in the sex scenes that made his other books notorious – there’s too much going on in the Aegean sky, the wine-dark sea and the Homeric landscapes.

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Nietzsche and the Burbs review – deadpan philosophical comedy [03 Jan 2020|09:00am]

Lars Iyer’s ambitious follow-up to Wittgenstein Jr tracks a gang of smart-aleck sixth formers as they explore nihilism in the suburbs

Lars Iyer’s follow-up to the celebrated Wittgenstein Jr is another attempt to treat his erstwhile academic specialism, European philosophy, as the basis for deadpan observational comedy. The more specific aim this time around is to examine the meaning of existence through the indulgent chatter, curricular and otherwise, of smart-aleck sixth-formers at a present- day comprehensive school in Wokingham, Berkshire. Topics include free will, the end of history, Gaia, wellbeing, the concept of “basic needs”, Beckett’s play Endgame and the virtues of nothingness. The result is certainly creditable – vivid, tickling and spry. It’s also remarkably unkempt.

The narrator, Chandra, is firmly ensconced in a gang of four when he befriends the “new kid”, a former private-school boy who physically resembles Friedrich Nietzsche (minus the moustache) and promotes a familiar nihilist agenda. Before long, Chandra and co have started a Dostoevsky book club and are on the hunt for an idiot’s guide to The Idiot and wondering how you pronounce the name of the Romanian-born essayist and Nietzsche-worshipper Cioran.

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The Living Days by Ananda Devi review – a tale of exploitation [03 Jan 2020|12:00pm]
The Mauritian author explores how legacies of colonialism and empire persist amid acts of cruelty and violence in London

First published in France in 2013, The Living Days is the 12th novel by the Mauritian author Ananda Devi. Set in London, it tells of the sexual abuse of a 13-year-old black boy by a 75-year-old white woman. Mary has lived a loveless life ever since losing her virginity to a soldier during the war: he went away to fight and didn’t come back, and she never moved on. Jeremiah, who goes by the nickname Cub, lives on a council estate in Brixton. His mother is very hard up, so he skips school to earn money doing odd jobs at Mary’s house in Notting Hill. Mary becomes obsessed with Cub; he starts sleeping in her bed, and things get worse from there.

Devi is not the first contemporary novelist to depict a female paedophile, but whereas novels such as Alissa Nutting’s Tampa (2013) and AM Homes’s The End of Alice (1996) foregrounded the psychopathology of sexual predation, the emphasis here is more social than psychological. The abuse scenario recounted in The Living Days prompts a meditation on urban inequality, in which the politics of race and class loom large. We learn that Cub had idealised white women: “He envied them their elegance, their affluence. Their modulated voices, their discreet accents so unlike the shrill shrieks of the neighbourhood girls … At night, he dreamed of them … They’ll be my way out of Brixton.” Mary’s adoration of Cub is described by Devi’s third-person narrator in startlingly dehumanising terms: Mary wonders at “this pure, animalistic marvel of his body”; he is “a glorious monster” and “the most elusive of creatures”.

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Architecture in Global Socialism by Łukasz Stanek review – a book that rewrites the cold war [03 Jan 2020|02:00pm]
From eastern Europe to west Africa to the Middle East … how cities in the developing world were built by the Soviet bloc

If you rummage through boxes of postcards in Polish secondhand shops, they reveal an unexpected geography – places few Poles would now go. They’re not just from Soviet cities such as Tashkent or Novosibirsk, but Baghdad, Havana, Tripoli. The UK-based Polish architectural historian Łukasz Stanek’s book explains why this is so. A generation of eastern Europeans travelled across the “non-aligned” countries between the 1950s and the 80s – and they were there to build. In the process, the urbanisation of what was then called the “third world” was carried out by architects, planners, engineers and workers from the “second world” of eastern Europe. While they were there, they promised to do things differently. “I remember well these eastern European architects,” recalls a Ghanaian at the start of this book, “because it was the first and the last time that a white man had an African boss in Ghana.”

This is one of those books that turns a discipline upside down – the cold war, state socialism, eastern Europe and 20th-century architecture all look different in the light of its findings. Based on multilingual research, it concentrates on how the development of several postcolonial cities – mainly, but not exclusively, Accra, Lagos, Baghdad, Abu Dhabi and Kuwait City – were in large part the product of architects and planners from the USSR, Yugoslavia, Poland, East Germany, Hungary, Bulgaria and Romania. It sketches in a strange geography, where an architect couldn’t legally go from one end of Berlin to the other, but could travel across the world and reconstruct it. Each state’s foreign trade organisation kept a close eye on travelling architects – and took as much as a third of salaries in hard cash – but the notion of state socialist insularity and autarchy is blown to pieces. So too is the idea of total Soviet control, both over its satellites and its postcolonial “proxies”. Each of the countries discussed here was in the Non-Aligned Movement set up in the 50s by India, Indonesia and Yugoslavia; they ranged from the statist developmentalism of Kwame Nkrumah’s Ghana and Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr’s Iraq to the rentier capitalism of 70s Nigeria, ending in the oil monarchies of the Gulf. Most of these governments harshly repressed their local communists, but welcomed foreign ones to plan and build their towns and industries – in the age of Sputnik, they gambled that the Soviet path to modernity would be faster and fairer.

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Wartime Albert Camus letter lays bare his Vichy-era anguish [03 Jan 2020|06:45pm]

Letter found in Gen Charles de Gaulle’s archives written when France was under Nazi control

As France marks the 60th anniversary of the death of Albert Camus on Saturday, a previously unpublished letter written by the Nobel prize winning-author during the Nazi occupation, expressing his anguish and uncertainty for the future of the country, has emerged.

In the missive, found in the archives of France’s wartime leader Gen Charles de Gaulle, Camus detailed his fears that the mass killing of so many able-bodied compatriots was also destroying the “lively and vibrant ideas” that would guarantee his country’s future.

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