Matsu and I recently had an entertaining conversation in the comments of this post (entertaining to me, at least) about President Bush's reading list.
Last night I read an article in the New Yorker by Adam Gopnik on the same topic, and here it is online.
I like his conclusion particularly. Regarding Bush's reading choices of Camus (The Stranger), a book about Oppenheimer and the bomb, and a biography of Lincoln, Gopnik writes that "it is encouraging to think that he has spent the summer reflecting on the inscrutable origins of human violence and on the unimaginable destructive powers now available through American science, while contemplating the achievements of a great man who hated wars, made a necessary one, and wandered the halls of the White House agonized by the consequences. It sounds almost like the beginnings of wisdom, or, at least, a compulsory fall reading list for us all."
3 hours ago
1 comment:
That is great. I like what the reporter wrote. Who could have guessed the President would make us think so much!
(Note to your husband: I feel like I'm back in Mr. Blair's class!)
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