A bit of a catch-up.
Last weekend we went to the Hay Festival and heard Rebecca Solnit in conversation with James Rebanks. So I read her latest book of essays, No Straight Road Takes You There. I think it’s one of her best essay collections – suprisingly comforting. The intro title sort of sums it up: “In praise of the indirect, the unpredictable, the immeasurable, the slow and the subtle.” When asked about how to respond to These Times, her answer was: do what you can, save what you can. Nothing is inevitable but there isn’t an easy direct route to better outcomes than look likely at the moment.
We also heard at Hay Javier Cercas talking to Kirsty Young about his Terra Alta detective series. The first one, Even The Darkest Night, was fantastic, I’ve been saving the second, Prey for the Shadow, and the third (of a trilogy), Fortress of Evil, is just out. Highly recommended – and Cercas was very funny and charistmatic.
I just finished Daniel Dennett’s memoir, I’ve Been Thinking. I loved this, very readable and lots of inside-the-academic world gossip and insight. One of the highlights of my life to date was when – on one of only two times I’ve endured Davos – he came to hear me talk about GDP.
I also enjoyed Doyne Farmer’s Making Sense of Chaos: A Better Economics for a Better World, now in paperback. As anybody who knows his work would expect, it focuses on complexity and agent-based modelling for the better economics. It’s a very clear explanation of their merits, and the demerits of standard macroeconomic forecasting. I’m not a complete convert but perhaps I should be: two brilliant young researchers he refers to a lot in the book are former Bennett Institute postdoc Penny Mealy and our current research affiliate Maria Del Rio Chanona. If they think this is the way to go, I don’t want to disagree with them.
Also, some novels:
The Cafe with No Name by Robert Seethaler, a decent enough read but disappointing after I’d seen so many glowing reviews
Measuring The World by Daniel Kehlmann, tremendous, an absolute page-turner, which is surprising when you realise it’s about two 18th century German scientists