Niall Ferguson & Colossus
Have spent much of Sunday working on a book review due later this week of Colossus, the new book from Niall Ferguson. Can’t say too much about it until after the review’s turned in and published, but I was interested enough to look up this interview, which although about a previous book hints at some of Ferguson’s current themes, and am now eagerly awaiting the full posting of this interview. Oh, and here’s another sneak peek at the themes of Colossus, in a recent book review Ferguson wrote for Foreign Affairs.
4 January 2004 | read this |
Aliena, Jake, Orientis oppidum…
Well, my Latin’s a little rusty, but I tried. Anyway, I was up last night reading Pompeii, another one of my Christmas presents. Robert Harris has come up with a great historical potboiler. The parallels between Ampliatus, the main “villain” of the novel, and modern-day figures like Donald Trump or Michael Milken are a bit heavyhanded (“Lucrum gaudium!” or “Profit is joy!” is a particularly amusing version of “Greed is good!”), but it’s all great fun, and the level of detail on ancient Roman aqueduct engineering seems quite rich indeed. So rich that the care Harris put into getting the volcanological details right might not be obvious at first glance…
For those who are interested in making the comparison, Edward Bulwer-Lytton’s The Last Days of Pompeii is available through Project Gutenberg.
2 January 2004 | read this |