mark monday's Reviews > South Wind

South Wind by Norman Douglas
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it was amazing
bookshelves: these-fragile-lives, world-of-insects, alpha-team, masterpiece-theatre, buried-treasure

An ideal vacation: the isle of Capri, warm and sunny; a community of idiosyncratic expats, amusing and lively; ferocious natives, sardonic and sly; colorfully dressed religious cultists, rustic and merry. Conversation and parties and conversation and art forgery and conversation and natural disaster and conversation and a deadly street battle and conversation and murder and so many conversations on all sorts of fascinating subjects. Art forgery is fine if it becomes a reason for a billionaire to hand money over to a proud friend. Natural disaster is fine if it's only ash to be dealt with; the volcano's eruptions mainly harm those boring mainlanders. A deadly street battle is fine if it's natives versus cultists, plus it gives everyone something to talk about for a little while. Murder is fine if the victim is a swindling louse and the murderess doesn't make a bloody fuss about it. A history is delivered: the island once ruled by an eccentric despot; his eccentricity has become the lifeblood of the island itself. A visitor arrives, an Anglican Bishop of Africa, already shown a different way of living in Africa; now ready and open to new ways of thinking. This rather stuffy but kindly gent finds his mind suddenly opening to all sorts of new possibilities. Now rename the isle of Capri: it shall be called "Nepenthe". The south wind blows hot, dry, and strong in this beautiful place; it causes all sorts of minds to expand in all sorts of directions.

The author was a scandalous man and an expat himself, on the island of Capri and elsewhere. He wrote lauded travel books and was friends with a variety of fascinating people. A suave perspective on the vicissitudes of fortune and life, an exciting interest in exploring all the different ways of thinking and being. Prose that is deliciously descriptive but never overcooked, sophisticated and ironic, pitiless and empathetic, amused and always highly amusing. I think this was his only book of fiction. Or should that be "fiction"? No doubt much of this was cribbed from his own life, the actual people he knew and the actual place he lived. Either way, the book is perfection; why bother writing more fiction if you've said all that you need to say?

This is a dream of a book and I wanted to stay dreaming, so I prolonged the experience as much as possible. The wit, the elegance! It gave me so much to smile at, be shocked at, and above all, to think about. So much food for thought. I love being around smart, individualistic people and I love being around people who enjoy life and I love being in a setting that is warm, breezy, colorful, surrounded by water. Full of things to do, people to meet, and above all, ways to relax. I love when something makes me both think and feel. I want to live in this book.

capri

"Something had been stirring with him; new points of view had floated into his ken. He was no longer so sure about things. The structure of his mind had lost that old stability; its elements seemed to be held in solution, ready to form new combinations."

"They produce a new kind of public, a public which craves for personalities rather than information... Men cannot live, it seems, save by feeding on their neighbour's life-blood. They prey on each other's nerve-tissues and personal sensations. Everything must be shared. It gives them a feeling of solidarity, I suppose, in a world where they have lost the courage to stand alone. Woe to him who dwells apart!"

"That venerable blunder: to think that in changing the form of government you change the heart of man. For surely we should aim at simplification of the machinery. Conceive, now, the state of affairs where everybody is more or less employed by the community - the community, that comfortable world! - in some patriotic business or other. Everybody an official, all controlling each other! It would be worse than the Spanish Inquisition."

"What is all wisdom save a collection of platitudes? Take fifty of our current proverbial sayings - they are so trite, so threadbare, that we can hardly bring our lips to utter them. None the less they embody the concentrated experience of the race, and the man who orders his life according to their teaching cannot go far wrong. How easy that seems! Has any one ever done so? Never. Has any man ever attained inner harmony by pondering the experiences of others? Not since the world began! He must pass through the fire."
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Reading Progress

May 11, 2022 – Started Reading
May 11, 2022 – Shelved
June 4, 2022 – Shelved as: these-fragile-lives
June 4, 2022 – Shelved as: world-of-insects
June 4, 2022 – Shelved as: alpha-team
June 4, 2022 – Shelved as: masterpiece-theatre
June 4, 2022 – Finished Reading
June 16, 2022 – Shelved as: buried-treasure

Comments Showing 1-16 of 16 (16 new)

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message 1: by Fionnuala (new) - added it

Fionnuala Mark wrote: "…This is a dream of a book and I wanted to stay dreaming, so I prolonged the experience as much as possible…"

That's it! That's exactly the effect it had on me too! I read it slowly trying to make it last, never tired of the characters' rambling conversations—even the drunken ones. Actually, the drunken ones were some of the best!


mark monday Your review and then Sketchbook's really inspired me to read this perfect delight. I'm a bit abashed to say that I also wanted to make sure you both read this review, since the inspiration came from both of you. Hopefully you won't be offended that I now change the "Recommended by" to Sketchbook, because I really want them to get a notification lol.

There were just so many good conversations in this book. And so many wonderful characters! I also loved the age spread - young voices and old, both delivering thoughts & ideas that had my own mind spinning.


message 3: by Scarlett (new) - added it

Scarlett O.H. Beautiful review, I sympathize with the feeling that you would want to live in a certain book. Sometimes the mood, place and people in a book can be so attractive. I have not read this yet but I will add it to my list, thanks.


message 4: by Fionnuala (new) - added it

Fionnuala mark wrote: "Your review and then Sketchbook's really inspired me to read this perfect delight..."

Ha! I got the notification after I spotted the review, Mark, so don't worry. And I didn't write a longer comment because I was rushing out the door to a Bloomsday event!
There's actually a slight connection between Joyce and Norman Douglas because Douglas compiled a book of street rhymes, the kind of rhymes children used to chant on the back streets of London, and Joyce is thought to have consulted it—there are street rhymes threaded into Ulysses and Finnegans Wake.
But back to your review. It's a real treat to read about your experience with the book—especially your catalogue of island eccentricities which you end with this hilarious line: Murder is fine if the victim is a swindling louse and the murderess doesn't make a bloody fuss about it Worthy of Norman Douglas himself.


mark monday Fionnuala wrote: "I was rushing out the door to a Bloomsday event!
But back to your review. It's a real treat to read about your experience with the book"


I hope the event was a good one! but how could it not be.

and thanks! glad you enjoyed the review and I'm grateful to your review and others that led me here.


Scarlett wrote: "Beautiful review, I sympathize with the feeling that you would want to live in a certain book. Sometimes the mood, place and people in a book can be so attractive. I have not read this yet..."

thank you and I hope you do! the book definitely creates a certain mood. and if interesting conversations are, well, interesting to you... this book is wall to wall Interesting Conversations.


message 6: by William2 (new)

William2 This guy raked Capri for boy tail. When he died, many of the farmers, former lovers among them, now married with children, carried him to his final rest.


mark monday Interesting! Did not know the "carried him to his final rest" part.


message 8: by William2 (new)

William2 Yes, it’s in Pagan light: dreams of freedom and beauty in Capri by Jamie James


message 9: by Jaidee (new) - added it

Jaidee Sounds divine ! Thanx for the recommendation !


message 10: by mark (new) - rated it 5 stars

mark monday Jaidee wrote: "Sounds divine ! Thanx for the recommendation !"

I hope you read this one! I rarely send out recommendations, but this book just needs to be read by more people.


William2 wrote: "Yes, it’s in Pagan light: dreams of freedom and beauty in Capri by Jamie James"

Interesting title! I will look into it, thanks William


message 11: by roosmarijn (new)

roosmarijn oh this review mark! and that last part This is a dream of a book and I wanted to stay dreaming, so I prolonged the experience as much as possible... and onwards, so beautifully written!! and the quotes!! hooked. thank you for the recommendations, i'm thrílled to give this a go soon


message 12: by mark (new) - rated it 5 stars

mark monday thank you very much, roosmarijn! :)


Sketchbook Wonderful review !


message 14: by mark (new) - rated it 5 stars

mark monday thanks Sketchbook!


Andrew Schirmer Great review, Mark! This is a favourite of mine as well. I have loved ND's travel books. Adding on to what William wrote - this was a thoughtful consideration on ND's life and mores which were pretty horrific by today's standards:

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/5...


message 16: by mark (new) - rated it 5 stars

mark monday thanks Andrew! I hope to read some of his travel writing.

That review by Sara Schulman was indeed very thoughtful, I appreciated it. And the review that follows by John Hamilton was certainly... passionately argued. *cough*


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