Wednesday, January 14, 2026

A Few Days on the Coast


After the extended Christmas hubbub, full of early darkness and general good cheer, Hilary and I almost invariably head for the fresh air, stunning beauty, silence, and solitude of the coast—the north coast, that is. Lake Superior.

It’s long since become a tradition.

We try to mix things up a bit from year to year, of course. Theme and variations. But the drive up is often punctuated by a visit to the Sax-Zim Bog. The following days are likely to include a few cross-country skiing excursions, pasties and fresh fish on the menu—not on the same night!—with herring, Jarlsberg cheese, Aunt Nellie’s red cabbage, and Ingebretsen’s liver pâté prominently featured on the lunch-time smorgasbord. Gooseberry Falls State Park. Two Harbors, and Shovel Point are all near at hand.

Our cabin is right on the shore, a half mile from Highway 61. It has a gas fireplace which generates a lot of heat and is easy to flip on. We’re always eager to relish the call of the coyotes (or wolves) and the startling brilliance of the night sky—especially the Quadrantid Meteor Shower on January 3.

And then there are the books.

What was that remark by Kierkegaard? “The more a person limits himself, the more resourceful he becomes.”

Operating on that principal, as usual, I limited myself to eight or nine books. That might seem like a lot, but you never know what mood you’re going to be in. Among my choices were a small early paperback of Milosz’s selected poems, a book about the Old Testament called People of the Book by A. N. Wilson, and a wide-ranging collection of essays about literature and art by Clive James called As of This Writing. Add to that a slim hardcover by a once-famous Columbia University prof, Sterling Lamprecht, called Freedom and Nature, an obscure (but handsome) paperback by Neal Atcherson called The Black Sea, and a fat hardcover collection of nature writings by Barry Lopez with a cool blue cover called Horizon. I was set. And if none of these books struck my fancy, too bad for me. I’ll have no choice but to read at least one of them, anyway. (Though in a pinch, the discard shop at the Two Harbors library is usually full of pleasant surprises!)  

But as we walked into the Wilbert Café in Cotton my mind was engaged in deeper issues: the burger or the pasty or the BLT? It’s a small but spacious room with pale green walls; several groups of people (with binoculars) are usually sitting in the booths along the window that looks out across the snow-packed parking lot and the four-lanes of highway 53, an expanse that’s uniformly flat and dreary. But the talk is lively. And during our recent visit Sparky Stennsaw, one of the moving forces behind the bog, happened to be eating there. As he was leaving, I heard him say to the group in the next booth, “Head for Two Harbors and on up the shore to Grand Marais. Look for that mountain bluebird. Look out beyond the harbor for long-tailed ducks.”

A man sitting alone a few tables to my right tried to catch my eye once or twice. I learned why a few minutes later, when he engaged another customer in conversation, telling the man about the ten acres he was developing near Cherry, and the two cabins he already had for rent. He gave the man a card.

Our own sightings in the bog were modest: a Canada jay near the visitors’ center, a boreal chickadee in the midst of a flock of black-capped chickadees at the Admiralty Road feeders, and a flock of pine grosbeaks at a platform feeder on Auggie’s Bogwalk  No hawks. No owls. Not even a siskin.

The bog had gotten a bit of snow, and the black spruce forest was stunning with the late afternoon sun coming in low and bright through the frigid air.

Rather than head back to Duluth and up the shore, we decided to cut cross-country through a chunk of the north woods we didn’t know well. I had never been to Forbes before. A few years ago we skied some sketchy trails near Brimson, a town better known for the New Years Eve bashes at Hugo’s, the local bar, which seems to be almost the only building in town. 

But the setting sun was behind us and the sky to the east was tending toward peach near the horizon. It had a scintillating dreamy quality that reminded me of childhood summers in Oklahoma. Quite a contrast to the street-light glare of the strip malls and body shops of the highway into Duluth.

It was still light when we arrived at the resort in Castle Danger. We drove to our cabin (#8) to find that it was already occupied! Hmm. I’d printed out the reservation. There was no mistaking the number. We stopped in at the office. “No, you’re in #11,” Jamie said, looking slightly confused. “The key’s on the kitchen counter.” End of problem.

There followed three or four days of reading, hiking, skiing, cooking, and staring out the window. Bright moon through the clouds, but very few stars. A few passing ore boats.

I won’t bore you with all the notes I took during our afternoon reading sessions, but one remark by Lamprecht is truly golden: “Despite the admirable character of the kindly Kant himself, the Kantian influence, in practice, has been as deleterious as in theory it has been incoherent.”

Bravo!

A second trenchant observation won’t hurt. “Nature is a lush welter of teleological profusion. Man faces the moral task of organizing as best he can what nature offers with total disregard of centrality.”

And while we're at it, how about this one? “Scorn of matter is a mark of arrogance of spirit. People of healthy spirituality never lose capacity for enjoyment of material goods.”  

We enjoyed our frozen walleye “from Canada,” breaded, fried, then baked, while listening to some poundy, youthful piano sonatas by Beethoven, then watched the gentle waves outside the window reflect a shimmering moon. 

It was a supermoon, in fact, and it also happened to be at perihelion. The last time than happened, in 1912, the extra gravitational pull set one or two icebergs loose, and the Titanic sank!

 

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

New Year: Nouvelle Vague


The phrase “nouvelle vague” might not mean much to most readers. Even the phrase New Wave might conjure images of the Talking Heads, the Ramones, and Blondie, rather than Truffaut, Rivette, and Rohmer. The film released last summer under the name Nouvelle Vague refers to the second group, introducing us to a number of very young French film critics, most of them writing for Cahier du Cinema, who turned to making their own films in the late 1950s. It focuses on the making of a single film, Breathless, which was released in 1960 and became a classic.

Breathless wasn’t the first Nouvelle Vague film, nor is it the best of the lot. Director Richard Linklater chose it, no doubt, because it’s among the breeziest and best-known. Of equal importance, it gave him the opportunity to place Jean-Luc Godard, the most eccentric but also the most revolutionary and absurd director in the cohort, front and center in the narrative.

The casting department did a wonderful job of finding actors who actually look like Francois Truffaut, Jean-Paul Bemondo, Agnes Varda, Jean Seaberg, Eric Rohmer, Roberto Rossellini, Jean-Pierre Melville, Juliet Greco, and Godard himself.

Each character is identified by caption on first appearance. I’d never heard of many of the minor characters. It doesn’t matter. The film is a lark, shot in French (of course), in black-and-white, and in an old-fashioned, squarish aspect ratio. It’s a lighthearted and cheeky romp that zips along even as the cast and crew grow tired of Godard’s cranky philosophizing and unorthodox shooting schedule, which is based entirely on his own whims and the desire to capture fleeting and unexpected moments of “authenticity.”

Among the masterworks of the genre, three films by Truffaut stand out: Jules and Jim, The 400 Blows, and Shoot the Piano Player. I saw them all at the Bell Museum in the early 70s, and was indelibly struck by their charm. Truffaut made other films worth seeing—Bed and Board, Stolen Kisses, Small Change, Day for Night—but never entirely recaptured the poetic intensity of that early work.

Eric Rohmer made a long string of films with far more conversation that action. The scripts for the first set were translated into English and published under the title Six Moral Tales. The names might be familiar: My Night at Maud's, Chloe in the Afternoon, Claire's Knee. Many more films followed, grouped in other ways. Never especially dramatic, they were always worth seeing. 

The two films by Agnes Varda that I can recall are The Gleaners and Me, a documentary about gleaning, and Chloe from 5 to 7, a collection of zany and romantic Parisian events in the best Nouvelle Vague manner, 

Godard started out with a more cerebral approach, and reached a peak of narrative film-making with Pierrot le Fou, perhaps. It’s an outrageous blend of Hollywood tropes and existential mystification. In time his distrust of scripts led him almost inevitably toward documentaries. 

The documentary of his that I remember best is In Praise of Love, which was released in 2002. You can watch it for free on YouTube here:

The themes are the same as his early "dramas"—the natural inability of the sexes to understand one another, the evils of capitalism, anti-Americanism, the rooted glories of classical European (i.e. French) culture, and the enduring expressive power of cinema cliché. The "story" is fragmentary at best, hence impossible to summarize. 

Much of the film is shot in Paris, in black and white, and we’re reminded repeatedly of the crude and romantic beauty of Breathless, The 400 Blows, and other films of the early Novelle Vague. The tones here are more saturated, however, like an Atget print, and the contrasts more dramatic, while at the same time the ebb and flow of motion and conversation is more comfortably elegiac. Old men look at famous paintings in an office, while discussing a film project based on the idea that middle age, unlike youth and old age, is a region of doubtful substance and character. Young and old women audition for the film, while the film’s producer scours Paris for a particular actress that he’d met before in Brittany. She works scrubbing out train cars at night.

Rehearsals involve episodes in the lives of Parsival and Eglantine. Charles Peguy and Simone Weil are quoted from time to time. Well into the film, the scene suddenly shifts to a vividly unreal digital color, and we find ourselves in a flashback involving American film agents who’ve just purchased the rights to a World War II Resistance story from the grandparents of our mysterious actress. (In Godard’s view, America has no history: it buys history from others.)

These elements never coalesce, but the images build in the mind, layer upon layer, like a Breton novel or a long Desnos poem, and the elements involved—courtly love, Catholicism, the authenticity of honest work, the corrupting power of capitalism, the beauty of Paris, and the ineluctable movement of time, which obliterates almost everything in its path—form an attractive ensemble, full of sadness and mist, history and romance, heroism and self-doubt.

On the night I saw the film, twenty-odd years ago, the auditorium at the Bell Museum was half full. That’s not bad! Young bohemians, many of them perhaps students from university French classes, sat beside old bohemians--film buffs who had seen Masculin-Feminine or Band of Outsiders at that same auditorium 30 years earlier. 

The film ends with the narrator ( Godard himself?) reflecting on all the people going down into a subway station, all the lives, the possibilities. Suddenly the film cracks and the screen goes white. Someone (young) in the audience yells “Credits!” but an older guy wearing tennis shoes and a zip-up hooded sweatshirt, who was just getting up to leave, says, “That’s the way the film ends. I saw it last night. That’s Godard ...”  

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Christmas with Marty Supreme


Afternoon matinees are almost as much of a Christmas tradition as sleigh-rides. Maybe more. On the day after Christmas, we decided to get out of the house before the bad weather arrived and see a film. There’d been a lot of hoopla surrounding the Christmas Day release of the latest Timothy Chalamet film, Marty Supreme, but we didn’t know anything about that. We’d seen the previews. The movie looked good.

And it was good. It has lots of razzle-dazzle, a relentless pace, an array of memorable minor characters, and a seemingly endless stream of plot twists. Enormous effort has been given to recreating the look and feel of New York City circa 1950. And Chalamet “nails” the central figure, a young shoe salesman (and ping-pong hustler), who thinks he can become world champion, if only he can drum up the funds to fly to London for the tournament.

The soundtrack is also good—and loud—though I wasn’t familiar with any of the songs.  Hits like "Everybody Wants to Rule the World" and “I Have the Touch” were prominently featured; I’d never heard of them. Perry Como and Fats Domino are also on the playlist. (Those two I’m familiar with.)

There are patches of violence in the film, and Marty himself steps on a lot of toes in his pursuit of personal glory. Well, so does Cary Grant in His Girl Friday. Come to think of it, what about Orson Welles in Citizen Kane? And how about the Jack Nicholson characters in a range of films from Five Easy Pieces to Chinatown and The Last Detail?

Marty has a good deal of youthful charm, and he seems to have a lot of friends at the local ping-pong parlor. In short, he isn’t a total jerk. Perhaps we can give him an added measure of sympathy second-hand by way of his sometime girlfriend, Rachel, played with anguished depth by Odessa Azion.

Ping-pong isn’t much of a spectator sport these days, but it was big in the early 1950s, and the tournament scenes are fun to watch. They’re given added political dimension due to the fact that the player Marty most wants to beat is Japanese. Marty also cracks a few Holocaust jokes along the way that are in very bad taste, but defends himself by arguing, “Hey. I’m Jewish. I’m Hitler’s worst enemy. And I’m going to be world champion.” 

But the political touches are minor, and the film has none of the “camp” flavor we find in works by the Coen Brothers. No, Marty Supreme is a vivid throwback to the days when a rollicking good romance/adventure story was all that an audience required.  

Thursday, December 18, 2025

Homage to Mercury


There’s moisture in the air again. I'm sure you've noticed. It's raining. It’s still dark at 6:45, but on a clear day, Jupiter is bright and high in the western sky, and the sun is brilliant on the ungainly heaps of snow. On a clear day, it also streams in above the piano on a lower plane than at any other time of the year, shoots across the room, and comes to rest on the light switch in the hall. 

Mercury is the god of quick changes, I think. They say you can see it just before sunrise in the southeast these days. I haven't made the effort, but I can see its influence everywhere.

It all began with a dreadful cold snap. During that bitter spell, we sat in the den by the warmth of the Jøtul stove, though we might just as well have been up on the North Shore. As usual in such situations, I had a stack of books by my side on the couch, including Petrarch’s Bucolicum Carmen, a biography of Erik Satie, a slim book about aesthetics by Bence Nanay (part of Oxford’s Very Short Introduction series), and a collection of essays by John MacQuarrie called Studies in Christian Existentialism.

Also near at hand was my journal, into which I occasionally jotted a few notes. For example:

“Nanay rejects both beauty and pleasure as foundations or standards for aesthetic judgment. In fact, he rejects judgment itself, preferring the term “analysis.” He quotes Susan Sontag, who characterizes aesthetic experiences as ‘detached, restful, contemplative, emotionally free, beyond indignation or approval.’ Evidently Sontag didn’t go to the movies much.”

The weather turned that night, and the next morning we went on a spectacular ski, following Tornado Alley south in bright sun through the woods, under Highway 55, across Bassett Creek, and around a loop through the white pines just north of Glenwood Avenue. We've walked these grounds many times, but had never skied them before. The freshness in the air was genuinely intoxicating. 

In order to make the most of it, I shoveled two feet of snow off the deck and oiled the track on the garage door, which was squeaking something terrible. (Alas! It still is.) Then I split a few pieces of the firewood stacked in the garage  into narrow strips for kindling, which will come in handy sooner or later. It won’t stay this warm for long.

The next morning the air was just the same, but the snow had crystalized during the thaw, and we left the skis at home during our morning ramble down alongside the creek.

Last night the rain arrived, slightly weird, but still atmospheric. 

This morning I was cleaning up some emails from Earth/Sky News and was cheered to learn that the universe, like me, is slowing down. The theory had been that it was not only expanding, but accelerating. New research offers a more reasonable view. In findings published November 6 in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, a team of astronomers argued that “the universe is in a phase of decelerated expansion.” 

Here's the gist: Early arguments for accelerated expansion were based on measurements of distance to faraway galaxies using Type 1a supernovas. These supernovas were regarded as the universe’s “standard candles,” but new research suggests that their brightness is related not only to distance, but also to the age of the stars that created them. Once you factor that information in, the data suggests that the universe expands and contracts like an accordion, rather than expanding and thinning out with relentless and ever-increasing speed.

I like that idea, and Empedocles would have liked it, too, I think.  




Saturday, December 13, 2025

Advent Meditations

The Pope in Nicaea.

The new Pope. A wonderful man by all accounts, and better yet, he’s from Chicago!

A few weeks ago he paid a visit to Nicaea, in Turkey, in honor of the 1,700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea. Bishops from many nations gathered there in 325—hundreds if not thousands of them—to deliberate a wide variety of issues. (Who paid for the lodging, the food, the enormous travel expenses? The Roman state.) 

At the top of the agenda was the question of whether Jesus existed before his birth in the manger in Bethlehem. The Arians said NO. At the council this position was ruled a heresy. It was deemed imperative to underscore the position (we can hardly call it a “fact”) that Jesus was of “one substance with the father” since the beginning of time, and perhaps well before.

To most people who were raised in Christian traditions the issue isn’t that important. For many, the most enduring result of the council was the introduction of a new prayer—the Nicaean Creed— alongside the somewhat shorter Apostle’s Creed. Most people find the Apostle’s Creed easy to remember. The Nicaean Creed? Not so much.  

At any rate, I never got the hang of it. Yet the rhetoric did sink in, to the extent that I began to wonder what a “substance” actually was, from the metaphysical point of view. I’m still wondering.

It’s a good question. But at Christmas time another question perhaps looms larger: Was Jesus ever really a baby? Would he be “of one substance” with the Father during that rudimentary phase in his earthly ontogeny?

It might seem like a frivolous question, if not a blasphemous one, but it cuts to the heart of the Christmas event. Aside from the lights, the music, the gatherings and the food, it seems to me that people are often moved by what I might call the rural simplicity and innocence of the event.

Let me suggest that Christmas is the most evocative time of the liturgical year, in part, because it's the least didactic. The gold, frankincense, and myrrh are dazzling and exotic; we don’t really care what they symbolize. The Star in the East could be any star, if it’s bright enough to attract our attention. (Stars are cool and mysterious, especially in the deep winter night.) We can forget, for the time being, the sometimes dour, gnomic, and prescriptive episodes in Jesus’s adulthood, and enjoy the aroma of balsam, the sweet buttery taste of a spritz, or the slightly edgy bite of a home-made pepper kaka, hot out of the oven. And also, perhaps, a vaguely delirious sense of cheer and hope.  

Family memories resurface. Some of them are “magical,” while others may remind us, painfully, of how naïve and self-centered we used to be—and probably still are. 

But there is no need to dwell on such things during these celebratory days of darkness and light. Better simply to relish the color, warmth, and togetherness that are pleasantly adrift on a mysterious something. Is it time? Or substance?

Sunday, December 7, 2025

Holiday Sale


On a Saturday in early December bright with new snow, what better thing to do than get together with friends, acquaintances, and a few utter strangers (friends of friends) at a low-key arts and shopping event? Hilary has been putting such gatherings together with a few friends for several years, and we hosted another one a few days ago featuring Hilary’s pottery, a friend’s dazzling runners, placemats, and other weavings, and even a few of my old books—plus a few newly printed miniature paperbacks on display as “stocking stuffers.”


Everything was priced to sell, and besides, any gift takes on added luster when it’s accompanied by the remark: “A friend of mine made this.” Not to mention the fact that the artworks themselves were first-rate. But matters of commerce aside, it’s fun to participate in an event where people come and go at odd intervals, bring a few friends, run into people they haven’t seen in a while or have perhaps heard about but have never met. They might eat a cookie or drink a cup of cider, watch the nuthatches and woodpeckers at the feeder out on the deck, or strike up a conversation at random as they examine the wares.

We sent out a few email invitations and so did our weaver-friend, Dave Taylor. We also invited a few young friends who live on our street. Three generations of Dave’s family showed up, two of Hilary’s brothers, a cousin or two, and numerous friends stretching back more than half a century.   

In the course of the day I found myself discussing the bison kill site at Itasca State Park, the Danish String Quartet, the comparative civic health of Chaska and Chanhassen, grizzly bear attacks at Glacier National Park, the novels of Thomas Bernhard, cross-country skiing at Wirth Park, the films of Mel Brooks (I somehow forgot to mention Young Frankenstein!), the merits of E-bikes, and sundry other things that escape me now. One friend was recovering from cataract surgery, another from knee surgery, 

Once the guests had gone home, as we sat around trying the sort the proceeds, Dave told me that he’d spoken at length with six people who owned looms, including one friend of ours who used to design them! (I’d forgotten that.) He’d sold nearly all of his pieces and gotten two commissions. It had been a good day. "Now I can buy more yarn."

Hilary has also “done well.” But I’m pretty sure they would both agree that the most precious result was the memory of friends and acquaintances chattering musically, getting to know one another on a bright December afternoon.     

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Re-Inventing the Renaissance


The title of this thick orange book—Inventing the Renaissance—intrigued me, and also the subtitle: The Myth of a Golden Age. I checked it out of the library the other day, surprised to imagine that at this late date historians still cling to idealized “periods,” and that other historians feel the need to let us all know that such categories are perhaps helpful as mnemonic devices but useless as categories of judgment or deeper understanding.

I somehow overlooked the fact that the purpose of a book title is to sell the book. Looking back at other books along similar lines that I’ve purchased in recent years—The Dawn of Everything: a New History of Humanity (2021); Time of the Magicians: Wittgenstein, Benjamin, Cassirer, Heidegger, and the Decade that Reinvented Philosophy (2018); Magnificent Rebels: The First Romantics and the Invention of the Self (2022)—I can see that I’ve been a sucker for such ambitious popularizations … but I don’t regret it.

And the same can be said for Inventing the Renaissance. It’s written by a scholar, but it’s not really a scholarly work, except by chance. It’s a chatty and insouciant look at the world of academic history, impressively larded with anecdotes about Renaissance figures—she knows the era well—but more seriously interested in the historiographic questions to which that vague and slippery “age” give rise.

The author, Ada Palmer, teaches at the University of Chicago. She also writes science fiction, which no doubt gives her additional insight into how a world or a social milieu takes on body through the accumulation of specific details which have been selected with a given end in mind. (Gee. Historians do that too.) She seems more interested here in stirring the hornet’s nest of controversy regarding the ways historians have assayed the Renaissance than in providing the reader with anything resembling an accurate picture of the era.

In short, this is not a book I’d recommend to someone who’s curious about Italian culture during the early modern period. You’d be better off reading Burkhardt’s The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy (1860), or Bernard Berenson’s Italian Painters of the Renaissance (originally published as independent essays between 1894 and 1907). If you’re interested in the science of era, why not try George Sarton’s Six Wings: Men of Science in the Renaissance (1957)?  

In fact, there is no easy way to come to grips with the Italian Renaissance, because it’s a welter of widely divergent personalities, jurisdictions, ideas, images, and events. Perhaps this explains, in part, why so many people are fascinated by the era. It’s rich in color and detail, but the political details need not concern us much. Whether Florence dominated Siena (50 miles away) or conquered Pisa (fifty miles away) has little bearing on the course of European history or the issues we face today.

Palmer narrows her field of view almost immediately to Florence itself, and proceeds to weigh various theories as to why such a focus might be justified. Might it be the banking industry that developed there? How about the vaguely “democratic” form of government?  Florentine art isn’t too shabby, either: Brunelleschi, Donatello, Masaccio, Botticelli, Leonardo, Luca della Robbia, Fra Angelico, Filippino Lippi. And how about the Neoplatonic philosophy of Ficino, Pico, and other lesser lights? It’s an impressive roll call for such a middling conurbation, though Florence’s population in 1450 is estimated to have been around 60,000, making it one of Europe’s larger cities.

And to top it all off, we have Machiavelli! Personally, I find his remarks about selling firewood more interested that his analyses of political life. Perhaps Palmer would approve!

Rooms could be filled with the books have been written about the art and culture of Renaissance Florence, of course. Palmer mentions quite a few that piqued her interest as a youth, many of them written in the early twentieth century by women who had married into lesser Italian nobility. (None of these works, she adds, are considered historiographically reputable these days.)

In any case, Palmer, tends to keep her attention more narrowly focused on such nagging (yet pertinent) questions as: What is a “humanist”? On this question opinions differ. Many definitions are vague, though most scholars find it convenient to agree that a Renaissance humanist differs markedly from nineteenth-century "secular humanist." Renaissance humanism wasn’t a religion; it was an educational niche. And the word humanista, back in the Renaissance, referred merely to whoever taught that bundle of subjects. Whatever a Renaissance humanist may have been, scholars are pretty well agreed that Petrarch was among the first of them, and probably the greatest.

Palmer informs us that there was an uproar within academic circles when Paul Oscar Kristeller included two humanists in his book Eight Philosophers of the Italian Renaissance (1965). Why? Because humanists might be good Latinists, but that doesn’t mean they contributed anything to philosophy. The moral and aesthetic “concepts” they fiddled with usually came straight from Cicero.

But such remarks drive me immediately to hunt out Kristeller's book on the shelf--no easy task. The introductory essay on Petrarch is a good one. To begin with, Kristeller emphasizes the personal nature of Petrarch's remarks, highlighting "the eminently personal, subjective, and as it were, individualistic character of all his writings. He talks about a variety of things and ideas, but essentially he always talks about himself,  about what he has read, and felt."

Yet Petrarch is also reaching for a formal and objective understanding of things, and this quest comes to a head, in Kristeller's view, in Petrarch's appraisal to the relative importance of will and intellect:

It is safer to cultivate a good and pious will than a capable and clear intellect. The object of the will is goodness, the object of the intellect, truth. It is better to will the good than to know the true ...

The issue of Renaissance humanism--its character and value--is but one of many that Palmer addresses in her lively book. It's an example of her willingness to cheerfully expose us to the behind-the-scenes disputes that divide university departments into cabals and camps, perhaps more so that actually engaging with the issues. She’s an academic herself, but her shoot-from-the-hip style is anything but academic. She’s having fun, airing both her many enthusiasms and her dirty laundry in public, and she doesn’t seem to mind bringing us along for the ride. 

The one rambunctious judgment for which it would be difficult to forgive Palmer is her description of the Italian historian and philosopher Benedetto Croce as a fascist. On the contrary, Croce was a beacon of liberalism throughout the Mussolini era, and everyone knows it. As the Italian historin Momigliano puts it:

"The liberty Croce spoke about was not just a philosophic notion. It was the liberty our fathers had won for themselves in the revolution and on the battlefields of the Risorgimento. Croce represented a constant reproach to Fascism, a constant reminder of what we had lost—freedom and honesty of thought, especially in matters of religion, of social questions and of foreign policy, tolerance, representative government, fair trials, respect for other nations and consequently self-respect."

Yet for the most part, subsequent generations of Italian scholars have resented the man ever since. They have not been inclined to reread him. 

Palmer does herself no credit by joining that bandwagon.