Wednesday, October 15, 2025

D.W. Buffa

The Dark Backward is among D.W. Buffa's more recent novels to be released. The story revolves around not just the strangest case William Darnell had ever tried;
it was the strangest case ever tried by any lawyer anywhere. It was impossible to explain; or rather, impossible to believe. The defendant, who did not speak English or any other language anyone could identify, had been found on an island no one knew existed, and charged with murder, rape and incest. He was given the name Adam, and Adam, as Darnell comes to learn, is more intelligent, quicker to learn, than anyone he has ever met. Adam, he learns to his astonishment, is a member of an ancient civilization that has remained undiscovered for more than three thousand years.
Buffa is also the author of ten legal thrillers involving the defense attorney Joseph Antonelli. He has also published a series that attempts to trace the movement of western thought from ancient Athens, in Helen; the end of the Roman Empire, in Julian's Laughter; the Renaissance, in The Autobiography of Niccolo Machiavelli; and America in the twentieth century, in Neumann's Last Concert.

Here is Buffa's take on "The Use And Abuse Of History" by Friedrich Nietzsche:
Everyone now understands that nothing in the past was what it should have been. No one in the past, none of those whose names are still remembered, measured up, fully measured up, to what we today understand are the standards all decent, right thinking people should meet. Washington and Jefferson, all the others who were once given credit for their commitment to the cause of freedom, either owned slaves themselves or did nothing to bring slavery to an end. History, especially American history, the history that was taught to children in schools and to everyone else in Fourth of July orations, was, if not a conscious lie, a failure to see things as they really were.

What everyone now understands, what everyone now thinks he knows, is not, surprising as it may seem, a new discovery, an original insightful of the present age; it is what Friedrich Nietzsche went to war against a hundred fifty years ago. In "The Use And Abuse Of History," the second of four essays known collectively as Thoughts Out Of Season, Nietzsche complained about “unreflective people who write as historians in the naive faith that, according to all popular opinions, their age is right, and that to write in conformity with this age amounts to exactly the same thing as being just.” It is worse than that; the historians want more than to criticize, they want to condemn. “Measuring past opinions and deeds according to the widespread opinions of the present moment is what these naive historians call ‘objectivity.’ It is there that they discover the cannons of all truth; their aim is to force the past to fit the mold of their fashionable triviality.” And as to the worth of these historians, the worth, we must add, of our own over-confident historians, he remarks, “every man’s vanity is directly proportional to his lack of intelligence.” They believe, mistakenly, that, in the present, they stand higher than those in the past, when, instead, they “merely come after them.”

The belief that the present is in all important respects superior to the past would once have been thought a mark of ignorance. The Greeks, the Romans, the Bible, spoke, if in different ways, of a golden age, a time in the past from which there had been, not just a decline, but a departure so great that, looking back, the loss was nothing less than tragic, and history, if it was worth reading at all, nothing more than failed attempts to recapture, reclaim, something of what had once been achieved. The Roman historian, Tacitus, writing in the second century about the sequence of Roman emperors from the death of Augustus to the death of the last of the Caesars, remarked that in the rebellions and civil wars that had taken place the actual course of events was more often than not “dictated by chance,” as if this were a fact too obvious to require any further explanation.

The belief in the superiority of the past, that what was older was better, that what was most ancient deserved not only respect but reverence, first began to be doubted in the seventeenth century when Thomas Hobbes, in a sentence that has become as famous, and perhaps even more famous, than anything written by Greek or Roman writers, described the earliest human beings as living no better than beasts, their lives, “nasty, brutish, solitary and short.” A century later, Rousseau, insisted that, instead of an unchanging nature, man was able to become what he wanted to be, that the human being was perfectible. The French Revolution, inspired by what Rousseau had written, seemed to prove that what he had written was true. Everyone, or almost everyone, now agreed that the rights of man, the equal right to life and liberty, were the basis of legitimate government and the only praiseworthy way of life. The perfectibility of man had been achieved.

But if that were true, Hegel argued at the beginning of the nineteenth century, the past had been nothing more than stages of development. The suffering, the wars, the conflicts and violence, the rise and fall of empires, were nothing but the means by which the human race could, finally, obtain knowledge of itself, and everyone could live in freedom, protected by a powerful but benevolent state. History had reached its long sought end, because, with Hegel, history now understood itself. Nietzsche, at the end of the nineteenth century, thought this nothing short of insanity. History had with Hegel become “a compendium of factual immorality,” in which the development of the world is seen “as occurring for the everyday utility of the modern human being.” Worse yet, with Darwin following Hegel, “the history of humanity is merely the continuation of the history of animals and plants.” Taught all this, modern man looks “with amazement on the miracle” of “the distance traveled,” and tells himself: “We have reached our goal; we are the goal; we are nature perfected. Overproud Europeans of the nineteenth century you are stark raving mad!”

Nietzsche was serious. It was madness to believe, as much of the world believed, and still believes, that the present is the desired culmination of everything that has happened in the past. “In truth, the belief that one is the late born offspring of prior ages is paralyzing and upsetting, but it must seem horrible and destructive when one day, in a brazen inversion, such a belief deifies this late born offspring as the true meaning and purpose of all previous historical events; when his knowing wretchedness is identified with the culmination of world history.”

What, precisely, is the reason - if there is a reason - for the “wretchedness” of the “late born offspring,” i.e. the contemporary man, what Nietzsche would later call “the last man?” He has become an abstraction, his instincts expelled by history, history as taught by Hegel and the historians who came after him, history that “takes the great drives of the masses to be what is important and paramount,” and views all great men “merely as their clearest expression, as if they were bubbles that become visible on the surface of the flood.” The result is that everyone disguises himself behind a mask of the cultivated man, “the scholar, the poet, the statesman,” all of them together “anxiously disguised universal human beings.” There is reason to doubt whether they are human beings at all, or only “merely machines who think, write, and speak,” spectators with an “acquired knowledge that has no outward effect, of learning that fails to become life.” Everyone exists in a state of universal haste and a “universal addiction to comfort.” We moderns “have nothing that we have drawn from ourselves alone; we become something worthy of attention - namely, walking encyclopedias….”

The remedy, the way to escape the “paralyzing education spell cast upon the present age,” is to study the history, and write the history, of “great men,” what Nietzsche calls “monumental history.” Unlike antiquarian history, which finds everything, even the smallest details, interesting about the past; or critical history, which condemns everything that does not meet the standards, however misinformed, of the present; monumental history is concerned with what is great: the life, the “beautiful life,” of those fortunate few who did not believe that simply staying alive was the most important thing. This is the kind of history that should be read by those who need teachers and examples that cannot be found among their contemporaries or in the present age. Nietzsche himself can be explained - he explains himself - as having found what he needed in what had been done, and what had been written, in the past, the very distant past: “it is only to the extent that I am a student of more ancient times - above all, of ancient Greece - that I, as child of our times have had such unfashionable experiences.”

The study of ancient times, the study of Greek history and Greek philosophy, makes it possible - and is perhaps the only thing that can do this - to break with the present and all its false assumptions. Instead of the last man who believes that the highest level of civilization is physical comfort and something to entertain him in the arid emptiness of his meaningless existence - the last man who, Nietzsche insists, is contemptible precisely because he does not know how contemptible he has become - the example of men and women who did great things in the past will cause at least a few others to attempt something great themselves. “With a hundred such unmodernly educated human beings - that is, human beings who have matured and grown accustomed to the heroic - the entire noisy sham cultivation of this age could now be silenced once and for all. -” It has happened before, a rebirth of ancient learning, and with it, a return to the ancient understanding of what human excellence really means. “Suppose someone believed that no more than one hundred productive human beings, educated and working in the same spirit, would be needed to put an end to the cultivatedness that has just now become fashionable in Germany; would he not be strengthened by the recognition that the culture of the Renaissance was borne on the shoulders of just such a band of one hundred men?”

The serious study of history, the history of what great men have done, proves for Nietzsche that men can do great things again. History proves that history has not come to an end; history proves Hegel wrong. But if history does not end with Hegel, neither does it end with Darwin. For Hegel, and the historians who followed him, everything is derived from what went before and becomes, in its turn, the basis for everything that comes after; everything in the past is provisional. Marx, following Hegel, agreed that history comes to an end. Man becomes what he called the ‘species’ animal, able to do, and to be, everything - a hunter for a fisherman in the afternoon, a literary critic in the evening. This is Nietzsche’s last man, the human being with no aspirations to anything higher than himself, content with what he is, convinced that there is nothing beyond himself. Hegel and Marx trace human history from the earliest human beings, unprotected in a state of nature, to the civilization of the industrial age. Darwin traced the development of the human being from its origin as a species. But anyone who takes Darwin seriously has to admit that by its own logic evolution does not stop with the human being. There has to be something higher than the human being, something beyond the last man, something Nietzsche called the “superman.” The last man is not last after all; he is only a brief transition, whose only importance is as the material from which the superman, who has both the knowledge and the will, will create something better.

This was Nietzsche’s hope, a hope based on what from his unsurpassed understanding of Greek philosophy he believed human beings could become again, a hope that vanished when he, and the world around him, descended into madness. The last man now dreams of an even more comfortable existence, spared from all effort by the thoughtless guidance of an artificial intelligence that does not, because it cannot, recognize either human excellence or the mystery of human existence. The need for monumental history has never been more urgent.
Visit D.W. Buffa's website.

Buffa's previous third reading essays: The Great Gatsby; Brave New World; Lord Jim; Death in the Afternoon; Parade's End; The Idiot; The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire; The Scarlet Letter; Justine; Patriotic GoreAnna Karenina; The Charterhouse of Parma; Emile; War and Peace; The Sorrows of Young Werther; Bread and Wine; “The Crisis of the Mind” and A Man Without Qualities; Eugene Onegin; The Collected Works of Thomas Babington Macaulay; The Europeans; The House of Mirth and The Writing of Fiction; Doctor Faustus; the reading list of John F. Kennedy; Jorge Luis Borges; History of the Peloponnesian War; Mansfield Park; To Each His Own; A Passage To India; Seven Pillars of Wisdom; The Letters of T.E. Lawrence; All The King’s Men; The Roman History of Ammianus Marcellinus; Naguib Mahfouz’s novels of ancient Egypt; Main Street; Theodore H. White's The Making of the President series, part I; Theodore H. White's The Making of the President series, part II; Thus Spoke Zarathustra; Fiction's Failure; Hermann Hesse's Demian; Frederick Douglass, Slavery, and The Fourth of July; Caesar’s Ghost; The American Constitution; A Tale of Two Cities; The Leopard; Madame Bovary; The Sheltering Sky; Tocqueville’s America and Ours; American Statesmen; Ancient and Modern Writers Reconsidered; Père Goriot; Edmund Burke; The Novels of W.H. Hudson; America Revised; The City And Man.

--Marshal Zeringue

Sunday, October 12, 2025

Kathleen S. Allen

Kathleen S. Allen is a young adult writer of gothic horror, historical, fantasy, and speculative fiction. She has published poems, short stories, novellas, and novels. She prefers dark to light, salty to sweet, and tea to coffee. She is a fan of K-Pop, classic rock, and British detective shows. She loves gray, foggy, cool, rainy days; unfortunately she lives in Los Angeles which is usually sunny and warm.

Allen's new novel is The Resurrectionist.

Recently I asked the author about what she was reading. Allen's reply:
I am currently reading Katabasis by R.F. Kuang. I’ve read all her books so she’s an automatic buy for me. I started with Babel and was intrigued by the history she wove into her story. I then read the three books in The Poppy War series, again the history intrigued me.

I’m a fan of historical fiction and I especially like Asian history/mythology so picking up Katabasis was an easy decision for me. She uses quite a lot of historical references in Katabasis, which I enjoy. Her writing can be dense at times but it’s worth it to plough through it. As a former professor I can appreciate the academic atmosphere she weaves into her stories. Do I recommend this book? I do!
Visit Kathleen S. Allen's website.

The Page 69 Test: The Resurrectionist.

My Book, The Movie: The Resurrectionist.

--Marshal Zeringue

Thursday, October 9, 2025

Randee Dawn

Randee Dawn is a Brooklyn-based author and journalist who writes speculative fiction at night and entertainment and lifestyle stories during the day for publications like the New York Times, NBCNews.com, Variety, The Los Angeles Times, and Emmy Magazine. Her debut novel, Tune in Tomorrow, was published by Solaris. Publishers Weekly said of Tune in Tomorrow: "Dawn balances over-the-top drama and comedy with genuine intrigue to create a fun story with plenty of heart." Lightspeed praised it as "an excellent read if you're looking for something to make you smile... well worth your time."

Dawn's new novel is Leave No Trace.

Recently I asked the author about what she was reading. Dawn's reply:
I have several stacks or shelves of to-be-read material, all of which has good intentions behind it – but much of which gathers dust. I am often attracted by the latest shiny new acquisition, but I also derive great pleasure from finally getting to that thing I've been staring at longingly for so long. One of these days, N.K. Jemisin and your Broken Earth trilogy, one of these days!

All of which means there's rarely rhyme or reason to what I pick up – but here are the last several titles I've torn (not literally! Don't tear books!) through.

The Essential Horror of Joe R. Lansdale

This legend of the horror genre had mostly passed me by until I attended a panel at ArmadilloCon (in Austin, TX) in which friends, fans and Lansdale's literary son talked about what made his stories so visceral, scary, and often funny. (Among many other things, Lansdale is the author of the short story "Bubba Ho Tep," about an old man who may just be Elvis battling a mummy.) The book is not for the squeamish; Lansdale goes there and a few steps beyond in ways that made me chuckle darkly, but might not be dinner reading for others. I picked up this book right after the panel in the dealer's room of the convention, and finished it up just a few weeks later, delighted at having found a new (to me) author whose work I wanted to chase down more of.

Leaving Time by Jodi Picoult

Picoult is important, in that she gets big ideas and moral quandaries into mass-market novels that are widely read, and I applaud her for that. But this one, oh, man, this one … in essence, it's a tale of elephant behavior, grieving rituals and mother-child bonding. Oh, and there's also a human daughter looking for the mother she believes abandoned her, a disenchanted former cop, a failed psychic (or is she) and a massive twist at the end you won't see coming unless you think throughout the whole thing, this teenage daughter does not behave like a 13 year old at all. Oh, and elephants. Did I mention the elephants? So many elephants. Maybe too many elephants. I'm fairly sure I picked this one up for free from a giveaway pile, but I don't recall where.

The Mind Worms by Nicholas Kaufmann

Kaufmann's a friend, so I picked this up from him when he read at a reading series I run in New York City called Brooklyn Books & Booze. This is the third in his trilogy of Dr. Laura Powell books (all of which are worth reading), and all of which involve in some form or the other corporations infecting locals with their toxins. People die in horrible ways, but it's also a mystery – how will the curious coroner Dr. Powell (who also has the worst luck in the world) figure out this particular disaster?

Tender is the Flesh by Agustina Bazterrica

When my friend Lynda tells me "this one's a rough ride" in a bookstore as we pass a book, I know it's the one for me. In a futuristic world where animals develop a transmissible virus that prevents them being eaten, it's vegetarian/vegan heaven! Except, it's not: Human desire for flesh means cannibalism is not only fashionable, it's trendy. I'd like to think the world where we decide that eating people (and raising them in herds, as well as hunting and experimenting on them) is more sensible than just becoming vegans is too awfully fanciful to happen, but I live in this world, right now, where people are now deciding that established, verifiable, effective science experiments now need to be tried all over again, like vaccines and fluoride in the water and pasteurization. A rough ride, indeed.

If Wishes Were Retail by Auston Habershaw

A simple premise – what if a genii (or djinn) set up a shop in a mall to dispense wishes (at a reasonable price)? It's much harder than you'd think to get people what they wish, as it turns out, even when he has a helper in 17-year-old Alex, who has one wish of her own: To get out of town and go to college. Auston, who also read with us at Brooklyn Books & Booze, was kind enough to hand me an advanced reading copy of this when we chatted at WorldCon in Seattle in 2025, and I love finding a truly funny author and premise. Not a lot of books make me laugh aloud (even if I enjoy them) and this one has at least one gag that did exactly that.
Visit Randee Dawn's website.

The Page 69 Test: Tune in Tomorrow.

Q&A with Randee Dawn.

My Book, The Movie: Tune in Tomorrow.

--Marshal Zeringue

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Tony Wirt

Tony Wirt was born in Lake Mills, IA, and got his first taste of publication in first grade, when his essay on Airplane II: The Sequel appeared in the Lake Mills Elementary School’s Creative Courier.

He's a graduate of the University of Iowa and spent nine years doing media relations in the Hawkeye Athletic Department. Wirt has also been a sportswriter, movie ticket taker and Dairy Queen ice cream slinger who can still do the little curly thing on top of a soft serve cone.

He currently lives in Rochester, MN, with his wife and two daughters.

Wirt's new novel is Silent Creek.

Recently I asked the author about what he was reading. Wirt's reply:
I’m currently reading It’s the End of the World as We Know It: New Tales of Stephen King’s The Stand. Being led back into that world by one of the most impressive group of authors that’s ever been assembled has been amazing.

I’m only about halfway through, but the standouts so far have been Gabino Iglesias’s "Hope Boat" and "In a Pig’s Eye" by Joe R. Lansdale. Knowing that heavyweights like S.A. Cosby, Cynthia Pelayo and Tananarive Due are still coming…I cannot wait to read on.
Visit Tony Wirt's website.

The Page 69 Test: Pike Island.

Q&A with Tony Wirt.

My Book, The Movie: Pike Island.

My Book, The Movie: Silent Creek.

The Page 69 Test: Silent Creek.

--Marshal Zeringue

Saturday, October 4, 2025

Skyla Arndt

Skyla Arndt has always loved the creepy, crawly side of life. When she was younger, she thought that love might translate to hunting Bigfoot, but luckily for him, writing proved easier. These days, you can catch her writing stories by candlelight, splurging on candles for her office, and continuing to keep an eye out for Bigfoot (because you never know). She lives with her husband and three cats by the perpetually frozen Great Lakes.

Arndt's new novel is House of Hearts.

Recently I asked the author about what she was reading. Her reply:
Body Count by Codie Crowley (forthcoming May 2026)

I was lucky enough to snag a copy of Codie Crowley’s wonderfully quirky, YA sapphic slasher. Body Count expertly balances serious themes (sexual autonomy, consent, and domestic violence) with an atmospheric, bubblegum horror backdrop. Our pink-haired protagonist, Sundae Valentine, is on the run from a wish-granting monster she met several years ago at the Jersey Shore. For the longest time, she thought she’d finally outrun him—but when her school chooses to return to the shore for prom weekend, she knows she’s in trouble. If Sundae doesn’t find a way to banish this demon, she’ll lose more than her crown this prom season. She’ll lose her life. An absolute must read!
Visit Skyla Arndt's website.

--Marshal Zeringue

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Suzanne Redfearn

Suzanne Redfearn is the #1 Amazon and USA Today bestselling author of eight novels: Call of the Camino, Two Good Men, Where Butterflies Wander, Moment In Time, Hadley & Grace, In an Instant, No Ordinary Life, and Hush Little Baby. Her books have been translated into twenty-seven languages and have been recognized by RT Reviews, Target Recommends, Goodreads, Publisher’s Marketplace, and Kirkus Reviews. She has been awarded Best New Fiction from Best Book Awards and has been a Goodreads Choice Awards Finalist.

Born and raised on the east coast, Redfearn moved to California when she was fifteen. Currently, she lives in Laguna Beach with her husband where they own Lumberyard Restaurant. In addition to being an author, Redfearn is an architect specializing in residential and commercial design. When not writing, she enjoys doing anything and everything with her family—skiing, golf, tennis, pickleball, hiking, board games, and watching reality TV. She is an avid baseball fan. Her team is the Angels.

Recently I asked Redfearn about what she was reading. The author's reply:
I have read some amazing books lately. My favorite was a surprise since I don’t normally read fantasy novels. But The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune was my book club’s selection a couple of months ago, and it was incredibly moving and thought provoking. I have the sequel, Somewhere Beyond the Sea, downloaded, and I can’t wait to rejoin the amazing cast of characters from the first novel.

The second story that I absolutely tore through is from one of my favorite authors, Fredrik Backman. I think his latest, My Friends, might be his best book since A Man Called Ove. I don’t know if anyone does a better job developing characters or working humor into storylines of such depth and meaning. I walked away from the story richer for the experience of having read it, which is the mark of a truly great book.
Visit Suzanne Redfearn's website, and follow her on FacebookInstagram, and Threads.

Coffee with a Canine: Suzanne Redfearn and Cooper.

My Book, The Movie: Hush Little Baby.

The Page 69 Test: Hush Little Baby.

The Page 69 Test: No Ordinary Life.

Writers Read: Suzanne Redfearn (February 2016).

My Book, The Movie: No Ordinary Life.

My Book, The Movie: In an Instant.

The Page 69 Test: In an Instant.

Q&A with Suzanne Redfearn.

My Book, The Movie: Hadley and Grace.

The Page 69 Test: Hadley & Grace.

Writers Read: Suzanne Redfearn (March 2022).

The Page 69 Test: Moment in Time.

My Book, The Movie: Moment in Time.

Writers Read: Suzanne Redfearn (February 2024).

Writers Read: S. E. Redfearn (October 2024).

The Page 69 Test: Two Good Men.

--Marshal Zeringue

Saturday, September 27, 2025

James Benn

James R. Benn is the author of the Billy Boyle World War II series, historical mysteries set within the Allied High Command during the Second World War. The series began with Billy Boyle, which takes place in England and Norway in 1942.

Benn's new novel, A Bitter Wind, is the twentieth installment of the Billy Boyle series.

Recently I asked the author about what he was reading. Benn's reply:
Re-reading, actually. More than three decades ago I read Lest Innocent Blood Be Shed: The Story of the Village of Le Chambon and How Goodness Happened There by Philip P. Hallie. It tells the true story of a French village during the Second World War, and how the residents came together to save thousands of Jews from certain death at the hands of the Nazis. I never forgot that story and have recommended the book many times. But it was only recently that I decided to look into Le Chambon as a setting for a future Billy Boyle WWII mystery novel, so a re-read is in order. I’m excited about this possibility and hope I can do it justice.

The basic facts are that in one small French town in Nazi-occupied France, some 4,000 Jews were taken in and sheltered by a group of Huguenot Christians, who understood from their own history the threat of persecution. From 1940 until Liberation in 1944, the people of Le Chambon-sur-Lignon joined in what can be called a conspiracy of goodness. Risking all, the village literally doubled itself, giving sanctuary to some three or four thousand people who were escaping from the Vichy authorities and the Nazi regime. They organized themselves to forge identification and ration cards and to help refugees escape into neutral Switzerland.

The author, a professor of philosophy, was a decorated Army veteran of WWII. After years of research into the Holocaust and the roots of human and institutional cruelty, he had been overcome with a deep personal despair that seemed to exclude the possibility that goodness and right could still exist.

At the height of his depression, Hallie stumbled across the miracle of Le Chambon. Lest Innocent Blood Be Shed is a deep and moving exploration of the renewal of spirit and optimism that Hallie found in the bravery of this small village of French Hugenots who had the courage and moral certainty to face evil and to resist it.
Learn more about the Billy Boyle WWII Mystery Series at James R. Benn's website.

The Page 99 Test: The First Wave.

The Page 69 Test: Evil for Evil.

The Page 69 Test: Rag and Bone.

My Book, The Movie: Death's Door.

The Page 69 Test: The White Ghost.

The Page 69 Test: Blue Madonna.

Writers Read: James R. Benn (September 2016).

Q&A with James R. Benn.

The Page 69 Test: Proud Sorrows.

The Page 69 Test: The Phantom Patrol.

Writers Read: James R. Benn (September 2024).

The Page 69 Test: A Bitter Wind.

--Marshal Zeringue

Friday, September 26, 2025

D.W. Buffa

The Dark Backward is among D.W. Buffa's more recent novels to be released. The story revolves around not just the strangest case William Darnell had ever tried;
it was the strangest case ever tried by any lawyer anywhere. It was impossible to explain; or rather, impossible to believe. The defendant, who did not speak English or any other language anyone could identify, had been found on an island no one knew existed, and charged with murder, rape and incest. He was given the name Adam, and Adam, as Darnell comes to learn, is more intelligent, quicker to learn, than anyone he has ever met. Adam, he learns to his astonishment, is a member of an ancient civilization that has remained undiscovered for more than three thousand years.
Buffa is also the author of ten legal thrillers involving the defense attorney Joseph Antonelli. He has also published a series that attempts to trace the movement of western thought from ancient Athens, in Helen; the end of the Roman Empire, in Julian's Laughter; the Renaissance, in The Autobiography of Niccolo Machiavelli; and America in the twentieth century, in Neumann's Last Concert.

Here is Buffa's take on Leo Strauss's The City And Man:
The question that used to be put with monotonous regularity to authors was: what book would you choose to have with you if you were marooned on a desert island. One author, a well- known woman who was not immodest about her own literary achievements, insisted that instead of something someone else had written, she would choose to have a paper and pen and write for herself what she would then get to read. With far greater cause for modesty, but with perhaps a better understanding of what life on a desert island really meant, I replied when asked: “Any book with the title: How to Build a Boat.”

This was not fair of me. I should have have taken that question more seriously, imagined that I was never going to get off the island, and that the only book I had to read would have to be one worth reading over and over again. It is a choice that requires more thought than might at first be expected. War and Peace, for example, may well be the greatest novel ever written, but how many times could you read it before the words began to lose all meaning. Plutarch’s Lives, the comparison of famous Greeks and Romans, would allow you to debate with yourself which was the greater: Cicero or Demosthenes, Caesar or Alcibiades, but that would be to devote your life to the outlines of what other people did or tried to do. And how you read it, what you gained from it, would depend on what you had read before.

This is the issue that goes unnoticed. Which one book would you wish to be your only companion depends on what you had you read before, how you had spent your life, or that part of it you had devoted to reading. Did you read to be entertained; reading, for example, mysteries in which the main attraction was the feeling of suspense as you were led through the search for the person or persons responsible for the crime that had been committed until, at the end, you discovered, and were surprised to discover, who the guilty party really was? But, having discovered that, would you really want to read it a second time, much less read it over and over again until your last, dying day? If, on the other hand, you had read to learn, read to study the serious things that attempt to discover what it means to be a human being; if you had studied with close attention the works of Plato and Aristotle and Thucydides; if, that is to say, you had spent years reading the great books that constitute the beginning, and the basis, of Western thought, read them so often that at the bare mention of a phrase in one of their classic works, you remembered, if not the exact words, the main thought expressed on the page, the book you would want, the book you would need, is a book few people have even heard of: The City And Man, written in l962 by Leo Strauss.

Two sentences, the first paragraph of the Introduction, tell you immediately that this is unlike anything you have ever read:

“It is not self-forgetting and pain-loving antiquarianism nor self-forgetting and intoxicating romanticism which induces us to turn with passionate interest, with unqualified willingness to learn, toward the political thought of classical antiquity. We are impelled to do so by the crisis of our time, the crisis of the West.”

The first time I read The City And Man I was a graduate student at the University of Chicago where I had gone to study under Leo Strauss. At the beginning of my first year, enrolled in his seminar on Plato’s Gorgias, I told him I did not think I was getting everything from my reading that I thought I should. He looked at me, nodded and said he would have to think about it. And he did. The next week, in the middle of his commentary on some passage in the dialogue, he suddenly stopped, looked straight at me in the crowd of seventy or more students in a room that could comfortably seat half that number, and said: “So, you see, you have to read, not just what is written, but what isn’t written,” and then immediately went back to what he had been saying to the class.

Little though I knew it, that remark went to the heart of what Leo Strauss discovered about the way some of the greatest writers wrote. In Persecution And The Art of Writing, he explained that because people tend to remember mainly the beginning and the end of a speech or discourse, someone who wants to speak or write of important but dangerous things, might mention, that is to say hide, them somewhere in the forgettable middle. Is that the reason why Plato is in the middle of The City and Man? The first chapter is “On Aristotle’s Politics,’ the second is “On Plato’s Republic,” the third is “On Thucydides’ War Of The Peloponnesians And The Athenians.” Aristotle came after Plato. Did Leo Strauss put Plato in the middle to remind us that Plato is central to everything Strauss thought important about ancient thought?

Whatever the reason, Strauss begins with Aristotle, and Aristotle makes very clear how different the ancient understanding is from our own.

“For Aristotle, political philosophy is primarily and ultimately the quest for that political order which is best according to nature everywhere and, we may add, always.” For Aristotle, “the best life is the life devoted to understanding or contemplation as distinguished from the practical or political life.”

Plato and Aristotle both agree on this. There is a natural inequality among human beings, an inequality that pervades all of nature. There are beings of different rank, and each of us is made up of different, and unequal, parts. “In man the soul is by nature the ruler of the body and the mind is the ruling part of the soul. It is on the basis of this that thoughtful men are said to be the rulers of the thoughtless ones. It is obvious that an equalitarianism which appeals from the inequality regarding the mind to the equality regarding breathing and digestion does not meet the issue.” But this equality is precisely what modern democracy insists upon. For Plato and Aristotle, for ancient political philosophy altogether, the question was primarily and ultimately the political order that was best according to nature always and everywhere. The city - what today we would call, not the state or society, but the country - exists for the practice of virtue, primarily moral virtue; in other words, it exists for the sake of human excellence. And that, in turn, requires liberal education.

No one sees things this way anymore. Instead of democracy understood as the rule of the poor, who, because they lack leisure, meant rule of the uneducated, and therefore, Aristotle was certain, opposition to philosophy, modern democracy “presupposes a fundamental harmony between philosophy and the people, a harmony brought about by universal enlightenment, or by philosophy (science) relieving man’s estate through inventions and discoveries recognizable as salutary by all, or by both means.” The “natural harmony between the whole and the human mind” was replaced by Bacon and Hobbes, Machiavelli and Locke, with a new understanding in which human passion, especially the desire for life, decided what was important; human reason, in the form of modern science, became the means by which to accomplish what the passions required. One man might be more intelligent than another, but everyone was equal in their right to live. Preservation, not human excellence, became the dominant consideration.

Plato and Aristotle thought that because some were better educated and more capable than others to rule with an eye to the common good rather than to their own individual interests, aristocracy, the rule of the best, was far superior to a democracy in which everyone, every citizen, had an equal voice. Athens, after all, was a democracy, and Athens had put Socrates on trial and sentenced him to death because he did not believe what everyone in Athens was expected to believe. But Athens also fought a war with Sparta, a war that lasted twenty-seven years, a war that, among other things, raised the question whether a democracy that was also an empire could conduct a war, the greatest war there had ever been, to a successful conclusion. Thucydides, the Athenian who wrote the history of that war, a history meant to be a possession for all time, was able to write it because, like Plato and Aristotle, he understood that human nature, like nature altogether, never changes and, because of that, what happened in that war held a lesson for anyone who would take the time to read it with the care it deserved.

The central episode, the most important event, in the Peloponnesian war was the Sicilian expedition, the attempt to expand the Athenian empire beyond anything anyone had imagined. Pericles had warned that the one thing that could cost Athens the war was an attempt to increase the size of the empire before the war had ended, but Pericles had died. His nephew, Alcibiades, driven by dreams of glory, insisted that Athens had either to expand or risk losing what it had acquired. The Athenians loved Alcibiades, but feared he might become a tyrant. They insisted that the cautious and conservative Nicias, who had advised against the expedition, be in joint command. Before the expedition sailed, the Hermes statues, religious icons that were placed in front of most of Athens’ homes, were destroyed and Alcibiades was accused of having profaned the sacred mysteries. He was allowed to sail with the expedition, but was then called back to stand trial. Because trial meant certain death, Alcibiades went to Sparta where he thought to help defeat Athens, and then to Persia where he convinced the King to play Athens and Sparta off against each other. Convincing the Athenians that he could get the Persian King to take their side, they called him back to Athens where he gave them what Thucydides thought the best government they had ever had.

The Sicilian expedition ended in disaster. The Athenian fleet was destroyed and nearly all the Athenian soldiers were killed. Pericles’ warning proved tragically correct. The attempt to expand the empire had ended in catastrophe. Pericles was a better, a more far-sighted, statesman than the brash adventurer Alcibiades could ever have been. Or was he? Thomas Hobbes, who translated Thucydides’ history called him “the most politic historiographer that ever writ.” Hobbes explained that “the narrative doth secretly instruct the reader.” And as to what that means, he refers to an ancient author of a Roman history: “Marcellinus saith, he was obscure on purpose; that the common people might not understand him. And not unlikely; for a wise man should not write (though in words understood by all men) but wise men only should be able to commend him.”

Leo Strauss, one of those wise men able to commend, that is, able to grasp the real intention of what Thucydides wrote, could see beneath the surface of things. Pericles had warned that the only way Athens could lose the war was if Athens attempted to expand its empire. But, as Strauss, who had once instructed a young graduate student that it is important to read not only what is written, but what is not written, remarks: “Thucydides never says that Pericles’s views were always sound.” Thucydides, read with care, leaves no doubt that, had Alcibiades been left in charge, the Sicilian expedition would have been victorious.

The City And Man, read with care, reveals how the world was once understood, and how the world can be understood again. Removing the barriers created by the modern attempt to impose an artificial manmade order on the world, the attempt to conquer nature by modern science, we can begin to grasp what Leo Strauss meant when he wrote that man is the “microcosm” of the world and that “there is a natural harmony between the whole and the human mind.” Philosophy, as understood by Plato and Aristotle and Thucydides, is not the acquisition, but the quest, for wisdom, a search that never ends, but a search that with each reading of The City And Man seems to get just a little bit closer to the always elusive truth.

Leo Strauss taught me how to read, but he also taught me how to write. Perhaps more importantly, he gave me something to write about. I wrote about him, or rather, what he might have been like if, instead of being born in Germany where he studied philosophy mathematics and natural science before leaving that country in 1932, he had been born in the United States, and become a judge, a judge who had studied classics in school. Leopold Rifkin is one of the central characters in The Defense. There is a scene, early in the novel, in which Rifkin engages in a brief dialogue with Joseph Antonelli, the defense attorney. Rifkin gets Antonelli to agree to the utterly improbable conclusion that if he knows one of his clients is guilty, the best thing he can do for him is make sure he is convicted so he can receive the correction he needs. Far from original, the dialogue follows closely part of a dialogue in Plato’s Gorgias. It is a permissible form of plagiarism, especially when the author had the great good fortune to have known, and studied under, the wise and generous Leo Strauss.
Visit D.W. Buffa's website.

Buffa's previous third reading essays: The Great Gatsby; Brave New World; Lord Jim; Death in the Afternoon; Parade's End; The Idiot; The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire; The Scarlet Letter; Justine; Patriotic GoreAnna Karenina; The Charterhouse of Parma; Emile; War and Peace; The Sorrows of Young Werther; Bread and Wine; “The Crisis of the Mind” and A Man Without Qualities; Eugene Onegin; The Collected Works of Thomas Babington Macaulay; The Europeans; The House of Mirth and The Writing of Fiction; Doctor Faustus; the reading list of John F. Kennedy; Jorge Luis Borges; History of the Peloponnesian War; Mansfield Park; To Each His Own; A Passage To India; Seven Pillars of Wisdom; The Letters of T.E. Lawrence; All The King’s Men; The Roman History of Ammianus Marcellinus; Naguib Mahfouz’s novels of ancient Egypt; Main Street; Theodore H. White's The Making of the President series, part I; Theodore H. White's The Making of the President series, part II; Thus Spoke Zarathustra; Fiction's Failure; Hermann Hesse's Demian; Frederick Douglass, Slavery, and The Fourth of July; Caesar’s Ghost; The American Constitution; A Tale of Two Cities; The Leopard; Madame Bovary; The Sheltering Sky; Tocqueville’s America and Ours; American Statesmen; Ancient and Modern Writers Reconsidered; Père Goriot; Edmund Burke; The Novels of W.H. Hudson; America Revised.

--Marshal Zeringue

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Francesca Catlow

Francesca Catlow writes bestselling fiction filled with passionate love stories that feature flawed, and sometimes broken, characters as they face a crossroads in their life. She often explores heartbreaking themes while also whisking readers off to beautiful locations.

Catlow loves to travel. Born and raised in the heart of Suffolk, England, she has travelled extensively in Europe with her French husband and, more recently, their two children. In 2024 she relocated to France where she spends her days dreaming up stories and her evenings sitting in her garden relaxing with her family.

In 2023 Catlow was a finalist for the prestigious Kindle Storyteller Award, and was nominated for an Innovation Award for her work with libraries in Suffolk.

Her new novel is Under a Greek Sky.

Recently I asked the author about what she was reading. Catlow's reply:
Currently I’m reading In Another Life by Imogen Clark. This book was chosen by me to be in September’s book box for Gaia’s Library. In Another Life is a fabulous book to launch the project as it's packed with family struggles and tons of mystery to keep everyone hooked. I want to celebrate female authors in women's fiction and romance and so created Gaia's Library. Each month subscribers are sent a box of goodies that compliment that month's book and I interview the author in a podcast at the end of the month with readers’ questions! I'm a big advocate for women's stories and I'd highly recommend picking up any of Imogen's books.
Visit Francesca Catlow's website.

--Marshal Zeringue

Thursday, September 18, 2025

Sonora Reyes

Born and raised in Arizona, Sonora Reyes is the award-winning and bestselling author of The Lesbiana's Guide to Catholic School, The Luis Ortega Survival Club, The Broposal, and The Golden Boy's Guide to Bipolar. They also have contributed short stories to the anthologies Transmogrify! and For the Rest of Us.

They write fiction celebrating queer and Mexican stories in a variety of genres, with current projects in both kidlit and adult categories.

Recently I asked the author about what they were reading. Reyes's reply:
I've gotten to read a few books from my favorite authors recently! I keep adding new authors to my list of auto-buys, and I'm not mad about it!

I adored Nav's Foolproof Guide to Falling in Love by Jessica Lewis. It was the perfect rom com to get me out of my head in a dark time. Sometimes I just want to forget about my own problems and scream about two fictional characters who couldn't be more clueless about their feelings for each other. I can't wait for the spinoff, Hallie's Rules for a Recovering Romantic, which comes out next year! I will read anything Jessica Lewis writes, from horror to rom coms, she hasn't let me down so far!

Another auto-buy author for me is Alechia Dow, and I had the privilege of reading her next release early to blurb it! Until the Clock Strikes Midnight was my favorite book I've read this year. With a bipolar fairy godmother and a broody misfortune who have to fight over the fate of a queer bookstore owner, I could not put it down. The entire time I was reading, I just kept thinking to myself, "this is the perfect book." It really healed something in my little bipolar heart to see a character with this illness portrayed with such tenderness.

Lastly, I also got to read an early copy of Aiden Thomas's next book, Cemetery Boys 2: Espíritu. If you haven't read Cemetery Boys yet, this is your chance before the sequel comes out! Aiden Thomas is one of my all time favorite authors. Every story has so much love and care weaved into each character, and this one was no exception. It was so nice returning to such beloved characters and seeing them grow even further. It's truly such a joy!
Visit Sonora Reyes's website.

--Marshal Zeringue