Tuesday, December 29, 2009

THAT HIDEOUS STRENGTH

I finished reading A S Byatt's "The Children's Book" yesterday. Shortlisted for this year's Booker Prize, it is a beautifully written story with a profoundly moving end; and perhaps the finest/most appropriate cover design I've encountered.

Nevertheless, whilst this is a deeply intellectual and thought-provoking book, I find myself disagreeing with the underlying vein of "northern realism" - which Byatt attributes to one of her most sympathetic characters - although I actually share such an outlook myself.

For although "The Children's Book" is a brilliant book, dealing as it does with the birth of socialism in the Victorian period, and the popularity of fantasy in The Arts, particularly in relation to childhood, I am left with the feeling that Byatt does not really understand the psychological power - or indeed empowerment - of myth in helping people confront difficult, sometimes profoundly difficult, situations in their real worlds.

Like some of the main characters in "The Children's Book", C S Lewis fought in and survived World War 1, along with fellow Oxford academic Tolkien. Lewis found it difficult to re-adapt to some of the superficiality of College life and students. However, he is best remembered for his own children's tales of Narnia, and for The Cosmic Trilogy which concludes with "A Modern Fairy-Tale for Grown-Ups" called "That Hideous Strength".

Like the Narnia books, "That Hideous Strength" has as a central theme the need to recognise evil, and human susceptibility, both individually and collectively, to its cosmic presence. In an incident which might have been encountered in a work of fiction, but in fact happened in my real life, I was reminded of this theme only the other day.

Visiting a country friend on Boxing Day, I was accosted by a local man who inquired "Do you realise that you are approaching the scene of a murder ?". I was shocked but not surprised by this question as there had been a police road closure in the area since before Christmas, which until then I had put down to a traffic accident/dangerous road conditions arising from the snow.

The full story emerged in yesterday's local paper. A woman had been beaten to death a few days before Christmas, and her husband is now the prime suspect. The couple had only recently moved into their lovely house, in what I have long regarded to be an almost idyllic rural setting in this part of Worcestershire.

Indeed this place has a particular resonance for me, a romantic attraction of the kind which A S Byatt - but probably not C S Lewis - might well disapprove. Moreover, my "country friend" is not human but a cat, whom I have known for over seven years. Yet it was precisely this feline, and another who joined her for a while in the run-up to Christmas, who seemed on some subconscious level to have alerted me to something in the area that was not quite right.

For this is an "almost" idyllic setting terrorised by heavy lorry traffic by day, and sometimes by night, from a dubious enterprise nearby, whose inhabitants seem strangely isolated amongst their many parked vehicles. In short, something of "That Hideous Strength" seems to be blighting the land, not just here but in other parts of Worcestershire where the population has become highly mobile. I ride a bike - in all weathers - incidentally.

Returning to the murder incident, it seems strangely fitting that the prime suspect should be identified to the public, in a police statement of the "northern realist" genre, as the driver of a highly distinctive gold landrover discovery. This seems to have travelled across large areas of The Midlands, visiting various shopping centres, on the day of the crime, carrying black plastic bags, and possibly the murder weapon, for disposal.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Lessons of Literary Constructions

I've recently finished reading the final volume of Stieg Larsson's brilliant Millennium Trilogy, "The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet's Nest". The Millennium series is now topping the best seller charts in Europe and the United States, causing some commentators to make comparisons with the Harry Potter books.

This comparison was particularly interesting for me because I'm also in the middle of "The Children's Book" by A S Byatt, written partly in ironic response to the kind of supernatural fiction popularised so successfully by J K Rowling.

I obtained my copies of "The Millennium Trilogy" and "The Children's Book" from Worcester's excellent city library, currently housed in a wonderful Victorian building, part of a larger civic legacy, some of which has now been re-developed for a city centre apartment block.

By co-incidence, a minor sub-plot of "The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet's Nest" involves the "outing" of a corrupt construction boss. Indeed Larsson's descriptions of the operation of the Swedish construction industry - not too different from our own - are quite fascinating. Larsson's life partner is an architect.

The subject of construction brings me back to Worcester City Library, for whom relocation plans are progressing as part of a larger building complex. As it happens, the firm selected to build this, under the Private Finance Initiative, has just been fined some £8 million by the Office of Fair Trading following an inquiry entitled "Bid Rigging in the Construction Industry".

This is a very interesting story* in itself ! For more information, please see :
http://www.oft.gov.uk/advice_and_resources/resource_base/ca98/decisions/bid_rigging_construction
However, a word of warning, in my own experience those who try to dig too deeply into such matters tend to be treated like naughty children and excluded by bossy bureaucrats.

* Unveiling the main findings of their investigation, the OFT stated that - as in Agatha Christie's "Murder on the Orient Express" - almost all potential suspects turned out to be involved. See also Financial Times Article of 22.9.09 "Web of wrongdoing that spanned an industry".

Thursday, December 17, 2009

WEBSITE UPDATES

Green Man Projects - http://www.greenman-projects.co.uk/ - has recently been updated, and I plan to relaunch my areas regeneration business EPONA in February 2010 : please see http://eponaland.wordpress.com/ in the meantime. Apologies to anyone who has experienced problems with email contact recently : these have now been resolved.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Three Wise Men to attend Iraq Inquiry ?

Some Suggest that the Three Wise Men came from Iraq*.... Image - Wikipedia Commons

Details of the Christmas cards to be dispatched by the Prime Minister, the leaders of the Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties, and London Mayor Boris Johnson have been published today in The Telegraph newspaper. Intelligence suggests that the apparent image of three camels and a desert encroaching upon the Houses of Parliament on the Mayor's card either poses the threat of some unforeseen climate change....an unknown unknown** perhaps ?; or the impending arrival of Three Wise Men at the Iraq Inquiry. Now that would indeed be a miracle !

* There is no suggestion that they came from Dubai, however.
** Former US Secretary of State for Defense Donald Rumsfeld reflected on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan : "Reports that say something has happened are always interesting to me, because we know that there are known knowns, there are things we know we know. We also know that there are known unknowns : that is to say there are things we know we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns - the one's we don't know we don't know"

Monday, December 07, 2009

A UK Strategy for Enterprise & Industry

Whilst attending a conference on the subject of energy and climate change a couple of months ago, I commented that what the UK needed to properly tackle these issues was a good old-fashioned industrial strategy. Now I want to address the issue of climate change at my other blog - http://janetmackinnon.wordpress.com/ - and focus here on the issues of UK enterprise and industry.

Following my conference contribution - not greatly welcomed by some of the organisers it afterwards transpired ! - I was approached by a youngish man who, I seem to remember, worked for a government funded-agency involved in energy conservation. I had used the analogy of the Greater London Industrial Strategy, produced shortly before the abolition of the Greater London Council in the mid-1980s, and about the time I started my career in area regeneration. The young man told me that he partly agreed with what I'd said, but felt I needed to be more private-sector orientated.

This comment surprised me for 2 reasons. On a personal level, I've been self-employed for some 80% of my working life, and, therefore, in this "private sector". Secondly, the young man seemed to have forgotten - and this is very worrying because I suspect he is not alone - that a large part of the UK banking sector is now publicly owned, and the sector as whole has now been bailed out by our Government to the tune of £850 billion as mentioned in my previous post.

With this level of government intervention - unimaginable in the days of old "Red" Ken Livingstone's GLC - I would suggest that a comprehensive UK strategy for enterprise and industry is required at the present time more than at any other since the end of World War II. This should clearly identify the role of strategic sectors, such as banking and energy supply, in the context of wider economic, social, security, and environmental objectives.

Of course such as strategy would involve partnership between the public, private and non-governmental sectors. However, elected government should take the lead - as the GLC did - so that the citizens of this country can have some influence and accountability in the process. This would, of course, require a considerable cultural change, because it is precisely the absence of real accountability which has brought us to the state in which we all presently find ourselves.

Friday, December 04, 2009

UK Banks Bail-Out & Bonuses

It has emerged today that the UK banking bail-out has cost some £850 billion. At the same time, it's bonus time for bankers again. Surely there must be some mistake, or does gross incompetence merit equally gross reward ?

Looking around me just now, I suggest that there's a bonus for bad behaviour and not just in the banking sector. As I've said elsewhere, it's the survival of the feckless at the present time !

On a more serious note, those concerned about UK finances and economy should check out the Financial Times today - http://www.ft.com/ - and headline reports on the problems of the commercial real estate sector. It is here, I suspect, that events in Dubai will have most impact.