A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

Reporting from the road

I’m in Atlanta, traveling for work, which, ironically, gives me more time to blog since I’m sitting here in a hotel room by myself with nothing to do. Interestingly, I seem to be here at the same time that this is going on, so my hotel is full of well-scrubbed Baptist kids walking around with Bibles. Not that there’s anything wrong with that; it’s just kind of surreal – no one in the northeast walks around carrying a Bible. But if any of them try to evangelize me I’ll just brandish my Book of Common Prayer to ward them off.

On the plane I started reading P.D. James’s The Children of Men. Very gripping and full of Christian themes. Dystopian science fiction is my favorite variety. It’s the first book of hers I’ve read, but I think I recall reading somewhere that James is an Anglican; she certainly takes some shots at modern watered-down versions of Christianity. And some of the heroes are explicitly Christian in their motivation. I wonder how much of that the new movie retains.

We don’t have cable tv, so whenever I’m staying in a hotel I’m always astonished at how shallow and sensationalistic cable news is. I watched about 5 minutes of the Lou Dobbs show, which seems to be an extended exercise in xenophobia; all of America’s problems, it seems, are caused by foreigners – foreigners overseas who want to take our jobs, or foreigners coming here. Then the inevitable Wolf Blitzer’s show came on. The one spot of serious analysis was when Blitzer had the NYT’s John Burns reporting from Iraq on what a mess the whole Saddam execution debacle has become. Regardless of your views on the death penalty, it’s pretty hard at this point to see it as a victory for democracy or the rule of law, much less a victory for the U.S.

I also watched a bit of the Gerald Ford funeral coverage. Interesting that he and Jimmy Carter became such close friends (at least to hear President Carter tell it). It’s pretty hard to imagine that happening now – Carter said that he used to give Ford regular briefings on his foreign and domestic policy! I’m not one to get sentimental about presidents or the pomp of our civil quasi-religion, but Ford seems like he was a pretty decent guy. RIP.

Not much else to report. I think I’m going to raid the mini-bar and get back to The Children of Men.

P.S. For the record, no Gideon’s Bible in the rooms in the Atlanta Westin. I actually didn’t pack a Bible because I wanted to pack lightly and figured there’d be one in the room. I actually thought hotel-room Bibles were universal. Or is this just cut-rate chains? (Also for the record, hotels in Utah have Bibles and copies of the Book of Mormon.) Maybe I should track down one of those Baptist kids…

6 responses to “Reporting from the road”

  1. James is a traditional Anglican, of the “Don’t touch the BCP, fools!” variety.

    It sounds like none of that made it into the movie.

  2. I love The Children of Men and dystopian science fiction as well. Any other books in that genre to recommend? (Besides Canticle of Liebowitz, love that one too.) I’m not inclined to go see the movie. I heard it’s very different from the book but I’ll probably catch it on DVD.

  3. Lutheran Zephyr

    Our hospital does not accept Bibles from the Gideons. The administration has found them too difficult to work with over the years . . . At least, that’s what I’ve been told.

  4. I read Children of Men a year or two ago, and wound up going “Huh.” It has Christian themes in it, all right, but I couldn’t figure out the overall purpose of the story. I’ll be very interested to hear your reaction to it.

  5. Remember, when thumping someone with the BCP, you must repeat over and over, “It’s in Christian Love, damnit!”

    Marriotts tend to have BoMs only, and since the Bibles tend to get graffitied, defaced, and/or stolen really really a lot, some hotels stopped carrying them.

  6. One of the deleted scenes in Sideways is of Miles thumbing through a Gideon’s Bible in the motel room, and throwing it in the trash can. Can’t say that deleting the scene changed the movie that much. It’s not as though there were any inklings of religiosity in those two before they got to the hotel, and what transpires afterward is not particularly anti-religious, just your garden variety hedonism and stupid sticking your foot into your mouth.

    I haven’t read The Children of Men, but I have read some of James’ Adam Dalgleish mysteries. Devices and Desires, Death in Holy Orders and one other, whose name I can’t recall, but is my favorite thus far. I also saw the Mystery production of The Murder Room. I quite like the new Dalgleish. He plays an intelligent, upright, emotionally cut off, but well dressed police detective very well!

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