Jacques Benveniste, one of the worldâs leading homeopathic âscientists,â now claims that you can email homeopathic remedies? Yeah, see, what you do is you can take the âmemoryâ of the diluted substance out of the water electromagnetically, put it on your computer, email it, and play it back on a sound card into new water. I mean, that could work, right?)
Richard Dawkins, Wheen recalls, once pointed out that if an alternative remedy proves to be efficaciousâthat is to say, if it is shown to have curative properties in rigorous medical trialsâthen âit ceases to be an alternative; it simply becomes medicine.â In other words, itâs only âalternativeâ so long as itâs been shown not to be any bloody good. I found it impossible not to apply this helpful observation to other areas of life. Maybe a literary novel is just a novel that doesnât really work, and an art film merely a film that people donât want to see⦠How Mumbo-Jumbo Conquered the World is a clever-clogs companion to Michael Mooreâs Stupid White Men ; and as itâs about people of both sexes and every conceivable hue, itâs arguably even more ambitious.
I read Liarâs Poker , Michael Lewisâs book about bond-traders in the eighties, for two reasons, one of which was Wheen-inspired: he made me want to try and be more clever, especially about grown-up things like economics. Plus Iâd read Lewisâs great Moneyball a couple of months previously [see âStuff Iâve Been Reading,â Dec. 2003/Jan. 2004], so I already knew that he was capable of leading me through the minefields of my own ignorance. It turns out, though, that the international money markets are more complicated than baseball. These guys buy and sell mortgages! They buy and sell risk! But I havenât got a clue what any of that actually means! This isnât Michael Lewisâs faultâhe really did try his best, and in any case you kind of romp through the book anyway: the people are pretty compelling, if completely unlike anyone you might meetin real life. At one point, Lewis describes an older trader throwing a ten-dollar bill at a young colleague about to take a business flight. âHey, take out some crash insurance for yourself in my name,â the older guy says. âI feel lucky.â As a metaphor for what happens on the trading floor, thatâs pretty hard to beat.
Francis Wheenâs book and Paul Collinsâs Not Even Wrong were advance reading copies that arrived through the post. Iâm never going to complain about receiving free early copies of books, because quite clearly thereâs nothing to complain about, but it does introduce a rogue element into oneâs otherwise carefully plotted reading schedule. I had no idea I wanted to read Wheenâs book until it arrived, and it was because of Wheen that I read Lewis, and then Not Even Wrong turned up and I wanted to read that too, and Buchanâs Greenmantle got put to one side, I suspect forever. Being a reader is sort of like being president, except reading involves fewer state dinners, usually. You have this agenda you want to get through, but you get distracted by life events, e.g. books arriving in the mail/World War III, and you are temporarily deflected from your chosen path.
Having said that I hardly ever read books about autism. I have now read two in the last few weeks. Paul Collins, occasionally of this parish, is another parent of an autistic kid, and Not Even Wrong , like Charlotte Mooreâs George and Sam , is a memoir of sorts. The two books are complementary, though; while writing unsentimentally but movingly about his son Morganâs diagnosis and the familyâs response, Collins trawls around, as is his wont, for historical and contemporary illustration and resonance, and finds plenty. Thereâs Peter the Wild Boy, who became part of the royal household in the early
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