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The Only War We Seek (by Arthur Goodfriend)

June 29, 2008 · Leave a Comment

The perfect vintage volume for you politicos who love to complain about the Bush Administration’s certainty that we would be greeted with “open arms” in the Middle East. You can show it to your friends and tell them with conviction that the United States has done this before, etcetera. An absolutely spot-on example of how we lose when we fail to understand other mentalities or cultures.

Why did communism win in China? Why is Asia seething? Why, after decades of missionary efforts, expanding trade and over twenty billion spent on global aid, are we seemingly so friendless?” (This was 1951!)

The Only War We Seek was written in the context of the Korean War by Arthur Goodfriend, who reported to Truman and the State Department during the 40s and 50s. Keeping with our policy of containment, we provided aid and propaganda to China and hoped that they would not be tempted to adopt communism (look up the “Four Point Program”). But mysteriously, in spite of our “best efforts,” they did! Goodfriend offers a very sincere, approachable explanation in a lengthy series of period journalistic photographs and short, lamenting captions. It’s very sentimental and very sincere, if not a little vague at times.

Some statements about the Chinese people are a bit… broad… but the book is not racist or xenophobic. It is rather anti-communist. And a lot of the pictures are kind of… random.

The Only War is uncommon but copies still can be found for not a lot amount of money. Cool enough to keep in your history/poli. science classroom or on a coffee table. It’s a nice floppy softcover with a picture of an ox on the cover.

“We can boast about our skyscrapers to illiterate people who live in one-room dirt-floor shacks. We can remind them how rich we are… how poor, they. We can show off our push-button civilization until, convinced of how hopelessly different we and they are, they turn elsewhere for help and understanding… We can make democracy seem alien to others by preaching it abroad in terms of our history and culture… holding up Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln… or we can express democracy in events and personalities other people understand and honor… stressing the democratic content in the doctrines of Buddha, Confucius, Mencius, Mohammad and other saints and heroes whose teachings are already part of a native tradition.”

“I am delighted that this book is being published which will give a pictorial concept of the Point Four Program and I hope it will be widely read.” – Eleanor Roosevelt

http://www.thecrimson.com/article.aspx?ref=191674

Goodfriend, Arthur. The Only War We Seek. Farrar, Straus, and Young, Inc., 1951. Published for Americans For Democratic Action.

 

→ Leave a CommentCategories: History/Political Science · Photo Journal
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Outer Space and All That Junk (by Mel Gilden)

June 28, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Fourteen year-old Myron Duberville is a young go-getter. His pastel golf shirt has a pelican on the breast pocket (“All the best people had pelicans on their pockets”) and he’s off to work for his Uncle Hugo, a multi-millionaire big-wig at the Astronetics Corporation. However, his uncle is probably crazy, thinks that aliens litter the Earth disguised as trash, and believes that he can send them back to their home planet in a 1960 Chevrolet Belvedere.

I picked this one up at a school book fair when I was a kid. I had one dollar. All of the other kids came to school with twenties pinned to their shirts. Outer Space and All That Junk was literally the only book I could afford and this was fortuitous. The idea is incredibly clever – We are surrounded by aliens but never noticed and now must return them in a vintage car. (Uncle Hugo noticed a plug in front of his house was changing positions over a period of years). There is human interest – our protagonist Myron is an uptight guy. His instinct is to trust the straight-laced antagonists instead of his eccentric uncle, whose sanity he doubts. There is adventure – Myron and his companion, Princess, must run from operatives of the Astronetics Corporation and fall into the hands of Pointdexter, an incompetent detective stuck in the 40s.

Um. It’s been a while since I’ve read this one so… that’s it so far as plot. But it’s a fantastically quirky little adventure story. Definitely meant for the 12-14 year-old crowd, but if you care about that you shouldn’t be reading this site.

http://www.melgilden.com/

GILDEN, MEL. Outer Space and All That Junk. J. B. Lippincott Company, New York, 1989; ISBN: 0397323069; LaVigne, Daniel (illustrator)

→ Leave a CommentCategories: Young Adult Science Fiction
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Welcome to the Good Books Blog

June 28, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Hello, and thank you for visiting the Good Books Blog.

I am an avid reader and collector of books. My father was an autodidact and librarian for many years, and I grew up around his personal library of three-thousand volumes, including a ridiculous collection of trade science fiction. Aside, I have no credentials whatsoever.

There are a lot of books out there. I mean, a LOT. Some really good. Some really bad. And some just in between. This blog is about good books and, more specifically, the books that are good but overlooked. There are a lot of these, and there are certainly a great many which are phenomenal in one respect but lacking in another.

So stay tuned for information about the most exciting works you never knew existed.

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