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exile

No amount of eccentricity can prepare for the surreal experience that is Nigeria. Recall the prologue to Coppola’s Apocalypse Now, when we are introduced to Capt. Willard. For one, there is a debilitating sickness here, painless yet fatal, sprawling unchecked and anonymous; most here are susceptible to it. The medical term escapes me but it is commonly known as “delusions of relevance”. The usual antidote, a hefty dose of artificially-enhanced Cynicism, is mere placebo in this context.

Exile ends the tyranny of the émigré novel; reading is self-defeating and itself becomes a byway to neurosis. Anne Tyler’s Breathing Lessons (from nineteen eighty eight) and EB’s Marlene Dietrich lived here compete with melatonin for space on the bedside table. Eric Alliez’s Capital Times, a dense, incisive, distinctly French, treatment of St. Augustine, our holiest Bishop, founder and architect of incipient modernity. Something to really wake you up in the mornings: industrial strength caffeine to counter chemically-enhanced Cynicism.

Chris Groves’ agent wrote with news that Northwestern University Press is poised to publish his first book. Well done! (I jest about the agent) Incidentally, Chris and I once trekked through Berlin snow to visit Hegel’s grave on the 167th anniversary of his death.

The following anniversary fell during the week and I arrived after the Dorotheenstädtisch Friedhof along Chausseestraße had closed. Darkness was no obstacle as the cemetery walls were scaled in the service of the Absolute.

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