Up@dawn 2.0

Monday, February 23, 2026

Exam review

The March 3 exam will feature objective-format questions about Be Mine, drawn from the questions I've posted each week. The answers will all be provided, you'll just need to match them to the right questions. You get a point for each correct answer, up to a possible 25... so there's no harm in guessing. But with adequate review, you shouldn't have to guess.

Here are some topics and relevant accompanying texts to review:

JAN 27

  1. Frank's opening thoughts on happiness, and on happiness and aging on  p.11.) ...
  2. Frank on the remoteness of neighbors in America 5
  3. Frank's characterization of "white southerners," Pug, etc. 17, 18
  4. Frank on fearing death, suffering,  a "good death," denial... 24, 26
  5. Frank on understanding, making sense, and meaning, and how to "make living steal a march on dying" 37
FEB 3

  1. Frank on making plans for merely-possible contingencies in life 47
  2. Frank's thoughts on scattering his ex's ashes 53-5
  3. Frank on what you need to do, to be happy 56
  4. Frank's remarks on Heidegger 73
  5. Frank on having specific life-goals for one's children 77
FEB 10
  1. More soon...


FEB 17

FEB 24



Sunday, February 22, 2026

Astonishing

"What an astonishing thing a book is. It's a flat object made from a tree with flexible parts on which are imprinted lots of funny dark squiggles. But one glance at it and you're inside the mind of another person, maybe somebody dead for thousands of years."

— Carl Sagan

Saturday, February 21, 2026

“aching urge”

"If there is a magic in story writing, and I am convinced there is, no one has ever been able to reduce it to a recipe that can be passed from one person to another. The formula seems to lie solely in the aching urge of the writer to convey something he feels important to the reader." — John Steinbeck

Thursday, February 19, 2026

No story is big enough to capture life

(That's his story, anyway.)

"In his famous 2004 paper Against Narrativity, the philosopher Galen Strawson challenges the popular idea that living well requires a coherent life story.

Human life far exceeds the narratives we construct, Strawson argues, and some of us don't experience ourselves narratively at all."

https://philosophybreak.com/articles/galen-strawson-our-lives-are-not-stories/?utm_source=threads&utm_medium=social

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Questions FEB 24

Conclude Be Mine, 267-342. Presentations: Markeem, Jalen
  1. "No one who can isn't cashing in. Why be here otherwise?" 267 Does that go for everywhere, in America? Does this attitude say something about our national character?
  2. "What causes places to be awful"? I read a post this morning from a recent transplant to Tennessee saying they found the place awful, mostly (it seems) because of what they perceive  as the mean-spirited and narrow-minded politics. Is the quality of "leadership"  what matters most, in determining the quality of a place? Or of the people at large? Or what?
  3. "Never let your son decide things." 268 Good parenting advice?
  4. "Why do Americans believe in Democracy?" Do they? And a related question: What do you say to people who claim that America is the greatest country in the world? What do you think of Will McAvoy's soliloquy on that? [script]
  5. Is it weird that some people draw an "unexpected connection" between Valentine's Day and those four dead presidents on the mountain? 269
  6. "You don't watch enough television." 272 Is Paul serious? Do Americans watch too much television? Do they know enough facts? Where do you get your facts?
  7. Are you "wary of people who decorate their vehicles with their beliefs"? 272 (Confession: I do.*)
  8. "There is nothing I can really deceive my son about now. Though I would." 279  Would you ever  deceive your child, even your adult child, about their terminal illness? Is it okay to do so, if motivated by love?
  9. "Nothing is enough" is one of Paul's epitaph choices. What's yours? 281 
  10. Is temporary forgetfulness ever "a kind of reprieve" for humans in general? 282
  11. What do you feel when you "look toward deepest space"? Is its incomprehensibility "freeing" (as for Frank) or terrifying, as for Pascal: "What then is man in the midst of these two infinities? Nothing in comparison with the universe, infinite in comparison with the atomic. Since he is infinitely removed from comprehending the extremes, he is equally incapable of knowing the beginning and the end of things… When I consider the short duration of my life, swallowed up in an eternity before and after, the little space I fill engulfed in the infinite immensity of spaces whereof I know nothing, and which know nothing of me, I am terrified. The eternal silence of these infinite spaces frightens me…" --Pensees
  12. Why does Frank see Krista's face when he hears Betty's voice? 284
  13. Do you regret or worry about "hard conversations" not had with departed loved ones? 286
  14. Have you ever suffered a "lost word" as Frank does with couscous? Is that a harbinger of death only for older people? Should it be?
  15. What does Frank mean about "ocean-y ease..."? 289
  16. "I've never been skilled at [knowing what's good]." 293  Is Frank being too hard on himself? Do you think you know what's good? How do you know?
  17. Why do you think so many Americans are apparently okay with "the Trump-certified climate hoax"? 294
  18. What do you think of Frank's remarks on "Southernness"? 295  Is he a self-loathing former southerner ("Do I hear south in my voice? I hope not." 303)
  19. [No wonder I couldn't find this last week: it's from this section of the book.] Do most southern women really think they can "read other people" etc.? Is Frank being ungenerous towards Patti? 303-4
  20. Would it annoy you, if you were dying of a terminal disease, to be told that you were battling courageously and could beat it? (It did annoy the late Barbara Ehrenreich: “There is a vast difference between positive thinking and existential courage... The failure to think positively can weigh on a cancer patient like a second disease.”)
  21. Do you agree with Frank's assessment of the American style of conversation? 298
  22. If courage is not the word to describe Paul's experience, what is? 304  And why does Frank have no word ("bon mot") for Patti? And NOTE, in The Story Behind the Scenery: "No words are needed to appreciate it." 314
  23. COMMENT?: More on the "alloy" of happiness, in the quote from "old Trollope" 306.. Anthony Trollope said something else I find inspiring: “A small daily task, if it be really daily, will beat the labours of a spasmodic Hercules.”
  24. Does the Kubler-Ross scale need more levels? Should it include escape? 307
  25. Have you ever been frustrated by your inability "to experience the same thing the same way" as a friend, partner, or family member? 307  Do words sometimes help to overcome such gaps in our experience? Are our human situations generally not "congruent"? And are humans "largely impenetrable"? 323
  26. COMMENT?: "I trust dumb instinct, then fill in reasons. Like everybody else." 308  Frank may have gotten this from William James**
  27. Is it the thought that counts? Or  its expression? 309
  28. How would you fill in the blank?: "What doesn't kill you makes you ____." 310
  29. Can you relate to Frank's "path" up the mountain, or to his regret at not discovering it sooner? 312
  30. Despite everything humanly objectionable and tasteless about Mt. Rushmore, is there still something to the idea that it "struggles withe hostile human nature" and is an "inspiration"? 314  Or is it really just another "Ozymandian way" of showing the folly of human conceits? 340
  31. "He means this and doesn't mean it": that's not really "the best of all modalities," is it? 317
  32. Why do many Americans prefer virtual Mt. Rushmores? 319
  33. Do you feel uneasy in public spaces? Or think about the possibility of random gun violence when there? Is the feeling of impotence in the face of such possibilities a peculiar "earmark of old age" or is it universal in America now? 320
  34. Could Washington, Jefferson, Roosevelt, and Lincoln really not get elected now? Even post-Trump? 321
  35. What do you think Frank thinks all religions are hiding?
  36. Is there something measly  about Nashville's Parthenon?  321 (I like it, myself.) 
  37. COMMENT?: "Any trip can be perilous once you commit to the destination..." 323 (This might be why skeptics refuse to commit to beliefs.)
  38. "[Augustine said] good is the absence of bad... happiness the absence of unhappiness." And pleasure is the absence of pain, said Epicurus. But is there nothing more positive to be said for good, happiness, and pleasure? 
  39. What do you think it is about Mt. Rushmore that so delights Paul? Is it just that it's "completely pointless and ridiculous"? 324
  40. COMMENT?: Paul "died fundamentally unchanged, dedicated to being himself, and giving life its full due--skeptical-seeming but not skeptical..." 331   
  41. COMMENT?: "Blake believed good was only good in specifics--which is what we had experienced together and enjoyed on our trip." 331  So was it a good trip? A good good-bye?
  42. COMMENT?: "I do not believe I have an essential self, though if I have one it is always on display... the most important thing about life is that it will end..." 333
  43. Is Paul's legacy to Frank a good one? 334
  44. Any thoughts on Frank's remarks about his daughter? 335
  45. How often do you ask yourself "What is my project now? What am I actually doing?" 337
  46. What do you think of Frank's view of the "brilliant" young writers he's been reading, and of his view that we read literature hoping to gain "a practical understanding of true happiness"? 338 
  47. Final thoughts on "the old Nazi Heidegger" and why Frank has stopped reading him? 339
  48. COMMENT?: "We can look too closely at life... [Death] doesn't have to be all that hard." 340-1
  49. Who do you think is speaking to Frank at the end? And though Richard doesn't want us to ask this: what do you think will be Frank's next (last?) chapter, the "something different" he's ready for? Does his latest episode of global amnesia portend trouble? 342
  50. Post your thoughts about the concluding sections, and about the book and author in general.

*
 **The history of philosophy is to a great extent that of a certain clash of human temperaments. Undignified as such a treatment may seem to some of my colleagues, I shall have to take account of this clash and explain a good many of the divergencies of philosophers by it. Of whatever temperament a professional philosopher is, he tries when philosophizing to sink the fact of his temperament. Temperament is no conventionally recognized reason, so he urges impersonal reasons only for his conclusions. Yet his temperament really gives him a stronger bias than any of his more strictly objective premises. It loads the evidence for him one way or the other, making for a more sentimental or a more hard-hearted view of the universe, just as this fact or that principle would. He trusts his temperament. Wanting a universe that suits it, he believes in any representation of the universe that does suit it. He feels men of opposite temper to be out of key with the world's character, and in his heart considers them incompetent and 'not in it,' in the philosophic business, even tho they may far excel him in dialectical ability. Pragmatism Lec.1

Heather Cox Richardson

I recommended her as a contextually and historically rich news source who places the headlines in deeper perspective. Here's her latest Substack installment.

https://open.substack.com/pub/heathercoxrichardson/p/february-17-2026?r=35ogp&utm_medium=ios

Monday, February 16, 2026

Happy birthday, Richard Ford (and Henry Adams)

It's the birthday of novelist Richard Ford (books by this author), born in Jackson, Mississippi (1944). When he was a boy, his mother told him that their neighbor across the street was a writer. He wasn't really sure what that meant, but he could tell it was something important from the way she said it. It turned out that neighbor was Eudora Welty. Ford went to the same elementary school as Welty, and they even had some of the same teachers. But he didn't meet her until many years later.

When he was eight, his father had a heart attack — and died from a second heart attack when Richard was 16. For much of his childhood, Ford went back and forth between Mississippi and Little Rock, Arkansas. His grandmother and her second husband, a former prizefighter, ran a hotel in Little Rock, and Ford said: "I did everything in the hotel. I worked in it and I played in it. A lot of things go on in great big hotels, behind closed doors, and I saw behind those doors. Recklessness and mistakes." After college, he tried to work for the Arkansas State Police, but he was rejected. Then he got discharged from the Marines because he had hepatitis. He tried law school — his plan was to be a lawyer for the Marine Corps and then work for the FBI — but he didn't like it, and he dropped out. Unsure of what to do next, he decided to give writing a try.

His first novel was A Piece of My Heart (1976), his only novel set in the South. A few years later, he was teaching at Princeton, and Eudora Welty came to do a reading there. He was nervous about meeting her because he was sure she disliked his novel — he said, "I had a feeling she probably knew about it; that it was full of dirty words and sex and violence." He introduced himself and said that he was from Jackson; she said, "Oh, you are?" and nothing else. He was depressed, convinced that she hated his book and disapproved of him.

Ten years after A Piece of My Heart, Ford published The Sportswriter (1986), the first of his trilogy about Frank Bascombe, a novelist-turned-sportswriter-turned-realtor from New Jersey. Ford did a book signing for The Sportswriter at Lemuria Books in Jackson, and not many people turned up. He said: "Suddenly I looked up and there was Eudora. She'd driven over to the bookstore. She had a deep voice — and I'm making her sound more imperious than she was; she was very sweet — but she said, 'Well, I just had to come pay my respects.'"

Ford and Welty became good friends. Ford shared an anecdote about his writing mentor: "One hot spring day, I was walking with Eudora Welty through a little shopping mall. It was her birthday, April 13th. There was a surprise party waiting at a bookstore down the way. She was 86. As we walked rather slowly along the glass storefronts, we came to where a wide, smiling, pink-faced man was inflating colorful balloons. As each balloon filled and fattened, the cylinder emitted quite a loud whoosh of air. Eudora looked about to find the sound. 'Balloons,' I said. I had her hand. 'Someone's apparently having a do.' 'Oh,' she said. Those luminous, pale blue eyes igniting, her magical face suppressing once again an amused smile. 'I just thought it was someone who saw me, sighing.'"

When Welty died in 2001, at the age of 92, Ford was a pallbearer at her funeral, and he was her literary executor. He co-edited Welty's Library of America: Collected Writings.

Ford's sequels to The Sportswriter were Independence Day (1995) and The Lay of the Land(2006); Independence Day won both the PEN/Faulkner Award and the Pulitzer, the first novel ever to do so. His most recent book (as of 2015) is Let Me Be Frank with You (2014), a series of novellas that follow Frank Bascombe in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy... 

https://www.garrisonkeillor.com/radio/the-writers-almanac-for-monday-february-16-2026/

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Exam review

The March 3 exam will feature objective-format questions about  Be Mine, drawn from the questions I've posted each week.   The answers w...