Tuesday, April 21, 2020

LEONARDO DA VINCI


Leonardo Da Vinci by Walter Isaacson ; Published by Simon and Schuster;Pages 599;Price Rs.1199/-
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There is no doubt that the best biographer today is Walter Isaacson. There is also no doubt that Leonardo da Vinci was one of the greatest men in History.
Walter Isaacson, the author of the book under review was Editor of Time and biographer of three great men---Albert Einstein, Benjamin Franklin and Steve Jobs. The subjects of his previous books were all blue-sky thinkers, with the ability “to make connections across the disciplines” and “to marry observation and imagination”.His new subject is well chosen. Few men were as polymathically brilliant, or as downright weird, as da Vinci.
There is a significant difference, though, between “Leonardo da Vinci” and Isaacson’s previous biographies. His other geniuses left behind bountiful source material about the lives they led. Leonardo did not.

There are about 7200 pages of Leonardo’s notes , representing about a quarter of what he wrote during his life. They are rich in maps, doodles, anatomical drawings, schema for new machines, models for new weapons, proposals for city redesigns, geometric patterns, portraits, eddies, swirls, curls, scientific observations of uncanny prescience. (Among the most staggering: He intuited the first and third laws of motion, 200 years ahead of Newton.)


Walter Isaacson weaves a narrative that connects his art to his science. He shows how Leonardo's genius was based on skills we can improve in ourselves, such as passionate curiosity, careful observation, and an imagination so playful that it flirted with fantasy. He produced the two most famous paintings in history, The Last Supper and the Mona Lisa. But in his own mind, he was just as much a man of science and technology. With a passion that sometimes became obsessive, he pursued innovative studies of anatomy, fossils, birds, the heart, flying machines, botany, geology, and weaponry. His ability to stand at the crossroads of the humanities and the sciences, made iconic by his drawing of Vitruvian Man, made him history's most creative genius.

                                            
Isaacson’s biography summarise the differing versions of Leonardo that have been in circulation from the time Vasari praised him in his Lives of the ArtistsHe was at once the colossal genius who wouldn’t bow down to influential patrons and the feckless fantasist who did not execute his assignmentsLeonardo was the truly Renaissance Man to whom maths and science were as important as painting; he was also the artist who “left posterity the poorer” by pursuing hobbies – engineering, architecture, pageantry, military strategy, cartography, etc – on which his talents were wasted.

Though he was born illegitimate no great stigma was attached to him: it meant he grew up with two mothers. He did not suffer due to lack of a formal education. He proudly declared that he was self-taught and he valued experience and his greatest asset was a relentless curiosity—like a small child.
At 14, he was apprenticed to the workshop of Andrea del Verrocchio, who was “astonished” by his talent and with whom he collaborated before producing at least two early masterpieces,The Annunciation and (his first non-religious effort, and one to rank with the Mona LisaGinevra de’ Benci.

The rise of Michelangelo (20-odd years his junior) may have been a factor in his preference for Milan: having spent much of his 30s and 40s there, he returned in his mid-50s. Milan was vastly bigger than Florence and was well stocked with intellectuals and scientists . Later he moved to Rome and later still, leaving Italy for the first time, to France. But it was Milan that encouraged the odd mixture of the practical and the fantastical that went into his inventions – his schemes for flying machines, giant crossbows, scythed chariots, needle grinders, screw jacks and so on.

According to Isaacson , his inventions and ideas occupy an important place in the history of science and technology, anticipating the discoveries of Galileo and Newton. He contributed to medical knowledge too: by dissecting the body of a 100-year-old man, he came up with the first description of arteriosclerosis as an outcome of the ageing process.

Isaacson is appropriately reverential towards the Mona Lisa, using it to underline one of his main themes – Leonardo’s sfumato technique, whereby lines are blurred and boundaries (like those between art and science) disappear.

While Isaacson makes no claim to fresh discoveries, we find that his biography is very cleverly arranged organised, lucidly written and beautifully illustrated .
Leonardo’s thirst for knowledge was that of a small child endlessly asking “Why?” His last drawings were turbulent images of water and wind. His entire existence is the culmination of a lifelong drive to find connections between natural phenomena – to link the curve of waves to a curl of human hair.


Isaacson emphasises Leonardo’s role as the scientist and innovator, the engineer and secret doctor . Between 1508 and 1513, Leonardo skinned at least 20 cadavers, some as they were decomposing in his hands, in order to study and draw muscle groups, organs, skeins of veins. His analysis of the human body was so thorough that he determined how the aortic valve worked 450 years before the medical establishment did.

Isaacson is at his most eloquent when he analyses what made Leonardo human. He was an inveterate deadline misser, more beguiled by starting projects than finishing them. He abandoned a 23-foot equestrian statue intended for a prince; he gave up on paintings and murals intended for wealthy patrons; he sketched “flying machines that never flew, tanks that never rolled, a river that was never diverted.”
Leonardo said. “Men of lofty genius sometimes accomplish the most when they work least, for their minds are occupied with their ideas and the perfection of their conceptions, to which they afterwards give form.”

Leonardo was an implacable perfectionist. He worked on the Mona Lisa for 16 years, and it was in his bedroom when he died.

Leonardo was strikingly devoid of ego, “more interested in pursuing knowledge than in publishing it.” According to Isaacson . “He wanted to accumulate knowledge for its own sake, and for his own personal joy, rather than out of a desire to make a public name for himself as a scholar or to be part of the progress of history.”

Reading this biography makes us realise how indifferent to glory Leonardo was.

Leonardo da Vinci from a distance was the master painter, sculptor, scientist, architect and engineer’s intellect seems remote, god-like; up close, he’s more human. He struggled with arithmetic and Latin; he was a habitual fantasist; he indulged his handsome young companion Salai, who he admitted was “a liar, a thief, stubborn and a glutton”; he lived in a state of constant obsession but constant distraction – his great mind’s great flaw was that it rarely finished anything.
Isaacson’s book is structured as a series of chronological essays on da Vinci’s life based on the contents of his notebooks, which teem with sketches, landscapes, lists, experiments, stories, scientific theories, ideas, portraits of gender-fluid angels and autobiographical notes.

Drawings from the notebooks are reproduced throughout the text, along with High Renaissance paintings and sculptures.
Isaacson’s portrait of the artist written 500 years after da Vinci’s death takes us as close as we can get.
The biography is an astonishing achievement and one that deserves to be widely read. This biography is a beautiful book and Isaacson is a fine writer .
P.P.Ramachandran.
19/04/2020.

Tuesday, April 14, 2020



JARNAIL  SINGH

With Four Prime Ministers by Jarnail Singh ;

 Published by Konark ; Pages 288 ; Price Rs 695/-

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The author of the book under review Shri.Jarnail Singh is a 1974 batch IAS officer belonging to the Manipur-Tripura cadre. Important positions held by him include Chief Secretary of Manipur , Joint Secretary to PM and Secretary to Government of India. Post retirement, he worked as Adviser to Chief Minister, Manipur . As Joint Secretary, Jarnail Singh served four Prime Ministers—H.D. Deve Gowda, I.K. Gujral, Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Dr Manmohan Singh—and handled matters relating to various ministries and states. His eight-year-stint in the PMO is among the longest by any officer. It was during these years that major economic development initiatives were taken in Power, Petroleum and Natural Gas, National Highways and Road Communications, Telecommunications, Civil Aviation, different social sectors and for development of the North-East.
Jarnail Singh received the PM’s Award for Excellence in Public Administration for the year 2007-08 for the initiatives taken to improve the governance in Manipur. He has earlier written a book  "My Tryst with Manipur" about his 23 years of public service experiences in Manipur.
Jarnail Singh holds BSc Engineering (Hons) and MSc Engineering (Distinction) degrees in Electrical Engineering from Panjab University, Chandigarh and Masters in Public Administration in Public Policy and Management from John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, USA.
The curiosity around what really goes on in the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) has refused to die down since its inception in 1947.This book satiates the curiosity to some extent. It is a fascinating account of the inner working of the office of the Prime Minister. The ethos and ethical standards to be maintained in PMO are an eye-opener. His pen portraits and personal anecdotes of the four completely different Prime Ministers make the book a must read. Policymakers and bureaucrats have a lot to learn from the insights on the functioning of government that Jarnail Singh has penned down. He has provided an excellent account of the functioning of the fulcrum of executive governance with focus on the pivotal role of civil servants like him, mostly unseen and unsung. Not only civil servants but also students of governance would immensely benefit from the narrative All four prime ministers were impressed by Singh’s sincerity, dedication and the kind of clarity with which he handled challenging tasks in PMO. His integrity apart, he was always immune to extra-curricular influences that civil servants come to experience in their career. His mantra was to quote the Rule Book, do only what it permits and sleep well.
This book affords an insight into working styles of the four Prime Ministers Deva Gowda, Gujral, Vajpayee and Manmohan Singh.
Jarnail Singh’s personal narrative is pieced together from the journal that he maintained during his years in service. It gives a detailed account of the factors involved in the functioning of the PMO while also reflecting the individual contribution of each prime minister to the country.
Gowda initiated a number of measures to develop the North-Eastern states and these included the Indira Gandhi Institute of Health and Medical Research, upgradations of airports,Turial Hydroelectric Project.The initiative of Deve Gowda became a Deve Gowda Mantra for development of the North-East.
Gujral concentrated on improving relations with Pakistan. Gujral was a hard-core democrat  who believed in the rule of law. Politically he was a light weight and many people tried to take advantage of this weakness. His government fell after the Report of the Jain Commission on the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi.

The longest period Jarnail Singh served in the PMO was with Vapayee as Prime Minister.These years traced in the book stand out for economic development and opening up of many sectors of the Indian economy. Listing the major initiatives Jarnail Singh terms the A.B. Vajpayee period from March 1998 to May 2004 as a ‘Golden Era’ for infrastructure and economic development in the history of India. It witnessed several developments like major economic initiatives,opening of new highways.the Delhi Metro, Chandrayaan I,energy sector advances. Pokhran II was the most important decision during his period. The Lahore Declaration was a commitment to peace but was violated by a vengeful neigbour.
Vajpayee was the unchallenged leader of the BJP—and at the same time at ease with leaders of all political parties. Decision making was much quicker and firm under Vajpayee.

Jarnail Singh’s short term with Dr.Manmohan Singh witnessed the development of North-Eastern states and some progress in irrigation projects.

The other key highlight of the book is the way Jarnail Singh has traced the policy continuation or otherwise under the four prime ministers, especially in major infrastructure development sectors, Jammu and Kashmir and the NE states. He also discusses some of the missteps taken during these years.Two items command our attention.There was a lack of knowledge among the Senior Officers of the Government about Government rules. He also noticed that any initiative from the PMO was immediately accepted and action taken immediately.

Jarnail Singh displays a clear understanding of what factors contribute to the successful administration of the world’s largest democracy.
This book throws a flood of light on how Governments work and forms a base for historians to study this crucial period in Indian history.
P.P.Ramachandran
12/04/2020.


BILL BRYSON

The Body: A Guide for Occupants ; by Bill Bryson ; Published by Penguin Random House ; Pages 454 ;Price Rs 999/-
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Bill Bryson is a fantastic writer who is an authority on several subjects. He is famous for his books on English language and William Shakespeare. He is highly acclaimed for his book “A Short History of Nearly Everything”, which dealt with the mysteries of the universe. It won the Aventis Prize and the Descartes Prize.All books are studded with delightful facts. Bryson was Chancellor of Durham University for 7 years .He is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society.

The book under review,The Body, is all about what each one of us occupies every single day. Bryson covers a wide array of topics, from the human brain, to the skin, to the microbes that we all carry around and even cancer, or when things go horribly wrong. Bryson absorbs reams of facts, the most interesting of which he presents liberally sprinkled with mischief, wit and lateral thinking. The book contains a startling amount of data relayed in a very chatty form and bubbles with humour. One simple example—Castration is a sure cure for baldness!.
Bryson uncovers the mystifying aspects of the human body and the developments in the medical world today. The skin, the digestive system, the immune system and so many other constituents are normally taken for granted. This is akin to the manner in which we have become accustomed to vaccines and antibiotics and modern dentistry. But to discover how complex they are, one has only to dip in Bryson’s book. He captures the essence of the human body and the history of medicine and modern clinical practice in a single volume and does it admirably well. He fleshes out the lives of pioneers — often with gossip about their irascibility, tax-dodging or the hijacking of their discoveries by colleagues — following this by interviewing an expert practising in the same field today.
How does the digestive system do such a classic job of destroying bacteria but protects our own organs?, What actually is behind race and skin colour ? How much of us is really us?


Bryson deals with the history of some of the greatest medical discoveries of our time. He enshrines the achievements of several unsung heroes, such as Ignaz Semmelweis, who first promoted handwashing to prevent infections in maternity hospitals, (important to recall him in the time of Corona) ;Nettie Stevens, whose dogged persistence led to the discovery of the X and Y-chromosomes, and Theodor Bilharz, who died trying to contain typhus in Cairo. We learn of the extraordinary story of William Halsted, the father of modern surgery, who performed a daring gallbladder surgery on the kitchen table before developing the radical mastectomy for breast cancer. The great “accidental” discoveries of medicine may not have been quite as accidental as we think — Alexander Fleming was a persistent and careful scientist, whose discovery of penicillin accompanied some other path breaking work on lysozymes to fight infection. Indeed, the petri dishes on which the penicillium grew had been discovered only 50 years before. To get as far as we have — a world with vaccines against infectious diseases, treatments for cancer and higher life expectancies than ever before — we have depended on years of work by many, many great scientists before us.


Bryson manages to convey a sense of wonder in whatever he writes . The book is peppered with delightful little factoids, such as how passionate kissing can transfer more than one billion bacteria between people. Bryson’s explosive sense of humour is always present — he describes sperm cells as “blundering idiots,” “curiously ill-prepared for the one task evolution has given them.”
Bryson sharply reminds us that our bodies, designed to keep us from starving in paleolithic winters, cannot quite deal with the abundance of food in our modern lives. Medical care in the United States, advanced as it is, is expensive and inaccessible to many. With the overuse of antibiotics, we may find ourselves gravely unprepared for drug-resistant infections lurking in every scratch of a rose bush. Bryson reminds us, this is a planet of microbes, which would do just fine without us. We would do well to remember the journey we took to get this far.


Who knew, for example, that the length of our blood vessels laid end to end would take one 2.5 times around the Earth? All the DNA in the human body laid in one fine strand would really stretch ten billion miles, to beyond Pluto.
His similes are lively — ‘When you eat, the tongue darts about like a nervous host at a cocktail party’
The key to making facts memorable is to illustrate them with colourful examples. This Bryson does with great panache.
Walton was the Father of open heart surgery and enjoyed a great deal of acclaim and financial success. Unfortunately he wasn't quite as impeccable in his private affairs as he might have been. In 1973 he was convicted of five counts of tax evasion and a great deal of imaginative book-keeping. Among much else, he had claimed a $100 payment to a prostitute as a deduction tax.
Occasionally he is heartless in his comments. Two doctors who pioneered operations or techniques — Christiaan Barnard, of the first successful heart transplant, and Henry Heimlich, of the anti-choking manoeuvre — are pronounced frauds and quacks for pushing ineffective commercial treatments. Possibly they were genuinely mistaken.
The Body is broken down into sections of surprise. Each chapter focuses on a different body part, organ, or system. The chapter is detailed, often telling us how that part works, a brief history of some of the scientific discoveries made about that part, and interesting facts about that part.

If you like learning more about how this miraculous body of ours works, this is a great book to read. You learn many interesting things from Bryson.
A great work worth reading again and again to “Know Thyself”
P.P.Ramachandran.


5/4/2020.