Book Catalogue

I did an audit of work both published and being prepared for publication.  The result is embarrassingly large.  There were problems in two books with co-authors, but there is not much left with the remaining few.  I will also look into making the Amazon books available in print.

BOOK CATALOGUE

OF

GEOFFREY GIBSON

PART I

SIX BOOKS PUBLISHED IN PRINT

The Journalist’s Companion to Australian Law

The Arbitrator’s Companion

Law for Directors

The Making of a Lawyer

The Common Law – A History

What’s Wrong?  Making Sense of Nonsense (with Chris Wallace-Crabbe)

PART II

THIRTY BOOKS PUBLISHED ONLINE

History (16)

A History of the West (5 volumes)

  1. The Ancient West
  2. The Medieval World
  3. The West Awakes
  4. Revolutions in the West
  5. Twentieth Century West

Parallel Trials

The German Nexus: The Germans in English History

The English Difference? – The Tablets of their Laws

Terror and the Police State: Punishment as a Measure of Despair

A tale of two nations – Uncle Sam from Down Under

Looking down the Well: Papers on Legal History

Some History Papers: Essays on Modern History in England and Europe

Listening to Historians: What is Truth?

Events in France 1789 to 1794

Some Men of Genius

Four Characters in Search of their History (Fox, Danton, Pitt, and Robespierre)

Autobiography (5)

Confessions of a baby boomer

Confessions of a barrister (Learning the Law)

Summers at Oxford and Cambridge

Up your North

The Dreamtime of a White Ghost-Seer

Literature (5)

Windows on Shakespeare

Some literary papers: Tilting at windmills

Top shelf, or what used to be called a Liberal education

Glimpses of Shakespeare

More Glimpses of Shakespeare

Philosophy (2)

The Humility of Knowledge: Five Geniuses and God

Different Minds: Why are English and European Lawyers so different?

Law (1)

Some Papers on the Law

Opera (1)

Why Opera?

  • PART III

NINE BOOKS READY FOR PUBLICATION

A Curated Library (4)

The book that was published on Amazon as Top Shelf, or What Used to be called a Liberal Education has been rewritten and followed by three more volumes called A Curated Library.  Each contains a vignette on fifty books by writers or on subjects of influence to me – a total of 200 such books.  There were two criteria of selection for the top shelves: I have read and enjoyed the book at least once; and the book or its author has enhanced my prospects of my dying happy in my own skin.  I have read all the novels at least twice, the bigger of them, and the histories, more often (Carlyle eight times – possibly nine; Gibbon, three).  Each book or its author has been a sustaining source of comfort to me.  The four volumes are ready for editing and publication.  The 200 entries are set out at the end of this note in the Tables of Contents of the volumes.

The War Against Humanity

  • This book looks in detail, and with a full historical background, at the dramatic decline in standards in public life – government and business.  Both are killing off people and leaving us and them with robots .  We are in truth looking at a war against humanity.  I fear for my grandchildren in a world gone virtual.  Those of my age had the best of it.

The Adversarial Trial – Gone with the Wind

  • This is a summary of the experience of more than fifty years in the law – solicitor, barrister, tribunal president (30 years sessional work hearing and deciding hard cases in the old way – just bloody get on with it).  Arbitrator, mediator, jurist and writer – and victim.  Its core are papers on fighting cases, deciding cases, the collapse of the adversarial trial and jury system as we knew it, and an extended essay on the place of courage and leadership in the legal profession.

The Pursuit of Happiness

  • This is how to survive in a profession – and enjoy life and be of some use to others and those coming after you.  Such a book is badly needed.  You need to be able to write a decision, listen to Beethoven or Miles Davis, cook lamb shanks in red wine after your swim, listen to Hamlet or Don Giovanni, and salute Kant on the way to bed – fly fishing or golf tomorrow – after a shot of Keats.  Comes with recipes – albeit mostly for boys – and advice about indulging yourself in high end rewards. 

The Basics of Investing

  • This kind of book is also badly needed.  It provides the basics of law and the teaching of well-known writers on investing to enable people to lose their terror of government and the stock market.  There are what lawyers call works of authority in this area.  I began with one co-author of repute in investing, and then with another.  I need to find a co-author.  The book is in substance written, but it requires the hand and name of someone of standing other than a lawyer.

PART IV

BLURBS FOR BOOKS ON LINE

A History of the West (5 Volumes)

1.    The Ancient West

The general history of ancient Greece and Rome is traced separately and then their contribution to the West is looked at under the headings Gods, Rulers, Thinkers, Writers, Artists and Historians.  One theme recurs – in what sense was either ancient Greece or Rome civilised? 

66,000 words, fully annotated, with chronology.

2.    The Medieval West

The book covers about 1000 years from the fall of Rome to the Renaissance under the headings the Spectres of Dante and the Pilgrims of Chaucer; Mohammed and Charlemagne; Saint Augustine and Saint Aquinas; Serfs and Peasants; Lords and Vassals; Soldiers and Priests; Knights and Lords; Kings and Popes; Crusaders and Charlatans; and Lawyers and Judges.

45,000 words fully annotated.

3.    The West Awakes

This book deals with three phases of the history of the West (now including the US) known as the Renaissance, the Reformation, and the Enlightenment.  The rebirth commenced largely in Florence.  It was followed by what was traditionally called the High Renaissance centred in Rome.  The spiritual Reformation exploded hotly in Germany.  It was followed by a very cold version in Geneva.  Typically, the English went their own perverse non-European way.  There the reformation had almost nothing to do with religion, and everything to do with politics.  History has not paid enough attention to the impact of this attainment of religious Home Rule on the later revolutions in England.

Volume 3 of A History of the West goes beyond the Renaissance to the Enlightenment.  The German philosopher, Kant, said that enlightenment is our emergence from our self-incurred immaturity.  The Enlightenment is the name given to the period following the events under the umbrella of renaissance and reformation when thinkers and artists focussed more on man than gods, and the quest for freedom became doctrinaire.  The book also looks at German classical music and the birth of the U S.

The book follows all these themes through the life stories of the main players.  

65,000 words, and fully annotated.

4.    Revolutions in the West

Five revolutions made the modern West.  The English have an unchallenged genius for deniable, incremental change, in a constitution which they built up over a thousand years or so, but even they had two authentic revolutions, one in 1641 and one in 1689, and they had a gruesome civil war in between.  Additionally, we shall look at the American War of Independence (starting in 1776), the French Revolution (starting in 1789) and the Russian Revolution (starting in 1917). 

The recurring theme is the willingness of those who get into a club to slam the door in the faces of those coming after them.  People who think that the glimmer called the Arab Spring could be dealt with inside, say, five generations may wish to reflect on the English experience, or the Russian, or even the agony of France for the century after 1789, or the guilt of the United States before it was purged by its Civil War – and then after.

This book first looks at the old regimes before each revolution, the crises in those regimes, and then looks separately at the five overthrows.  The book looks in detail at the terror in two of them, and draws conclusions about revolutions elsewhere. 

Volume 4 of A History of the West is 74,000 words fully annotated.

5.    Twentieth Century West

We will now look at the completion of the industrial revolution and the current onset of the technological revolution (which is destroying minds, manners, and jobs); the horror of peoples’ wars and nuclear weapons; a world depression and the threat of a recurrence of economic collapse; the popular sterility of modernism in the arts apart from jazz; the claimed death of God, and the complete absence of any alternative, and the humiliation of a world church; the rise of professional sport as a business and as the new opium of the masses; the appalling moral collapse of three entirely ‘civilized’ nations (Italy, Germany, and Spain); the depravity of three of the most evil people in history (Lenin, Stalin, and Hitler – Mao is outside our field); the way that Einstein and computers can leave us feeling powerless in a world that we now have to take on trust; wins and losses on racism; the challenges of what will be the dominant religion, Islam, the faith of the East, and what will be the strongest economic power, China; the mediocrity and possible seizing up of democracy; the extinction of the aristocracy, and the movement of wealth from land to capital; the growing divide between rich and poor; and what some see as the closing of the western mind, the emptiness of its art, and the failure of its pillars and institutions.

We shall look at these questions while looking at the lives of Kaiser Wilhelm, Henrik Ibsen, Henry Ford, Lloyd George, Edith Cavell, Albert Einstein, James Joyce, John Maynard Keynes, Sigmund Freud, Joseph Stalin, Louis Armstrong, Francisco Franco, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Pablo Picasso, Charles de Gaulle, Harry Truman, Walt Disney, Elvis Presley, John Kennedy, Maria Callas, Muhammad Ali, Margaret Thatcher, Silvio Berlusconi, Bill Gates, and Angela Merkel.  The American weighting is not surprising in what we now call the American century.  We shall additionally look separately at the following issues: The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich; Two Economic Crashes; The Rule of Law and Racism; The Technological Revolution; Annihilation; and, The Death of God, Sport, and Manners?

This is volume 5 in A History of the West.  The book is 95,000 words.  It is fully annotated.

Parallel Trials

This book considers the two most raked over trials in history – Socrates and Christ.  It looks at them in tandem under the following headings: Sources; Powers; Laws; Accused; Teachings; Accusers; Courts; Charges; Prosecutions; Defences; Verdicts; Reactions; Conclusions; History; Responsibility.

No other book has analysed either trial in such a way.  In order to keep some kind of narrative going for both trials, some of the more controversial issues in the trial of Jesus are looked at in detail in Appendices.  They set out the relevant terms of one of the gospels and give some comments on the difficulties that flow from them, and raise questions like: Was it blasphemy for Jesus to claim to be the son of God?  Could the Sanhedrin have enforced a death sentence?  Can we say what actually happened?

The evidence for the ‘trial’ of Jesus is very thin.  It looks like there was a Jewish charge of blasphemy and a Roman finding of sedition:  There was evidence of the first but not the second.  What is clear is that the accused offered no defence to any charge against him – except perhaps when he said ‘My kingdom is not of this world’.  What is less well recognised is that Socrates in substance offered no defence either.  As a defence to either charge against Socrates, the Apology is demonstrably fallacious in logic.  Socrates then invited the death penalty by his submission on penalty.

The book aims to be an independent analysis of the evidence and law and the procedure for each trial by a practising lawyer who does not profess any relevant faith.  The final appendix gives extracts from books of two distinguished judges on either side – Christian and Jewish – which accounts are obviously disfigured by bias. 

The work is fully annotated.  It is about 71,000 words.

The German Nexus

This book of 27,000 words has three essays on the impact of Germany on England.  The Anglo-Saxons were the first English, coming from Germany with the seeds of the language and kingship, and the glimmer of individualism.  Two Germans did not take root in England, although their influence was very great elsewhere – the second essay looks at why Luther and Kant had no impact and the great difference in thinking in the two countries.  The third traces the history of the current royal house which came from Germany.  The three essays, which are fully annotated, look at themes I have looked at in detail elsewhere.  It is deliberately idiosyncratic.

The English Difference? The Tablets of their Laws

Why are the English so different to and difficult for Europe?  This is a history of the English constitutional story from Anglo-Saxon times to now for the general public or for lawyers.  Germans (410-1066) deals with Anglo-Saxon kings and dooms up to the Conquest.  The English did not, like the rest of Europe, accept Roman law.  Barons (to 1399) covers Magna Carta, on which most subsequent English legal history is just a commentary, and the birth of Parliament and a legal profession.  Protestants (to 1603) sees English Home Rule, which legal historians underrate, and the rise of Parliament and the judges.  Gentry (to 1776) shows a century of conflict where the Stuart kings faced king-breakers from hell like Cromwell, leading to the Bill of Rights, which the Americans sent back as the Declaration of Independence.  Shopkeepers (to 1911) sees parliamentary party democracy as we know it after the crisis of the People’s Budget of Lloyd George and Winston Churchill.  Women (to 2014) covers universal suffrage, the accession of women and workers, and the current development of the rule of law.  Reference throughout is made to the present, and to comparable events in Europe and the U S.  The author is not British, but he has written extensively on the history of law and ideas.  The book of 48,000 words is fully annotated.

Terror and the Police State: Punishment as a Measure of Despair

This book looks at terror and terrorism, and its cause or effect, the police state.  It is a proper subject of study now.  This book therefore looks at a comparison of the role played by terror in France, Russia, and Germany, during the periods referred to.  After setting the scene, the book proceeds under these headings: enduring emergency; righteousness; good bye to the law; the instruments of terror; waves of terror; degradation; secret police; surveillance; denunciation; fear; popular courts and show trials; scapegoats, suspicion, and proof; gulags; propaganda, religion, and cults; the numbers; and the horror.  The book concludes by trying to describe common threads in the three regimes, and with something like a plea for Robespierre.

The book does not deal with the Holocaust.  I have enough on my plate already – sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof – but it may help in trying to understand that moral landslide to see the extent to which it might be related to the evils that are discussed in this book, which I now commend to you, my reader.

The book is 113,000 words and fully annotated.

It was painfully hard to write – and is not easy to read.

A Tale of Two Nations: Uncle Sam from Down Under

This book plots in outline the histories of the US and Australia.  This is not a potted history of either, but a collection of snapshots of each taken side by side as these nations negotiated some of the principal stepping stones in their progress across the stream of history.  I have the pious hope that the selection of the subject matter of the snapshots may be uncontroversial if not prosaic, leaving discussion only for the inferences to be drawn and comments that might be made, but experience suggests that such a hope is likely to be illusory and hardly pious.

Both America and Australia started out as refuges for boat people, two terms of abuse now in some quarters, but although they share an original common ancestor, their stories are very different.  How, and why, is this the case?

I should disclose my sources of prejudice.  I am an Australian white male, middle class professional, who is much closer to death than birth.  I have no political affiliation, but I have a mistrust of government in general, and politicians and their parties in particular.  My perfect government is one that has as little to do with me as is decently possible – especially the part that hands out speeding tickets.  I have made a handsome living from a profession that we in this country derive from England.  I have an unlimited sense of admiration for the contribution that England has made to the civilization of the West and to the history and character of both America and Australia, and an almost equally unlimited frustration at the inability of my nation to cut what I see as the apron strings tying Australia to England, and to stand on its own two feet.  A dark cloud hangs over my descent into the dust – that I shall leave this earth before my country gets what I regard as its independence. 

I have no belief in a personal God, but I believe that the Ten Commandments and the Sermon on the Mount are a little like cutlery – they are what distinguish us from the gorillas.  As the white people took America and Australia, they committed crimes against the native peoples of those lands in ways that violated every part of the great religious laws that I have mentioned, but in common with most other people, I have no real idea of what to do about those wrongs now.

Doubtless other of my prejudices will become apparent to you as you go through this book, which I hope that you will enjoy.

The book is 100,000 words and fully annotated.

Looking down the Well: Papers on Legal History

The book has 18 essays or notes on the legal and constitutional history of England that underpins all common law countries.  The essays are annotated.  The book is 95,000 words.

A great English judge, Lord Devlin, said that the ‘English jury is not what it is because some lawgiver so decreed, but because that is the way it has grown up’.  That is so true of almost every part of our law.  Our law is its history.  This is why anyone claiming to be a real lawyer, and not just a bean-counter or meter-watcher, needs to get hand to hand with our legal history.  It is a rollicking story going for more than a thousand years of a people with a genius for law-making while pretending that they were doing no such thing.  It is the story of how the world got its only workable way of protecting people against bullies and each other – whether in the form of government or at large. 

That which took a millennium to construct could be washed down the drain in a generation.  We have already trashed two vital parts of our governance – responsible government, and an independent civil service – and we have been scandalously weak in standing up for juries.  These failings come in large part because we have chosen to forget and then betray our heritage.  Sadly, I see no prospect of that decline being reversed.

Some History Papers: Essays on Modern History in England and Europe

These papers were written between 2008 and 2015.  They relate to what we call the modern history of Europe and Britain.  Some were written in or as a result of Summer Schools at Cambridge and Oxford.  For example, the two pieces under the heading Foretelling Armageddon were first written as course notes at Clare College Cambridge, and now can be found in the fifth volume of A History of the West.

Five of the essays deal with the two big questions that have followed me for fifty years – how did France and Germany, two of the most civilised nations on earth, succumb to their total moral collapses, and with such frightful consequences for the rest of the world?  If you are being raped or killed by a soldier, do you care about the motives of those who sent him.

Three of the pieces deal with issues in Stuart England, and all come from Summer Schools.  My notes on Cromwell come from a remarkable weekender at Cambridge taught by Dr David Smith; those on the Stuart parliaments come from a week at Oxford taught by Dr Andrew Lacey.  The story of the Treaty of Dover should be told in a play or film.

There is a long look at the very flawed views on the Atom Bomb of A C Grayling, who might just be too busy to be able to indulge in scholarship, and a piece on the great story of Lloyd George and Winston Churchill on the People’s Budget – at a time when politics had real leaders.  The piece on witch hunts is the oldest, but the bullying of the majority is still just as threatening.

These are contributions by a lawyer and a legal historian whose professional training teaches him to proceed by example, and to look at what goes on elsewhere.  I hope that you enjoy them.

128,000 words.  The major essays are annotated.

Listening to Historians: What is truth?

To write history is to tell a story.  The better the story, the better the history.  There are two parts to telling a story – stating what happened; and choosing how you will describe those events.  If you tell the story well, the reader will hardly notice the distinction. 

The rise of the professional historian has moved the focus to what happened from how those events are described – the focus is on evidence, rather than style.  The writers, or historians, have brought this change on.  The readers do not like it.  They like their stories to be well told.  They want to listen to the stories.  For that they want to read good writing.

This book is loaded with good writing – not by me, but by some of the best writers in the West.  There is a good spread in time and place – five British (Gibbon, Carlyle, Macaulay, Maitland, and Namier), three French (Michelet, Taine, and Bloch), two Germans (Ranke and Mommsen), one Dutchman (Geyl), one Greek (Thucydides), one Italian (Tacitus), these last two being ancient, and one Swiss (Burkhardt).

The book concludes by considering truth in history and meaning in art.

Historians are fond of talking about what history is.  They might better ask why people read it.  Do people read history so that they might know more or be better informed about the past?  Do they read it to gain insight into and some connexion with other people?  Or do they read it just for pleasure?  Do they read to listen?

The book is 55,000 words and is fully annotated.

Events in France 1789-1794

There was no such thing as the French Revolution.  That is just a label that we apply to events in France during a period from 1789 to whatever date the speaker chooses.  This book seeks to look at the main events through the eyes of someone trained in English law and philosophy and in English constitutional and legal history.  It is very much an exercise in comparative law and history.  It compares the French experience with revolution to those experienced in England, America, and Russia.  It compares the regime of terror in France to those in Communist Russia and Nazi Germany.  Once the scene has been set, the book seeks to give narrative sense to the main events and give pen portraits of the main players.  It contains a plea on behalf of Robespierre.  It also looks at the subsequent agony of France in the 19th century.  Its chapter headings are: Prologue; Terms of Engagement; Outline of Events; The old regime; The English Comparison; The American Example; The Enlightenment – French and English Minds Compared; The crisis in France; Bliss was it that day to be alive; The revolt that never ended; The Terror; The horror; A plea for Robespierre; The endless agony of France; Epilogue; Further reading; and Sources and Notes.

I have drawn extensively on previous books of mine about the revolutions in England, America, France and Russia; the differences in the legal and philosophical histories of England and France; and in particular on the book Terror and the Police State; Punishment as a Measure of Despair.  The market on all this reached saturation decades ago, but I am not aware of another comparative legal and philosophical analysis like that in this book. 

The book is 90,000 words and it is fully annotated.

Four Characters in Search of their History

Fox, Danton, Pitt, and Robespierre

During the period of the events that we know as the French Revolution, the paths of two Englishmen crossed with those of two Frenchmen.  They were Charles James Fox (1749 to 1806), Georges-Jacques Danton (1759 to 1794), William Pitt (1759 to 1806), and Maximilien Robespierre (1758 to 1794).

The two Englishmen were born into the purple.  The father of each was successful in politics.  Pitt the Elder, as he is known, was Prime Minister of England, and seen to be a great one.  The elder Fox was more of a party machine man.  Both of these fathers died ennobled. 

The fathers of the two French men were both middle-class and in the law.  Neither of them had had any real role in politics.  Only one of the English men studied law, although it was unusual for Englishmen going into politics not to do so then – but the family of each gave him a head start.  Both the Frenchmen trained in the law and practised in it. 

Fox and Pitt were destined to go into politics – neither Danton nor Robespierre may have done so but for the French Revolution.  The Englishmen were products of their class.  The Frenchmen were products of their times.

Pitt and Robespierre got to the top of the greasy pole when they were very young.  Pitt became Prime Minister at the absurdly young age of 24.  Robespierre never got to the nominal top rank – there was none after the king was executed – but there is no doubt that he was the most powerful man in France at the time of his death.  Danton and Fox both became popular leaders and for a brief time each of them held high office, but neither was as successful in politics as his opposite number.  And just as Fox was the opposite number for Pitt, so Danton was the opposite number for Robespierre. 

Both Pitt and Robespierre were puritanical and sexually abstinent, if not sexless.  The reverse was the case for both Fox and Danton – their love life was as full as it was uninhibited.  And you can see a similar division in their politics.  Pitt and Robespierre were straight down the line doctrinaire party men.  Fox and Danton were far freer spirits – so much less bound to platform or party, and prepared to use their considerable powers of persuasion to go straight to the people.

The ambitions for office of Pitt and Robespierre were much stronger and much more focussed than those of Fox and Danton.  The latter would act as if they did not want to be in the fight when it did not suit them.

In today’s terms, Pitt and Robespierre might be described as conservatives, while Fox and Danton might be described as liberal or perhaps left-leaning.  And the latter two had that propensity that we so often see in free-spirited liberals or left-leaning politicians – they had some kind of death-wish which would surface from time to time and harm their cause, and eventually destroy them.

This book looks at the way these four lives intersected.  There are striking similarities in the differences between two political leaders on either side of the Channel.  It is a way of comparing the histories of France and England.  It looks at the contributions made by Pitt and Fox on slavery and the break between Fox and Burke.  The breach between Danton and Robespierre was of course fatal to both.

The book is 52,000 words and has two time-lines as appendices.

Some Men of Genius

The Oxford English Dictionary gives the following for ‘genius’:

Natural intellectual power of an exalted type; extraordinary capacity for imaginative creation, original thought, invention, or discovery.

The editors also suggest that the notion of ‘talent’ is to be distinguished.

All but three of the portraits in this book have appeared in one or other book of mine, but to collect them in one volume may serve to illustrate the meaning of the word.

For those who like categories, the thirty men could be grouped as follows: science, 6 (Galileo, Newton, Darwin, Freud, Einstein, and Bohr), music, 5 (Mozart, Beethoven, Verdi, Armstrong and Presley), drama and poetry, 4 (Aeschylus, Milton, Shakespeare, and Ibsen), novel, 3 (Cervantes, Tolstoy, and Joyce), art, 3 (El Greco, Goya and Turner), religion, 2 (Jesus and Bonhoeffer), philosophy, 2 (Spinoza and Kant), statesmen, 2 (Augustus and Lincoln), history, 1 (Gibbon), economics, 1 (Keynes), and sport, 1 (Ali).

We need not get into demarcation disputes about the standing of men of faith in this group – there can be no doubt of the standing of our two in the world at large – and of course there are many other geniuses in our history who could have been nominated.  The thirty men we have here should give us some idea of what it means to be a genius.

Windows on Shakespeare

This book is an introduction to the world of Shakespeare.  Chapter 1 is headed ‘A Writer in Time and Space’ and puts Elizabethan England in its context in the evolution of western theatre starting with Greece, and looks at Elizabethan education and theatre, and tells all that we know of the life of Shakespeare (which isn’t much).  Chapter 2 contains a note on each of the thirty-eight plays (averaging about 2000 words on each play, but loaded heavily in favour of the most played and celebrated pieces).  Chapter 3 offers an overview of the plays in groups – Problem, Romance, History, Classical, Comedies, and Tragedies.  Chapter 4 gives a commentary on the ranges of recordings available, and includes a catalogue of recordings on cassette, CD and DVD.  Chapter 5 looks at the greatest players of Shakespeare on stage and screen.  Chapter 6 looks at the main streams of literary criticism from time to time.  Chapter 7 concludes with general observations on this genius and his continuing presence in our life.  There are no footnotes, but references are given at the end of each chapter, or note on a play (in chapter 2). 

The book is about 98,000 words.  No other handbook of Shakespeare is structured like it.

Glimpses of Shakespeare

Twenty essays about the playwright.  70,000 words.

More Glimpses of Shakespeare

The same.

Some Literary Papers: Tilting at Windmills

These essays and notes come from the last five years or so.  They come from a lawyer and they do not claim to be works of scholarship.  I have written elsewhere about Shakespeare, great writing in history, and our great novels.  About half of the present pieces relate to Shakespeare, some in an anecdotal manner, although the grip of the Big Four goes on.  Most of these have been published by the Melbourne Shakespeare Society.  The other pieces relate to other kinds of writing, from cooking to crime, but with a few on novels.  The two substantive essays deal with great peaks in our literature – the role of Achilles and Satan in our two greatest epics, and our two greatest characters, Falstaff and Don Quixote. 

If you said that the whole book was Quixotic, I would be happy.

82,000 words.  Some essays are annotated.

The Humility of Knowledge: Five Geniuses and God

This book considers the relations between God and Spinoza, Hume, Kant, Gibbon and Wittgenstein.  The Foreword says:

‘These five thinkers represent the flower of the Western Enlightenment or philosophy.  They maintained that religious belief or faith was a no-fly zone for philosophy.  That simple proposition seems obvious enough to most people.  You do not get to the bottom of God by using logic any more than you get to the bottom of Michelangelo, Mozart, or Melbourne Storm by using logic.  But here is this simple proposition being laid down as a matter of logic by the biggest hitters that philosophy has known.  That leaves two questions.  On what grounds do some philosophers – not noticeably the most humble or tolerant of them – say that they can dictate to others what they should or should not believe about God?  If philosophers succeed in abolishing God, what, apart from that abolition, will philosophy have to show for itself for the two thousand years’ efforts since Aristotle?’

The issue is discussed sequentially for the five thinkers under the headings Times, Lives, Teachings, Reactions, and Beliefs.  There are three general chapters and a chapter ‘Other Geniuses and God’: Milton, Newton, Bach, Mozart, Goethe, Darwin, Tolstoy, Holmes, Yeats and Einstein.  Most of the subjects have a generosity of mind and spirit that is sufficient to put intolerant and dogmatic God abolishers in the shade.

There are no footnotes, but the book is fully annotated.  It is about 50,000 words.

Different Minds: Why are English and European Lawyers so Different?

By looking at the comparative legal and political histories of England, France, Germany and the U S, and at the great differences in philosophy on either side of the Channel, this book looks at the variations in the way that European lawyers think compared to Anglo-American lawyers.  This book is essential for any lawyer who wants to be more than a bean counter.  There are as well chapters on rights, lawyers, jurists, trials and judgments.  The author has written on many of these themes elsewhere.  He has practised law for more than forty years and has presided over statutory tribunals for thirty years.  He has reflected on a lot of the issues raised in this book in many summer schools at Oxford and Cambridge, and one at Harvard.  He has practised at the Bar and in a major international firm, and has been briefed in the U K and the U S.

The book is 47,000 words and is fully annotated.

Confessions of a Baby Boomer

This book is an autobiographical memoir of the author.  It goes through to when I turned 30.  Eleven days later, Gough Whitlam, the PM, got sacked.  Innocence, if not paradise, was lost.  The book is meant to give a snapshot of what it was like to grow up in a very different Australia – if you were born here at the end of the War.  References are made to outside political and sporting events, and to social customs and consumer habits to round out the picture.  One theme is the difference between three generations.  My parents, Mac and Norma, left school at about 13, and had to survive the depression and a real war; they got by with hard work and saving and a very pinched way of life, with both of them in work; they looked for their reward in the next generation rather than in a frugal retirement; they knew the value of money and saving. 

My generation was not tested by a depression or a real war; we grew up in God’s country and we had everything before us – there were hardly limits to what we could achieve; we came into money, and we forgot its value and purpose. 

‘We baby boomers had enjoyed our day in the sun.  We had taken what was on offer when the war ended.  We actually got to walk along what Churchill called the broad sunlit uplands.  This was a promised land, it had been promised to us, and we had been cocooned in it.’ 

But the next generation looks very different – they grew up amid at least the trappings of wealth and an image of an urbane lifestyle as we sought to cast off the cringe (while clinging grimly to the Queen) and give them the best, but these children did not seem to be looking at a world of opportunity; au contraire, they were looking at threats and broken illusions.  My conclusion is that my generation were ‘the luckiest bastards alive’, and I doubt whether we have done all that we could to redeem the faith that our parents put in us. 

Since this is a personal memoire, there are no footnotes.  This book is nearly 40,000 words.

Confessions of a Barrister: Learning the Law

This is a memoire of the professional life of an Australian baby boomer as a lawyer. The author has practised law for more than forty years as a barrister or solicitor, and has presided over one or another statutory tribunal for thirty years.  Of late he has concentrated on his writing in history, literature, and philosophy.  He has learned much from many summer schools at Cambridge, Harvard, and Oxford.

The author wanted to thank those other lawyers who have helped him as a lawyer, and to try to pass on to others the lessons that he has learned in practising law in various ways.  The book is dedicated to the idea that the required professional skill and attitude only come from vocation and experience, and that a good life is open to those who are prepared to put in the time and effort, to acquire the judgment, and to show the loyalty and courage that membership of this profession calls for.

Aspects of the boyhood and youth of an Australian baby boomer may be seen in a companion volume, Confessions of a baby boomer.  64,000 words.

Summers at Oxford and Cambridge and Elsewhere

A traveller’s reflection on history and philosophy- and place

Reflections on Summer Schools at Oxford and Cambridge, and visits to Scotland and Europe, and on the subjects taught, including opera, history and philosophy.  There are essays on the philosophy of religion and Cromwell, but most of the writing is of contemporaneous impressions of Berlin, Paris, London and Scotland.  41,000 words.

Up Your North

The Kimberley and Kakadu: A Seniors’ Guide from Broome to Darwin in 14 days by 4WD

A personal diary of a trip from Broome to Darwin in 14 days by a lawyer and writer in a 4WD with commentary on the outback and people living there and advice on how to avoid the mistakes of the author.  17,000 words.  Humour is guaranteed. 

Dreamtime of a White Ghost-Seer

A whimsical walkabout of a white man through life at law and history, theatre, sport and life.  A source book for The Pursuit of Happiness.  I enjoyed every bit of it – all good luck – and some fearful gutsers.  (71,000 words.)

Why Opera? 

A gentle introduction to operafor those who like me cannot read music but don’t want to run into snobs.  Practical advice on how to get into enjoying the best that technology can offer – at such little cost for such a fine result.

(28,000 words.)

PART V

INDICES OF BOOKS READY FOR PUBLICATION

The War against Humanity

PRELUDE

FOREWORD

The Principle of Humanity

  1. Our present discontents
  2. Insult to the brain

Some Sad Tales from inside the War Zone

The Rogues’ Gallery: Qantas, NAB, ASIC, Avis, Fines Victoria, Telstra, Cunard, Bendigo Bank, Foxtel, Centrelink.

  • Symptoms or causes?

Underlying assumptions; Assumptions refuted; Looking after you and yours; The intellectual vacuum; The emptiness of parties; Good night, sweet think tanks; The queer conservatives; A failure of education; A failure of trust; One way traffic; The invisible hand; Battle fatigue; Who would want the job?; Deceit; The dollar.

  • The failure of responsible government

The Westminster System – the uncivil service – the failure of the two-party system – the lethal collapse of the opposition – the Robodebt Royal Commission – submission to the Commission.

  • The failure of corporate governance

Who is in charge?

  • An American Interlude

Tourneau Bucherer and WatchBox

  • Losing your freedom to robots

Losing your livelihood in a process untouched by a visible hand

  • Robots and Managing Agents
  • So what?
  • A personal lament

Getting a slap in the face for doing the right thing.

  1. Saving our souls

Are we without hope?

EPILOGUE

A failure of confidence.

APPENDIX

A continuing running sore with the robots.

NOTES

The Adversarial Trial – Gone with the Wind

Fighting Cases

Deciding Cases

Two libel actions compared

The Law of Evidence and the Mess We Are In

Remarks on Law, War, and Leadership

Epilogue

Notes

The Pursuit of Happiness

  1. What is a profession?
  2. What I believe
  3. Essentials in life

Writing and history

A Curated Library

The philosophy of football

Theatre and music

The philosophy of slow cooking

Art and décor

A wine cellar

  • Diversions in life

Seeing the world

Continuing education

Out and about

Indulgences

Regrets

  • People and thoughts

Some sayings that I live with

Some people of influence

Epilogue

The Basics of Investing

FOREWORD

PART 1 LAW

  1. Basic concepts

Contract – trust – incorporation – agency and positions of trust –fiduciaries  fair play – commission and ethics– money and wealth – probability and risk – differences person to person – fallibility –conclusions

  • Corporate securities

Companies – shares – debentures and bonds – equity or debt?

  • More on corporate securities

Hybrids – ETF’s – options and futures – returns (yields) on bonds and interest rates – interest rates and share prices – conclusions

  • Taxation

Income tax – avoidance and evasion – tax deductible contributions – low income tax on fund – income tax relief on dividends – tax free after 60

  • Duties of agents and trustees

Reputation of Wall Street – fiduciary duties – hypotheticals – trustees

  • Commission

Conflicts of interest – secret commission

PART II INVESTING

  • Kinds of investment

Real property, gold, annuities

  • Superannuation in Australia

Industry funds – self-managed funds – actuarial projections

  • Investing for beginners I: Sense and stability

Investing – active/passive – anxiety about the future (the unknown) is natural – no investment is free of risk – investors choose the level of risk that they are comfortable with – investment and speculation are different – you seek to manage risk by care in selecting the property to be bought – you also seek to minimise risk by spreading your holdings – the risk that you are managing is not that the price of your shares may fall – the big risk is that the business will fail, not that the price of shares may fall – volatility is not risk – fluctuations in share prices do not really affect sensible long term investors – there are fall-backs – it therefore makes sense to buy good securities and to hold them – conclusions

  1. Investing for beginners II: Greed and stupidity

Eggs in one basket – ignoring risk or defying reality – false science and falser security – yielding to seduction – changing times for different results – tipsters and touts – the herd mentality – getting out of your depth- beating the house – short termism – rose coloured glasses – the need for a story or to see a pattern – fallacies of hope – the answer

  1. Equity v Debt; Dividends v Fixed Interest

Spreading wealth – the search for yield – an owner or creditor of the business?

  1. Five investors on Index Funds

Graham, Zweig, Bogle, Buffett, Malkiel

  1. Shifts in the Economy and the Markets

The Great Crash and the Depression – the Credit Squeeze – Volatile Stock Markets – the Great Financial Crisis – the Covid Crash

  1. Corporate Collapses and Criminals

Trustees and Executors – Alan Bond – Christopher Skase – Pyramid – Adsteam – Tricontinental

PART III MECHANICS

  1. Regulators

ASX – ASIC – APRA – ATO

  1. Financial advisers

Types of advisers – Amber Lights and Red Lights – The Answer – ASIC Website on Financial Advisers

PART IV CONCLUSIONS

  1. Summary

The legal basics are comprehensible – trustees can manage the risks in investing in corporate securities – history favours the Stock Exchange, at least in the long run – whether you want to run your own fund is a matter for you – finally, at least think of index funds – a legal train wreck – conclusion.

APPENDIX A:  Returns (yields) on bonds and interest rates

APPENDIX B:  Interest rates and share prices

Notes

FURTHER READING

CONTENTS OF A CURATED LIBRARY – FOUR VOLUMES

VOLUME I

FOREWORD

  1. THE ILIAD, Homer
  2. THE FRENCH REVOLUTION, Thomas Carlyle
  3. WUTHERING HEIGHTS, Emily Brontë
  4. FAUST, Goethe
  5. THE ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF THE PEACE, J M Keynes
  6. THE TRIAL, Franz Kafka
  7. LIFE OF THE MOZART, Edward Holmes
  8. THE HISTORY OF THE PELOPONNESIAN WAR, Thucydides
  9. ULYSSES, James Joyce
  10. HISTORY OF ENGLAND IN 18TH CENTURY, T B Macaulay
  11. THE CRITIQUE OF PURE REASON, Immanuel Kant
  12. ROIS ET SERFS, Marc Bloch
  13. THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES, Charles Darwin
  14. HISTORY OF FLY FISHING FOR TROUT, John Waller Hills
  15. LETTERS FROM PRISON, Dietrich Bonhoeffer
  16. PARADISE LOST, John Milton
  17. A HISTORY OF WESTERN PHILOSOPHY, Bertrand Russell
  18. TWO PLAYS, Anton Chekhov
  19. ENQUIRIES CONCERNING HUMAN UNDERSTANDING, Hume
  20. FOUR PLAYS, Henrik Ibsen
  21. TRACTATUS THEOLOGICO-POLITICUS, Spinoza
  • THE DAM BUSTERS, Paul Brickhill
  • FOUR QUARTETS, T S Eliot
  • SPEECHES, Winston Churchill
  • OLD GORIOT, Honoré de Balzac
  • MONSIGNOR QUIXOTE, Graham Greene
  • BILLY BUDD, Herman Melville
  • AMERICAN MUSICIANS, Whitney Bailliett
  • MEMOIRS OF MY LIFE, Edward Gibbon
  • F W MAITLAND, G R Elton
  • ABSALOM! ABSALOM!, William Faulkner
  • ENGLAND IN THE AGE OF REVOLUTION, Lewis Namier
  • CANNERY ROW, John Steinbeck
  • LETTERS FROM A WALKING TOUR, John Keats
  • LITERARY WORKS, Abraham Lincoln
  • ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST, Ken Kesey
  • SONNETS, William Shakespeare
  • FRENCH PROVINCIAL COOKING, Elizabeth David
  • THE LEOPARD, Giuseppe di Lampedusa
  • FIVE LESSONS, Ben Hogan
  • EL GRECO, F Gray Griswold
  • PROMETHEUS BOUND, Aeschylus
  • KIM, Rudyard Kipling
  • VERDI, George Martin
  • ANNALS AND HISTORIES, Tacitus
  • DON QUIXOTE, Cervantes
  • CASABLANCA, Epstein and Koch
  • THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND, Jane Austen
  • WAR AND PEACE, Lev Tolstoy
  • BEOWULF, (trans) Seamus Heaney

AFTERWORD

(A breakdown of the fifty books here is as follows: novels, 18; history, 10; poetry, 5; drama, 3; art, 3; opera (and ballet), 3; science, 2; philosophy, 1;economics, 1; music, 1; wine, 1; cars,1; and sport, 1.) 

VOLUME II

FOREWORD

  1. MADAME BOVARY, Gustave Flaubert
  2. THE OFFSHORE ISLANDERS, Paul Johnson
  3. HEART OF DARKNESS, Joseph Conrad
  4. SOLTI ON SOLTI, Sir Georg Solti
  5. A HISTORY OF ROME, Theodore Mommsen
  6. HUCKLEBERRY FINN, Mark Twain
  7. WAITING FOR GODOT, Samuel Beckett
  8. A REMARKABLE POLITICIAN, Stefan Zweig
  9. THE THIRD MAN, Grahame Green
  10. RIDERS IN THE CHARIOT, Patrick White
  11. THREE PLAYS, David Williamson
  12. DOMBEY AND SON, Charles Dickens
  13. THE LORD OF THE FLIES, W Golding
  14. COLLECTED POEMS, Philip Larkin
  15. CULTURE AND VALUES, L Wittgenstein
  16. COLLECTED POEMS, W H Auden
  17. NEWTON TERCENTARY CELEBRATIONS, E N Andrade (Editor)
  18. ALI, A LIFE, Jonathon Eig
  19. DEBATES WITH HISTORIANS, Pieter Geyl
  20. A FAREWELL TO ARMS, Ernest Hemingway
  21. MANNING CLARK’S HISTORY OF AUSTRALIA, Michael Cathcart (abridged)
  22. SELECTED POEMS, W B Yeats
  23. VOICES: SINGERS AND CRITICS, J B Steane
  24. OUR FIRST ART, National Gallery of Victoria
  25. ON WAR, Von Clausewitz
  26. THE CIVILISATION OF THE RENAISSANCE IN ITALY, Jacob Burckhardt
  27. COLLECTED PLAYS, Arthur Miller
  28. LINCOLN, Gore Vidal
  29. SCARLET AND BLACK, Stendhal
  30. CANTERBURY TALES, Geoffrey Chaucer
  31. DOCTOR ZHIVAGO, B Pasternak
  32. MARK ROTHKO, FROM THE INSIDE OUT, Chris Rothko
  33. SONS AND LOVERS, D H Lawrence
  34. MELBOURNE, Mark Strizic and Emma Matthews
  35. PLAYS, Euripides
  36. LORD OF THE RINGS, J R R Tolkien
  37. NINETEEN EIGHTY-FOUR, George Orwell
  38. I DRINK, THEREFOR I AM, R Scruton
  39. IDEAS AND OPINONS, Einstein
  40. THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV, Dostoevsky
  41. JEFFREY SMART, Peter Quartermaine
  42. I MAYA PLISETSKAYA, M Plisetskaya
  43. LECTURES ON FOREIGN HISTORY, 1494-1789, J M Thompson
  44. EICHMANN IN JERUSALEM, Hannah Arendt
  45. BACH, J E Gardiner
  46. FATHERS AND SONS, I Turgenev
  47. THE MAN WHO LOVED CHILDREN, C Stead
  48. THE GREAT GATSBY, F Scott Fitzgerald
  49. LES MISÉRABLES, Victor Hugo
  50. THE WEALTH OF NATIONS, Adam Smith

VOLUME III

  1. CATCH 22, Joseph Heller
  2. THE INFERNO, Dante
  3. CONVERSTIONS WITH CARDUS, N Cardus
  4. ROB ROY, Walter Scott
  5. IUSSI, Bjorling and Farkas
  6. CLOUDSTREET, Tim Winton
  7. THE PRINCE, Machiavelli
  8. MILES, THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY, Miles Davis
  9. THE INTERPRETATION OF DREAMS, Sigmund Freud
  10. THREE COLOURS TRILOGY, Kieslowski
  11. THE OUTSIDER, A Camus
  12. MIDDLEMARCH, George Eliot
  13. SELECT POEMS, Dylan Thomas
  14. GOYA, Robert Hughes
  15. TIM STORRIER, Catherine Lumby
  16. THE WAR AT THE END OF THE WORLD, M V Llosa
  17. LA CALLAS, A Tubeuf
  18. FERRARI, Lehbrink and Schegelmilch
  19. THE CATCHER IN THE RYE, J D Salinger
  20. A LIFE LIKE OTHER PEOPLE’S, Alan Bennett
  21. THE QUEEN OF SPADES, A Pushkin
  22.  PRIME OF JEAN BRODIE, M Spark
  23. JESTING PILATE, Owen Dixon
  24. PARALLEL LIVES, Lord Bulloch
  25. THE BOYS WHO STOLE THE FUNERAL, Les Murray
  26. THE THREE MUSQUETEERS, A Dumas
  27. VARIETIES OF RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE, William James
  28. EMINENT VICTORIANS, L Strachey
  29. SYDNEY NOLAN, Barry Pearce
  30. TWELVE ILLUSTRIOUS LIVES, Plutarch
  31. BEETHOVEN, A Thayer
  32. THE LIFE OF JOHSON, J Boswell
  33. FRED WILLIAMS INFINITE HORIZONS, NGA
  34. A HISTORY OF GREECE, J B Bury
  35. PUCCINI, William Weaver
  36. THE ESSAYS OF MONTAIGNE, Seigneur de Montaigne
  37. SELECTED POEMS, W Wordsworth
  38. GAGANTUA AND PANTAGRUEL, Rabelais
  39. BARASSI, R Barassi and P McFarlane
  40. SCARAMOUCHE, Sabatini
  41. THE MAN OF PROPERTY, J Galsworthy
  42. THE SPIRIT OF THE COMMON LAW, Roscoe Pound
  43. RELIGION AND THE RISE OF CAPITALISM, R H Tawney
  44. POEMS, Shelley
  45. POEMS, Chris Wallace-Crabbe
  46. THE GREAT CRASH OF ’29: J K Galbraith
  47. THE TRIUMPH OF THE NOMAD. Geoffrey Blainey
  48. THE COMMON LAW, O W Holmes
  49. MEN AND IDEAS, Johan Huizinga
  50. POEMS, Gwen Harwood

(One breakdown is: novels, 14; history, 8; poetry, 6; music, 6; law, 3; art, 3; philosophy, 3;sport, 2; psychiatry, 1; religion, 1; theatre, 1; economics, 1; film,1.)

VOLUME IV

  1. A HISTORY OF GOD, Karen Armstrong
  2. HOLMES – POLLOCK LETTERS,  Ed M D Howe
  3. MINI & MINI COOPER, A & S Sparrow
  4. THE RING CYCLE, Richard Wagner
  5. PENSEES,R  Pascal
  6. THE HABSBURGS, Andrew Wheatcroft
  7. THE KING’S ENGLISH, Fowler
  8. THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD, J Le Carré
  9. OF HUMAN BONDAGE, Somerset Maugham
  10. ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT, E M Remarque
  11. DUKE ELLINGTON’S AMERICA, H G Cohen
  12. EDWARD HOPPER, W Schmied
  13. POWER WITHOUT GLORY, F Hardy
  14. ARTHUR BOYD, ART & LIFE, Janet McKenzie
  15. PORTRAIT OF A LADY, Henry James
  16. FOUND RECIPES OF A LOST GENERATION, S Rodriguez-Hunter
  17. DARKNESS A NOON, A Koestler
  18. REFORMATION, D MacCulloch
  19. DISRAELI, A Maurois
  20. TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD, J Reed
  21. LOLITA, V Nabokov
  22. BRIDESHEAD REVISITED, E Waugh
  23. TRUMAN, David McCullough
  24. A STROKE OF GENIUS, G Haigh
  25. THE INTELLIGENT INVESTOR, B Graham
  26. LEAVES OF GRASS, W Whitman
  27. JOHN COBURN, Lou Klepac
  28. GOODBYE TO BERLIN, C Isherwood
  29. QUATRE VINGTS NEUF, G Léfebvre
  30. SWANN’S WAY, Marcel Proust
  31. A PASSAGE TO INDIA, E M Forster
  32. BUDDENBROOKS, Thomas Mann
  33. COLLECTED POEMS, Judith Wright
  34. THE MEANING OF HITLER, S Haffner
  35. JUDE THE OBSCURE, T Hardy
  36. RENAISSANCE, W Pater
  37. THE ART OF WAR, Sun Tzu
  38. REVOLT IN THE DESERT, T E Lawrence
  39. MOHAMMED AND CHARLEMAGNE, Pirenne
  40. THE PROPER STUDY OF MANKIND, Isaiah Berlin
  41. THE REPUBLIC, Plato
  42. ON THE ROAD, J Kerouac
  43. PREFACES TO SHAKESPEARE, T Tanner
  44. THE CHAIRS, Ionescu
  45. RHETORIC, Aristotle
  46. THE FATAL SHORE, Robert Hughes
  47. THE UNBEARABLE LIGHTNESS OF BEING, M Kundera
  48. SLAUGHTERHOUSE FIVE, K Vonnegut
  49. FOR KEEPS, Pauline Kael
  50. ANCIENT LAW, Henry Maine

PART VI

SUMMARY TALLY

Published in print:       6

Published on line:       30

Ready for publication:       9

TOTAL:       45

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