Friday, October 10, 2025

Civilization?

More and more Halloween displays in my neighborhood. Coming soon: another post dedicated to them.

Halloween critters for Eileen.


A Beautifully Illustrated Cookbook

José Andrés: Zaytinya.
I haven’t tried many recipes yet, but I hope I will do more.
I have enjoyed dining at the author’s restaurants in Washington, DC.

Fattoush salad from Zaytinya. Tomatoes, cucumbers, feta cheese, croutons, radishes, bell peppers,
red onions, and herbs from our garden. Olive oil, pomegranate, and lemon dressing. (I omitted sumac because I didn’t have any.)

In 2023: our family at one of the Andres restaurants in 
Washington DC.

Two Historical Novels

I originally reviewed this book by John Shen. Yen Nee and SJ Rozan last year:
https://maefood.blogspot.com/2024/07/two-exotic-mystery-tales.html
Reading next: a newly-published sequel about the same characters.

Next book: the sequel, also featuring Judge Dee.
The Railway Conspiracy by John Shen Yen Nee and S.J.Rozan.

A Challenging Theory of Prehistory and Civilization


Luke Kemp: The History and Future of Societal Collapse.
There are so many theories of prehistory! I haven’t finished this book yet.

The early chapters of this book summarize the emergence of violence and war in human societies, which in hunter-gatherer times had tended to be very egalitarian and peaceful. I found this fascinating. Here are a couple of passages that capture the author’s ideas about the disadvantages of civilization:

“In Europe, there are no signs of war during the Palaeolithic. Around 9500 BCE, after the entry into the Holocene, evidence of lethal violence begins to become more common. After around 5500 BCE, as agriculture agriculture spreads across Europe, people settle down, and inequality intensifies; clearer indications of warfare, including fortifications, towns surrounded by ditches, and evidence of massacres, all creep upwards. The Near East follows a similar trajectory. The Natufians killed each other at low rates and didn’t conduct war. For thousands of years we find just a few skeletons with fractured skulls and embedded projectiles. Then in the seventh century BCE, perhaps the first fortification in the world – Tell Maghzaliyah in northern Mesopotamia – was constructed near a node of long-distance obsidian trade.” (p. 68)

The author points out that the increasingly dense cities that emerged not only were more violent, but also began to suffer from contagious diseases. He writes:

“Many of the plagues of the world today, such as influenza, measles, mumps, cholera, smallpox, chicken pox, and, of course, Covid-19, are all recent developments from the past ten thousand years. Our hunter-gatherer ancestors never had to endure the throaty cough of influenza or the painful and disfiguring scabs of chicken pox or smallpox, which emerged only with the advent of urbanism and agriculture. These ‘density-dependent’ diseases require intense interaction between humans and animals, something many of the earliest cities provided in abundance. Such diseases also need a sufficiently large population so they don’t burn themselves out by killing all their hosts.” (p. 89)

This is a challengingly-written and rather long book, and I’m planning to continue reading it around 100 pages at a time.

Related book reviewed in 2017

James C. Scott , Against the Grain: A Deep History of the Earliest States.
Reviewed here: 
https://maefood.blogspot.com/2017/10/against-grain-contrary-book.html

Blog post © 2025 mae sander
Shared with Deb’s Sunday Salon at Readerbuzz

25 comments:

  1. I haven't heard of these John Shen Yen Nee and SJ Rozan books. It's always good to find a new mystery. And ha ha with your neighborhood photos. It feels like some of these creatures would be better than some of the "people" Trump has put out on the streets in their masks. Hope its been a good week.

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  2. When I was a kid no one decorated outside for Halloween. Now it's everywhere and delightfully fun and spooky. (But one does wonder what aliens would say if they popped down around this time of year!). Love your diverse reading list!

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    1. @Jeanie: We do know about aliens and Halloween — remember the film ET!

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  3. I just heard an old interview with Jane Goodall, and which she was describing occasional warfare among chimpanzees. This is apparently due to a group expanding their territory. I suspect that human population growth would lead to the same dynamic.

    I find it difficult to believe that our distant ancestors were peaceful. Perhaps they were just isolated from each other. Of course, it’s quite possible that aggressive groups were more successful in increasing their numbers, eventually resulting in a more aggressive species. I’m not particularly proud of our species.

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    1. I also watched the final interview with Jane Goodall that was recorded shortly before her death, intended for broadcast only after she died. She did feel that warfare was innate in humans as in chimps. This author has a different viewpoint, based on prehistory studies rather than current observations.

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    2. Note: She died on October 1 of this year.

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  4. Here Halloween is but in the stores, nothing outside - reckon people would steal it away so: Nice to see your creepy Neighborhood! Thank you and oh, the food looks great, too! As I just bought three books "by accident" I did not go into yours....

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  5. Hello, Mae
    I love all the Halloween decorations and the Halloween critters are cute. Interesting variety of books. Thank you for linking up and sharing your post. Take care, have a great weekend. PS, thank you for leaving me a comment.

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  6. OK, you took a photo of my family. Ha ha ha.

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  7. I have never lived in a place that decorates as much for Halloween as the people around here do. Have a good week.

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  8. Your neighborhood has great Halloween spirit! The books look really good, too.

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  9. I have always loved the dressing up and candy-collecting aspects of Halloween. The scary, the bloody, the spooky---not for me.

    The History and Future of Societal Collapse sounds fascinating. I'll see if it is coming to my library.

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  10. I love decorating for the different holidays. These decorations are great!

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  11. Fascinating connections between civilization, disease, and war. And that Fattoush is seriously making me hungry! Enjoy the sequel!

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  12. So interesting! I also love all the Halloween decorations. We're visiting our daughter for the weekend and found some fun houses here too :)

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  13. Fun Halloween decorations!
    The Fattoush salad looks yummy.

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  14. Those are quite the halloween decorations!

    You've got me very curious about The Murder of Mr. Ma and the sequel.

    Hope you have a good week!

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  15. That is a great cookbook.

    Halloween is so over the top now.

    I would be interested in what you think about that last book.

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  16. Halloween is not really a thing here but I do almost envy you the elaborate neighbourhood displays, it’s so fun!

    Wishing you a happy reading week

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  17. I love seeing how people decorate for Halloween!

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  18. The salad looks really good. And I sure hope we can hold off Societal Collapse.

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  19. I love Halloween decorations and those are fantastic. The decorations are going up in my neighborhood as well, but mostly glowing lights and those large air-filled figures. Such fun!

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  20. I love the over-the-top Halloween decorations. A few people in my neighborhood have those giant skeletons.

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  21. I love how more and more people are going all out with their Halloween decorations.

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  22. Yes, it has become very popular to decorate for Halloween. When I was growing up I don't remember seeing any- I'm going to look into the Jose Andres cookbook - looks interesting and I do like historical fiction too.
    Thanks Mae for all the reviews.

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