Saturday, December 31, 2011

Best (and Worst) of 2011

As 2011 closes, a summing up is a necessary compulsion for all commentators, just as the resolve to lose those 20 pounds. Last year, I limited my list to the best fiction and nonfiction books of the year, but this year, I thought I'd expand my list a bit beyond the literary.


  • Best Nonfiction: Empire of the Summer Moon by S.C. Gwynne. There were several strong contenders in this category, including two great biographies of great American competitors: Endgame by Frank Brady, a masterful biography of the enigmatic Bobby Fischer and Wonder Girl by Don Van Patten, the captivating story about Babe Didrikson Zacharias, who may be America's greatest all time athlete. Empire of the Summer Moon, however, tops my list. It is about the Comanche tribe and the American West. It brings to life the difficulties of life on the frontier and the clash between the European settler and the warrior culture of the Comanche. The book dispels the mythical image of the Comanche as the "noble savage" and there are strong parallels between the Comanche and today's Islamic jihadists and the brutality of the conflict on the Plains.

  • Best Fiction: State of Wonder by Ann Patchett. This was the best of a weak field this year. Patchett's book was part mystery, part science fiction, part autobiography. The book centers on the journey of Marina Singh, a scientist that travels to the Amazon jungle to attempt to find the cause of the sudden death of her lab partner. She confronts an uncivilized local tribe, the hostility of the jungle and a rogue scientist along the way. Patchett is at her best describing the stifling, buggy and remoteness of the Amazon jungle.

  • Best Album: 21 by Adele. Adele blows the field away. Her rich, soulful, strong voice reminds me of a refined, trained and modern version of Janice Joplin. This woman sings from the heart and her hit "Rolling in the Deep" may be the best work I've heard in years.

  • Best Film: Okay, I admit that I don't go to as many films as I should. But of the films I did get to see, "Of Gods and Men" was clearly the best. The film is based on a true incident that occurred in Algeria in 1996 where Islamic militants murdered several Christian monks. In the film, the monks, leading a quiet, Christian life in which they tried to help the local Islamic community (but did not try to convert them). The movie raises important questions of what it means to lead a good Christian life, the extent of Christian courage, and the clash between jihadism and Christianity.

  • Best News of the Year: In 2011, we had a trifecta. Three bad actors were removed from the world stage-- Osama bin Laden (by the U.S. Navy Seals), Mohamar Gaddafi (by his own people), and Kim Jong Il (by God). Hugo Chavez, Vladimir Putin and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad are still around but 2011 put a good dent in the bad guys' starting lineup.

  • Worst News of the Year: Tough call. We had the Euro crisis and the bankruptcy of MF Global (led by super-Democrat Jon Corzine, who proved that he could do to shareholders what he did to the taxpayers of New Jersey. The Obama Administration served up the downgrade of the credit rating of the U.S., Solyndra and Fast and Furious along with the hasty retreat from Iraq. But my vote goes to the Penn State scandal, in which an administration, much like the Catholic Church, permitted young people to be violated in the most despicable way.

  • Best of America: Steve Jobs. The announcement of his death brought a tear to my eye. Jobs was an American icon and embodies what is best about this country. A self made man. A maverick. An entrepreneur. A paradigm buster. A quirky guy that would have failed in a large company. He rewrote rules and turned industries upside down. He took products that didn't exist and made them an indispensable part of the landscape. Probably the most creative mind since Thomas Edison (whose lightbulbs the liberals are trying to ban, by the way).

  • Worst of America: Occupy Wall Street. Sure, no one was happy about the fact that some people had their wealth unjustly protected in the financial collapse by the government bailouts. That was an unfortunate by-product of keeping us from bread lines. However, the OWS crowd-- that gross, unhygenic, gaggle of rabble rousers wanted more than that. Their demands basically amounted to a bunch of free stuff--- free education, free health care, free this, free that. One of America's most famous slogans, "Give me liberty or give me death," gave way to "Where's mine?" and, like their British counterparts earlier this summer, disrupted the lives and businesses of many small entrepreneurs and shop owners. On full display for all to see was the ugly reality that the term "economic justice" is code word for "government guaranteed middle class lifestyle."

For all that, the economy showed slow but steady signs of improvement, no major international crises broke out (other than the "Arab Spring" and that has yet to play itself out), and Barney Frank announced his retirement. In the end, on balance, 2011 wasn't all bad at all.