Builders,
In letters, several people mentioned the connection to the 1974 book “Zen and The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance” by Robert Pirsig. I first read it in 1981,when it was assigned to a friend in college, and I have returned to read it again every ten years or so. It is different each time; obviously the book never changes, just my perspective does. The novel is something of a yardstick against my thoughts.
The book is very much like “The Ugly American”, in the sense that both are endlessly used as a reference by people who have never read, or are even acquainted with the contents. Pirsig stated outright that the book has nothing to do with Buhdisim or motorcycles, it is a vigorous work of philosophy, specifically targeting the value of quality. It is widely respected as an intellectual and artistic masterpiece.
It says something about professional critics that the manuscript was rejected for publication 121 times. It has since sold 5 million copies. It is a difficult read. Pirisg has a 170 IQ, a number that happens in only 1 out of 150,000 people. He patiently explains, but does not dumb down the subject. The story line is roughly autobiographical, and he leads you through his decent into madness and the cruelty of suffering that fate in the 1960s. The immediate setting of the narrative is on a motorcycle trip with his son and two friends in the Western US. He is revisiting both the questions that drove him and the places he lived in his former life, the time before he was ill. He rides with his young son, who he fears may have the same path ahead of him.
The book’s success was not a harbinger of peace in Pirsig’s Life. His son was murdered in 1979 and Pirsig lived most of his life in seclusion, writing only one other book. He is 85 years old now and lives quietly in Maine. This strikes me as a contrast to how much light and illumination he put into countless lives of others, almost all of this for people he would never meet. -ww.
Above, Robert Pirsig and his son Chris on the trip that was reflected in the narrative. I did not see this photo until 20 years after I first read the book. Pirsig is a powerful writer, and the setting he vividly described became imprinted in my mind. When I first saw the photo I had a very strong sense that I had seen the exact spot before, although I have never been to Montana. I have returned to this photo many times and thought about how his son only lived 10 more years.
