The Strange Last Voyage of Donald Crowhurst: Difference between revisions

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Tomalin and Hall’s book, which came out within a year of the original event, is an expertly pieced-together and beautifully written forensic study of the whole awful saga, and charts sympathetically and extensively Crowhurst’s descent into what they assume (plausibly enough to me) to have been a form of paranoid schizophrenia by the end of his life. The relation of Crowhurst’s final plunge into the abyss, and his final burst of energy in recording his cosmic revelation is by turns dreadful and somehow uplifting: here is a hero going out in true [[Nietzsche|Nietzschean]] style with the psychology of the tragic poet:  
Tomalin and Hall’s book, which came out within a year of the original event, is an expertly pieced-together and beautifully written forensic study of the whole awful saga, and charts sympathetically and extensively Crowhurst’s descent into what they assume (plausibly enough to me) to have been a form of paranoid schizophrenia by the end of his life. The relation of Crowhurst’s final plunge into the abyss, and his final burst of energy in recording his cosmic revelation is by turns dreadful and somehow uplifting: here is a hero going out in true [[Nietzsche|Nietzschean]] style with the psychology of the tragic poet:  


:“''Not so as to get rid of pity and terror ... but beyond pity and terror, to realise in oneself the eternal joy of becoming - that joy which also encompasses the joy in destruction''”
{{quote|“''Not so as to get rid of pity and terror ... but beyond pity and terror, to realise in oneself the eternal joy of becoming that joy which also encompasses the joy in destruction''”}}
{{sa}}
*{{br|The Long Way}}