But Which Spenser Would Not Be The Fool?

Jordan posted an excellent taking up of the exploration of ideas around junkets last evening. Earlier in the day he and I had a very good exchange on the topic and I assured him that the point was that this was very much that – an exploration. It interests me because in my other areas of life, there is no question that accepting side b$enefits from those I am dealing with would be greatly challenging to say the least. But Jordan’s review captures many of the differences that may make the situation distinct. He concludes his piece with this:

I suspect that the fact that Alan’s blog post needled at me at 6:30 AM in an environment where most people would be content to listen to a light jazz soundtrack and punish the continental breakfast buffet speaks to the fact that I have an active moral compass when it comes to representing my activities as they relate to writing about beer. There is also the other fact, which some folks might not be willing to admit to. While I’m certainly compensated well for writing (be it books or newspaper columns), a trip like this would typically be beyond my financial means. Given the circumstance, if someone invites you to go to Boston, meet Jim Koch and eat a bunch of really good seafood while drinking a selection of beer on their dime, the response is predictable. As Spenser would say, “We’d be fools not to.”

Being the proud holder of a degree in English Lit before the LLB and LLM, I immediately assumed we were talking about the author of The Faerie Queene, itself an exploration of virtue – but I was unclear how that would attach to a beery jaunt in Massachusetts, to Winthrop’s very City upon the Hill. Then I thought it might be reference to the Victorian thinker Herbert Spencer who was, perhaps like Jordan, a utilitarian in matters such as these. But this Spenser’s ethics are a distasteful pre-Randian whackjob un-virtuous sort of utilitarianism, the sort that allows wikipedia to summarize his thoughts as including “anything that interfered with the ‘natural’ relationship of conduct and consequence was to be resisted and this included the use of the coercive power of the state to relieve poverty, to provide public education, or to require compulsory vaccination.” Screw you, too, Herb. Turns out Jordan was actually referring to the character Spenser in the novels of Robert B. Parker. This Spenser is also Bostonian so a junket there would make no sense. Not sure how his ethics play out but seeing as he is a detective one assumes they are somewhat reality-based.

Some years ago now, there were bloggy posts about the ethics of beer writing that went in circles before settling neatly on a high shelf where it sits well within reach, getting brushed off now and again. The Junket Registry is nothing more than the same ideas turned around, like looking at another side of an unsorted Rubik’s cube. I never gained the obsession that others did when it first came out so I don’t know how many paths it offers towards its own resolution. Within Spencers and Spensers alone the range of options is quite remarkable, too.

One thought on “But Which Spenser Would Not Be The Fool?”

  1. [Original comments…]

    Jordan St.John – November 4, 2012 2:24 PM
    http://www.saintjohnswort.ca
    The reason I was reading the Parker novels is because much of my mental framework of Boston is definied by that series. Spenser’s office is at Boylston and Berkeley, a block from the hotel we were staying at. In addition to being a gumshoe (sleuth, dick, sheamus, snoop) he’s a fully fledged character. A lot of the books have sections where he talks about food and beer. He’s a patron at Jacob Wirth’s on Stuart Street and the books are useful in that way. The man cooks so prodigiously in the novels that there’s actually a Spenser cookbook.

    Oddly, really useful in terms of understanding the development of beer in the new england scene, especially since his choice of beer changes over the years from novel to novel. He starts out with Dunkel at Wirth’s and Amstel in the fridge at home in the early 70’s, but by the late 80’s he’s saying positive things about Catamount.

    You’d like the novels. The first one is the Godwulf Manuscript.

    Alan – November 4, 2012 3:24 PM
    I have not taken on a detective series since Morse but that sounds good. My Boston is entirely framed by connections of cousins, love of the Red Sox and a book on Winthrop. We go to southern Maine often so kinda skip the city as the last place to pass before you get where you are going. We did hit the aquarium once. Felt hungry for seafood for days.

    Jordan St.John – November 4, 2012 3:46 PM
    http://saintjohnswort.ca
    Heck, mom has most of them. Just drop her an email and I’m sure she’d be willing to lend you six or seven of them.

    Alan – November 4, 2012 3:57 PM
    I haaaaaaate borrowing even using the library. I want books that I can throw, mark up, burn or treasure.

    But thanks.

    Bailey – November 5, 2012 4:42 AM
    http://boakandbailey.com
    Philip Marlowe would turn it down, and everyone would think he was a fool, but he wouldn’t care.

    Craig – November 5, 2012 8:25 AM
    A degree in English Lit! You might as well have a BFA!

    Oh wait…

    Alan – November 5, 2012 8:28 AM
    With 1/2 an honours, too! I decided to give up halfway through undergrad. A “B” student with “could try harder” on every note… you know, if they sent notes home.

    Jordan St.John – November 5, 2012 12:51 PM
    http://saintjohnswort.ca
    Bailey,

    Philip Marlowe would probably have just drunk Four Roses whiskey instead. Possibly with Terry Lennox.

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