Heya!

It's a me, Adventure Van! I'd just like to thank you all for coming and reading my less then good blog. It means a lot to me, so I hope you enjoy!

Saturday, August 4, 2018

Lord Jim

Hey guys, it's Adventure Van here with a blog about the book Lord Jim. Written by Joseph Conrad, this book is the story of a sailor named Jim in the 1880s. Based off of a real person, Augustine Podmore Williams, the story follows Jim, a first mate, as he does a single cowardly act of abaonding a ship and taking a place on a boat that should have gone to a passenger, when he himself knew that he should go down with the ship and let someone else take the place. The ship survives, along with the people on it. All of the crew, including the captain, run and disappear, not wanting to give testimony and taking place in trial. Only Jim insists on appearing in the court. He is and will be haunted by this act of cowardice for the rest of his life.

After the case, he's taken aside by Charles Manlow, who tells us the story of Jim, as the entire book is written down from his point of view and stories from others. Jim confesses his guilt to Manlow, who takes pity on him and finds him a place to live. However, Jim encounters an engineer who also abandoned the ship there and leaves. Jim then spends time wandering, from going into a job and doing successfully until the name of the ship is mentioned and he immediately leaves, and then getting into a fist fight. Marlow realizes Jim needs to escape the place that knows of what Jim did, so he contacts his old friend Stein, who gives Jim a job on a remote island as a trade representative.

Jim leaves to take this job, and then finds peace in the fact that he is now mysterious and clouded, and no longer known as someone who abandoned his ship, and instead gets a new start. However, just his presence makes enemies, especially from one person who was the former trade representative. His name was Cornelius. His step daughter, who he abused, flees to Jim for protection after Cornelius is ousted from power by his arrival. Cornelius is enraged by this as well.

A pirate known as Gentleman Brown comes with a starving crew to the outpost, but is driven off. The natives and traders there want to land a killing blow on him and his crew, but Jim goes against that and simply send the pirates back thru a guarded riverway to get back to their ship. Cornelius sneaks out and meets with Brown, and then tells him about a better, less guarded way. Brown takes it, and kills some of the sentries as he escapes easily. One of Jim's servants figures out Cornelius' involvement and kills him, and Manlow advises Jim to leave. But Jim doesn't want to abandon his 'ship' again, and takes personal responsibility for the deaths caused by him and goes to the native chief to get himself killed.

It's a sad story about the life of a man, but it's much more heroic then who Jim was based off of. As it's all from the point of Jim's friend, Manlow, you can't tell how much is fully fact and if an attribute or two, or even all of them, is completely made up. The story of how an honorable man would seek penance for a singular crime he committed for the rest of his life is haunting.

Monday, July 30, 2018

Buffalo Japanese Garden

Hey guys, it's Adventure Van here with a blog about the Buffalo Japanese Gardens. Buffalo is a sister city with Kanazawa, a Japanese city. Because of this, Buffalo has this amazing park which seems unnaturally natural in art! I went on a tour there the other day, and it's a great place, with tons of views. All of them beautiful. And it's lasted a good 40-30 years, which is amazing. Even with people trying to destroy it and steal parts, it's an amazing part of the community and structure. And some people don't even know it exists!

Adventure Van, strolling out.