About the Author:
Roger Lipsey, author, art historian, editor, and translator, has written on a wide range of topics and intellectual figures. He was the general editor of the three-volume edited works of Ananda K. Coomaraswamy. Other works include "An Art of Our Own: The Spiritual in Twentieth-Century Art" and the prizewinning "Angelic Mistakes: The Art of Thomas Merton." He is director of the parent company that publishes "Parabola" magazine.
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Review:
."..an intellectual and spiritual memoir. As such, it is masterly." -;i>Cambridge Humanities Review"--Rowan Williams"Cambridge Humanities Review" (05/01/2013)
."..no one has sketched [Dag Hammarskjold's] life and peacekeeping endeavors with such depth and breadth as Mr. Lipsey...He argues that Hammarskjold's diplomatic skills preserved the U.N. as a beacon of hope through turbulent times."
- George Melloan, "The Wall Street Journal"
--George Melloan"The Wall Street Journal" (03/22/2013)
"A monumental life, spiritual and intellectual more than purely biographical, of the great Swedish diplomat and author. Dag Hammarskjold (1905-1961), writes Lipsey ("Angelic Mistakes: The Art of Thomas Merton," 2006, etc.), was "formidable in his time, somewhat forgotten now." The second secretary general of the United Nations, he was also an author of note whose book Markings sold widely across the world--and, the author is careful to record, some 185,000 copies in its first six months in the United States. Lipsey makes a convincing case for why Hammarskjold should not be "somewhat forgotten": His spiritual yearnings and conviction that the U.N. could serve as a vehicle for true Christian compassion may seem a touch arcane now, but his activist stance and equal conviction that all humans are indeed created equal lend the office and institution a certain nobility. Lipsey argues that, more than mere inspiration, Hammarskjold, once a diplomat with an economic portfolio, brought useful specific ideas to the business of international human rights, among them the importance of sanctuary and his capacity for "lightning-like" assessment of unfolding crises. He died a half-century ago in one such crisis, in the Congo, where an ugly civil war was raging; Lipsey devotes a considerable number of pages to this conflict as a kind of exemplar of all the things the U.N. is meant to ameliorate. Another episode he covers thoroughly is of current interest again more than 50 years later, namely the flight of the Dalai Lama and the Chinese invasion of Tibet, which the U.N. could not satisfactorily resolve. A good and indispensable man, Hammarskjold "understood and respected the need for heroes." In this lucid, well-written biography, he certainly emerges as one." -- "KIRKUS"
..".no one has sketched [Dag HammarskjOld's] life and peacekeeping endeavors with such depth and breadth as Mr. Lipsey...He argues that HammarskjOld's diplomatic skills preserved the U.N. as a beacon of hope through turbulent times./i>--George Melloan"The Wall Street Journal" (03/22/2013)
A monumental life, spiritual and intellectual more than purely biographical, of the great Swedish diplomat and author. Dag Hammarskjold (1905 1961), writes Lipsey ("Angelic Mistakes: The Art of Thomas Merton," 2006, etc.), was "formidable in his time, somewhat forgotten now." The second secretary general of the United Nations, he was also an author of note whose book Markings sold widely across the world--and, the author is careful to record, some 185,000 copies in its first six months in the United States. Lipsey makes a convincing case for why Hammarskjold should not be "somewhat forgotten": His spiritual yearnings and conviction that the U.N. could serve as a vehicle for true Christian compassion may seem a touch arcane now, but his activist stance and equal conviction that all humans are indeed created equal lend the office and institution a certain nobility. Lipsey argues that, more than mere inspiration, Hammarskjold, once a diplomat with an economic portfolio, brought useful specific ideas to the business of international human rights, among them the importance of sanctuary and his capacity for "lightning-like" assessment of unfolding crises. He died a half-century ago in one such crisis, in the Congo, where an ugly civil war was raging; Lipsey devotes a considerable number of pages to this conflict as a kind of exemplar of all the things the U.N. is meant to ameliorate. Another episode he covers thoroughly is of current interest again more than 50 years later, namely the flight of the Dalai Lama and the Chinese invasion of Tibet, which the U.N. could not satisfactorily resolve. A good and indispensable man, Hammarskjold "understood and respected the need for heroes." In this lucid, well-written biography, he certainly emerges as one. -- "KIRKUS""
"Lipsey is a patient, discreet, and compassionate guide to Hammarskjold s inner world.... [H]is biography of Hammarskjold illuminates how the Christian mystical tradition became the secret source of Hammarskjold s life and thought."
"New York Review of Books"--Michael Ignatieff"New York Review of Books" (11/07/2013)"
...no one has sketched [Dag Hammarskjold's] life and peacekeeping endeavors with such depth and breadth as Mr. Lipsey...He argues that Hammarskjold's diplomatic skills preserved the U.N. as a beacon of hope through turbulent times.
George Melloan, "The Wall Street Journal"--George Melloan"The Wall Street Journal" (03/22/2013)"
..".an intellectual and spiritual memoir. As such, it is masterly."
Rowan Williams, "Cambridge Humanities Review"--Rowan Williams"Cambridge Humanities Review" (05/01/2013)"
"Roger Lipsey has produced a magisterially comprehensive portrait of the second Secretary-General of the United Nations ... Lipsey's achievement is all the more remarkable because at first glance Hammarskjold appears to be, in the combination of his monastic bachelor dedication to his role and his veiled diplomatic tact, a uniquely unknowable person."
"Huntington News"--Winslow Myers"Huntington News" (08/26/2013)"
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