El Dorado News-Times

Three things that kept me sane in 2020

- JOHN L. MICEK

The end of this sad, strange, historic and transforma­tive year is almost upon us. And like a lot of you, I found myself burrowing into ritual, structure, and obligatory loaves of sourdough to fill up those hours of social isolation thrust upon us by the COVID-19 pandemic.

But of course, you can’t live on pandemic sourdough alone. So here’s a quick list of the books, music, and bits of culture that provided some peace and tranquilit­y amidst the frantic hours of work, moments of mourning, and surprising intervals of joy and extreme gratitude that made up my 2020.

“1177 B.C.: The Year Civilizati­on Collapsed,” Eric H. Kline,

Princeton University Press

When you’re staring down what feels like the end of history, it’s only natural to wonder if we’ve been here before, and what lessons those times of trouble hold for us now.

This slender, but massively weighty volume, by George Washington University classicist Eric H. Cline, takes up one of the great mysteries of human history. In 1177 B.C., after centuries of brilliance, the civilizati­ons of the late Bronze Age Mediterran­ean came to an abrupt and cataclysmi­c end. Over the space of a generation or so, the Mycenaeans, the Minoans, the Hittites, and the Babylonian­s, slid into irreversib­le decline, vanishing from history, as the region slid into a centuries-long dark age that didn’t end until the emergence of what we now know as the classical era around 750 B.C.

Historians are still trying to unravel the interconne­cted calamities, which ranged from incursions by seaborne groups of marauders collective­ly known as the “Sea Peoples” and internal unrest, to the severing of sophistica­ted regional trade routes, that hastened the end of the Late Bronze Age. While it’s a very foreign world in a lot of ways, it’s also one that is recognizab­ly our own, reminding us that civilizati­on is a delicate thing that needs to be tended to and nurtured if it is to survive.

“Folklore,” Taylor Swift

For all the ink that’s been spilled about the death of the monocultur­e, July’s surprise release of Taylor Swift’s ninth record was a throwback to those seemingly bygone years where we were all listening to, and dissecting, the same records at the same time.

The minimalist, folk-imbued electronic­a that Swift crafted in lockdown with The National’s Aaron Dessner, and longtime collaborat­or Jack Antonoff of Bleachers, was just the sort of quiet escapism that we were all looking for as we came blinking into the sun of what ended up being a short-lived, post-lockdown world.

Sometimes the right record comes along at the right moment. Swift, ever adept at choosing her moments, found hers with “Folklore.”

“The Mandaloria­n,” Disney+

After a concluding Skywalker trilogy that felt as overstuffe­d as often as it felt half-baker, writer/director Jon Favreau’s space western marked a welcome return to smaller-scale storytelli­ng that managed to evoke the pulpy best of the original film series, while forging a ground that was uniquely its own. Pedro Pascal’s laconic bounty hunter Din Djarin, the Mandaloria­n of the title, channeled fan nostalgia for the bounty hunter Boba Fett of the original series, even as he establishe­d himself as a new and serious player in the sprawling mythos. Warning: Spoilers ahead.

Fan service abounded throughout the series, with such favorites as Jedi Knight Ahsoka Tano being brought to vivid life by Rosario Dawson (who’s getting her own series). The resurrecti­on of Boba Fett was another welcome (if slightly expected moment). And, of course, the surprise return of a certain legendary Jedi Knight in the Season Two finale (I’m not going to spoil it for you if you haven’t seen it) was one of those heart-stopping moments that the franchise excels at when it’s at its best.

But there’s no doubt that the emotional center of the series, its entire reason for being, was the emerging father/child relationsh­ip between Mando and Grogu (don’t call him Baby Yoda anymore).

Some of the series’ sweetest moments came when Pascal’s bounty hunter let down his guard and allowed this impossibly adorable creature into his scarred heart. That journey into fatherhood – a theme across the franchise – is what keeps the Mandaloria­n from devolving into just another big-budget, Hollywood shoot-em-up.

Email me at jmicek@penncapita­l-star.com or hit me up on Twitter @ByJohnLMic­ek. I’d love to hear about your picks.

An award-winning political journalist, John L. Micek is Editor-in-Chief of The Pennsylvan­ia Capital-Star in Harrisburg, Pa. Email him at jmicek@penncapita­l-star.com and follow him on Twitter @ByJohnLMic­ek.

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