Past Caring review

‘Past Caring’ is only the second book from Robert Goddard I’ve read, but it shares many key ingredients with ‘In Pale Battalions‘. Again it is about generations in England around World War I, a heritage house again takes a role, but most of all, it is about time. ‘In Pale Battalions’ lets us explore morality — right and wrong in the time of war. In ‘Past Caring’, I believe there’s one central line in the book that begs the question of whether or not people attract bad luck through no fault of their own — and how to redeem yourself. The book goes into British turn-of-the-century politics and perhaps because of that — lacks the polish of In Pale Battalions, mostly in pacing. But it’s again an intricate page-turner that cleverly fits together. Like any great book, halfway in the story becomes so captivating that you want to take off from work for it, or keep reading during the night to get to know how it ends. And it is constructed partly on reality, as key historical figures weave their way through the story — and fictional ones were so realistic that I tried to find them on Wikipedia, thinking they might have been real, even when they were not.

On the author: One observation is that reading Robert Goddard is a lonely experience, in that on Reddit his books are barely discussed, nor are any in-depth plot discussions available online. (Goddard sharing his name with a rocket inventor does not help with search results). But perhaps Goddard’s readers are not found so much online. This book was published in 1986, before I was born. Stephen King did tweet about Robert Goddard, so that may have helped his recent popularity a bit, but he also pointed out his books are not available in the US. Perhaps I do not need such an outlet for this book, as my dad and I have been reading this book eight thousand kilometers apart at the same time, and I’ll soon be back in the Netherlands.

Latest

Rich People Park

Rich People Park

We’re in TaiKoo Li QianTan (前滩太古里), a brand new, high-end shopping mall near the Huangpu River in Pudong. It’s a beautiful complex with four levels, viewing bridges, walls of white steel and vertical gardens (the first I’ve seen that actually look like on an architectural drawing), and paths of bright bricks alternating with patches of […]
June 5, 2026
Torrential rain and colorful umbrellas

Torrential rain and colorful umbrellas

I was planning a bike ride, but then saw it was drizzling, so I carried Hasse outside — underneath an umbrella — to go get a coffee. Yet the rain was so heavy we just hid underneath the canopy in front of a supermarket to see some of the chaos unfold. I’ll miss these streets […]
May 25, 2026
Streetside in the AI Park

Streetside in the AI Park

Be skeptical of sweeping stories about China, regardless of how good or bad they portray things. The technological advancements mentioned in the news may be even more profound in reality, but not as widespread as shown. The GDP growth has lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty, but real wealth is mostly concentrated in coastal […]
May 16, 2026
Clothes Making Clouds

Clothes Making Clouds

There are so many ways to define Shanghai, yet a few popular icons do a lot of the talking. As the international metropolis and a symbol of China’s rising economic power, there’s the Lujiazui (陆家嘴) skyline — with the Oriental Pearl Tower (东方明珠) and high offices of Chinese and multinational corporations. There’s the Maglev train […]
May 5, 2026