The essays in this volume are, at first sight, a curiously varied
assortment. Written solely for personal pleasure, without intention or
expectation of publication, many have long lain forgotten, gathering
digital dust over many years. Except for those covering aspects of
Balinese culture and history, they possess no unifying theme to justify
inclusion. They range from the semi-academic to the frivolous, from the
serious to the trivial. One essay explores an unexpected connection
between narcissism and travel, another considers possibilities of life
in the hereafter. Art and Disability is discussed next to atomic
weapons, high crimes and nuclear misdemeanors. A comic village dispute
in the depths of rural France is juxtaposed against the dramatic
discovery of a new-found family uncovered by untangling threads of DNA.
It is manifestly a strange collection, offered without excuse or apology
in the hope that readers may perhaps find something to interest or
amuse.