Introduction
This is a remarkable book. Written in a diary form, in 44 instalments spanning the years 1994 to 2005, with a glimpse into the future summarised in two imaginary letters dated 2015, it combines a description of rebuilding a family farm in Poland with thoughts on wider aspects of interaction of communities and nations. The combination is entertaining and original. (T.S)
Forty Four Bells suggests a social, political and economic response to present-day world problems, rather than seeing them as perennial context of human spiritual inadequacy - he proposes Idsanism, where the members grouped in units known as Hundreds would promote the awareness of political dangers facing the world and their mitigation. (T.R.)
Matthew Wallis believes "US are trying to bankrupt the world to buy it on the cheap" aiming to transform the environment into a hegemonic continuum, static, manageable and directed by an Oligarchy of the Rich.
Matthew Wallis was born in 1925 in Poland a veteran from Normandy landings where he was wounded and decorated. He graduated in Architecture in 1950 at Edinburgh College of Art and worked for Hertfordshire CC and Coventry Corp. Received a prestigious one year fellowship working on productivity in design and subsequently lectured at Regent St. Polytechnic and Hochschule fur Gestaltung in Ulm. He set up his own practice in 1964 working in London as well as abroad. In 1994 he bought old family land in Poland where he is farming on a pre-war grain farm. In 2008 his book Forty Four Bells was published simply to visualise a dream of True Civilization.
TETRIC BOOKS
First published by Tetric Projects Ltd 2008
London PO Box 63754 SW6 3RW
Copyright © Matthew Wallis 2008
The moral right of this author has been asserted.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on subsequent purchaser.
Contents
- Preface
- I - 9th May 1994
- II - 4th July
- III - 9th October
- IV - 29th August 1995
- V - 18th November
- VI - 22nd March 1996
- VII - 27th August
- VIII - 14th July 1997
- IX - 9th September
- X - 7th April 1998
- XI - 12th August
- XII - 31st March 1999
- XIII - 11th May
- XIV - 8th September
- XV - 24th June 2000
- XVI - 1st October
- XVII - 21st July 2001
- XVIII - 3rd November
- XIX - 21st November
- XX - 11th April 2002
- XXI - 29th May
- XXII - 19th September
- XXIII - 14th December
- XXIV - 22nd May 2003
- XXV - 29th May
- XXVI - 4th September
- XXVII - 8th October
- XXVIII - 15th Jan 2004
- XXIX - 1st May
- XXX - 11th May
- XXXI - 24th July
- XXXII - 29th October
- XXXIII - 13th November
- XXXIV - 11th December
- XXXV - 24th January 2005
- XXXVI - 25th January
- XXXVII - 14th June
- XXXVIII - 19th August
- XXXIX - 23rd August
- XL - 18th November
- XLI - 22nd November
- XLII - 12th December
- XLIII - 15th December
- XLIV - 28th December
- Letter 1 - 18th Nov 2015
- Letter 2 - 18th Nov 2015
- Postscript
- Appendix