Finally, my last post. Can’t even believe I made it through 11 books over the semester. In this course, we actually touched on a lot of stories about memories. Regarding the memories of reading, I can still clearly remember the image of secretly reading The Romance of the Three Kingdoms during class in elementary school. […]
Posted in Blogs | Tagged with
Finally, it’s the last book! Luckily, I personally liked this book 🙂 Well, this book is full of the dilemma and helplessness of women in a patriarchal society, but also showing the awakening of women’s power. Lila and Elena form a complementary and mutually redeeming feeling to me, and they find in each other the […]
Posted in Blogs, Ferrante | Tagged with patriarchal society, sisterhood, soulmate, Women's Power
I didn’t really read much into the meaning of this book. However, I did like the magical realism of the book’s setting. The main characters are a reincarnated chameleon (which, when I first started reading, Agualusa didn’t intentionally reveal the identity of the narrator until it brought it up on its own, which made me […]
Posted in Agualusa, Blogs | Tagged with chameleons, Dreams, lie, magical realism, past, reincarnation
This novel is filled with money, crime, sex, drugs, alcohol; in one word: chaos! After learning that this story was based on a true story, it gave me even more of a sense of the insanity of the world. Anyway, I wanted to share something about the theme that the whole story revolves around: MONEY! […]
Posted in Blogs, Piglia | Tagged with Corruption, homosexual, lure, money, obsession
Okay, I admit that the relationship is indeed poignant, and Duras does have a different flavor in taking this memory and writing a book about it. But the purity of the relationship is worth reconsidering; after all, the beginning of the protagonist’s relationship is based on the mutual benefits of money and beauty. Another thing […]
Posted in Blogs, Duras | Tagged with barrier, lover, race, Relationship
The narrative perspective of this book was completely unexpected to me, and this is the first time I’ve read a book where the author narrates from a second-person point of view, which definitely gave me a very strong gateway to connect with the author. This was a very new and creative reading experience for me […]
Posted in Blogs, Calvino | Tagged with ending, reading, scattered
The Time of the Doves tells the story of the two marriages of the heroine, Natalia, living in the period of Spanish Civil War, when she first meets and falls in love with Quimet in the square. But their married life was not a prosperous one, and to make matters worse, Ouimet enlisted in the […]
Posted in Blogs, Rodoreda | Tagged with Chaotic, marriage, memory, motherhood, Spanish Civil War, tragedy
The novel, Deep Rivers, takes the reader through the lens of life in a municipality in the mountainous interior of Peru through a personal perspective of a middle school student. Most of the inhabitants are Quechua-speaking Indians and mestizos. The novel reflects that although they live in pain and poverty, they are noble in spirit and full […]
Posted in Arguedas, Blogs | Tagged with Indigenous, marginalization, Religious conflict, Suffering
Of all the novels that we have read in the past few weeks, Agostino is one that really resonated with me. As I read the novel, it was like a mirror to the overwhelmed adolescent me. Although the novel is relatively short, the storyline, especially the complexity of the main character’s inner workings, is well […]
Posted in Blogs, Moravia | Tagged with adolescence, awakening, growing, sexuality
The Shrouded Woman is centered around the perspective of a dead woman, who, though dead, still sees and hears her family and friends who come to her coffin, which plunges the woman into memories of her time spent with these people. The memories triggered by the sequential appearance of her daughter, her old nanny, her […]
Posted in Blogs, Bombal | Tagged with death, Feminism, gender, Latin American feminist literature, love, marriage