Yay! last blog post! Happy end of the semester/ year! Hope everyone is having a good end of the semester and is excited for summer!!! I actually had so much fun in this course! I originally took this course because it sounded super cute and fun, and I’m happy to say it did not disappoint. […]
Posted in Blogs, Conclusion | Tagged with byebye, yay
Elena Ferrante checks your mailbox, I’m sending you a check for emotional damages. Holy fuck I loved this book. This genuinely might be one of my favourite books I’ve read this semester, and maybe on of my favourites books in a while. It’s in this novel’s simplicity is where I found the most connection to […]
Posted in Blogs, Ferrante | Tagged with coming of age, gender, girlhood, whydoihavegreyhairim19
I feel conflicted about this novel. One one had I thought it was interesting, creative and unlike anything I’ve read before. The idea of an almost ‘double’ or bi-directional reincarnation is super cool and confusing. But on the other hand, this book left me confused and a bit unsatisfied. I wanted more information and answers […]
Posted in Agualusa, Blogs | Tagged with im confused but maybe thats a good thing, translation
Luca Guadagnino, I have your next movie idea king! I actually really liked this novel. It was fast-paced, interesting and genuinely made me go WTF several times. I fully forgot that what I was reading was based on a true story, because everything about it felt like a movie. But even with the genre of […]
Posted in Blogs, Piglia | Tagged with Corruption, crime, money
I’ll be super honest I picked this book because it was short and I have a midterm this week. And I feel super neutral about it. I liked the plot of a dinner party, a spy mystery – it felt like Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf if Mrs. Dalloway was about totalitarian Romania! Something I […]
Posted in Blogs, Manea | Tagged with politics
Clarice Lispector you would have loved Greta Gerwig I’m so sorry if you didn’t like this book because I’m about to sing its praise. The Hour of the Star by Clarice Lispector is one of my favourite books so far in this class. For a book so short why did I almost cry at multiple […]
Posted in Blogs, Lispector | Tagged with childhood, gender, time
If there’s one thing I’ve learned from this class, it is that the shortest books have the most to say. I found this novel to be such a beautiful telling of the ‘other side’ of war stories—a story about the people who stay behind, and the aftermath of conflict. One thing that really stuck out […]
Posted in Blogs, Rodoreda | Tagged with gender, politics, war
Black Shack Alley by Joseph Zobel has to be my favourite novel we have read in class so far. The story of transformation and expectations is one I think many people can relate to, even in today’s society. One thing about the novel that particularly stuck out to me, was the way Zobel wrote about […]
Posted in Blogs, Zobel | Tagged with cycles, education, postcolonialsim, race
I went into this book expecting a picturesque Italian summer novel ya super cute and fun … I was wrong. Reading this book as a psych major was actually an insane experience, cause all I could think about was Freud, and I had to stop myself from psychoanalyzing Agostino every page. What I mainly want […]
Posted in Blogs | Tagged with
Reading ‘The Shrouded Woman’ by María Luisa Bombal felt like watching a reality TV show. I felt like I was watching the Real Housewives: the first loves, first wives, unhappy marriages… all felt like a TV plot and I loved it! But for such a packed story, the novel is so short. Even Ana Maria […]
Posted in Blogs, Bombal | Tagged with agency, Femininity, gender