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Amulet | Dust, Teeth, Kissing, and Bathrooms?
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Week 10: Bolaño’s “Amulet”
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Roberto Bolaño, Amulet
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Thoughts on Bolano’s “Amulet”
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Amulet
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Amulet was a book that was hard to put down. I enjoyed the style of writing tremendously, throughout the book, even though the narrator told us that her memories were unreliable (a recurring theme in books we’re reading) I did not care. Every story she told was captivating and every character she introduced was dynamic and interesting. This was a horror story, like any story about a trauma. But like it was mentioned in the lecture, the unsettling aspects of the story happened ‘off screen’. We didn’t directly witness them. She was hiding in the bathroom and had very little idea what was going on outside - terrifying!
The characters I enjoyed reading about the most were the women. There was Elena, with whom Auxilio shared a lot of time and had a friendship she valued. Elena had a limp and she was in love with a man who was leaving soon. The last time Auxilio sees Elena, she contemplates running after her and giving her a hug. She decides against it and never sees Elena again, although she imagines seeing her in random places including on campus. Another interesting female character was Lilian who Auxilio seemed to be jealous of as she believed that she was the real mother of Mexican poetry. She was beautiful (and had all her teeth, she didn’t need to cover her mouth when she spoke!), she was living off of selling art and didn’t seem to struggle financially as much as Auxilio, she had many lovers which Auxilio hadn’t and she slept with Che Gevara (and thought he was ‘normal’, but what is normal!). What made her even more interesting is that we see her coming out of the painter’s house (I’m forgetting her name). The painter Auxilio was very excited to meet, wanted to stay at her house and was refused. Why was Lilian hiding in there? Why did the painter lie about having her there?
I’m generally not a big fan of realism, I read multiple books by Marquez and did not really enjoy them - not his popular ones anyway - the book that I enjoyed was Chronicles of a Death Foretold. However, I did not feel the same way about Bolano’s writing. I thought there was a lot of beauty in his choices of words even when describing the mundane. The details painted images in my memory and even though it was indeed a horror story, I found the writing to be calming and far from boring.
Amulet
Posted by: feedwordpress
Amulet was a book that was hard to put down. I enjoyed the style of writing tremendously, throughout the book, even though the narrator told us that her memories were unreliable (a recurring theme in books we’re reading) I did not care. Every story she told was captivating and every character she introduced was dynamic and interesting. This was a horror story, like any story about a trauma. But like it was mentioned in the lecture, the unsettling aspects of the story happened ‘off screen’. We didn’t directly witness them. She was hiding in the bathroom and had very little idea what was going on outside - terrifying!
The characters I enjoyed reading about the most were the women. There was Elena, with whom Auxilio shared a lot of time and had a friendship she valued. Elena had a limp and she was in love with a man who was leaving soon. The last time Auxilio sees Elena, she contemplates running after her and giving her a hug. She decides against it and never sees Elena again, although she imagines seeing her in random places including on campus. Another interesting female character was Lilian who Auxilio seemed to be jealous of as she believed that she was the real mother of Mexican poetry. She was beautiful (and had all her teeth, she didn’t need to cover her mouth when she spoke!), she was living off of selling art and didn’t seem to struggle financially as much as Auxilio, she had many lovers which Auxilio hadn’t and she slept with Che Gevara (and thought he was ‘normal’, but what is normal!). What made her even more interesting is that we see her coming out of the painter’s house (I’m forgetting her name). The painter Auxilio was very excited to meet, wanted to stay at her house and was refused. Why was Lilian hiding in there? Why did the painter lie about having her there?
I’m generally not a big fan of realism, I read multiple books by Marquez and did not really enjoy them - not his popular ones anyway - the book that I enjoyed was Chronicles of a Death Foretold. However, I did not feel the same way about Bolano’s writing. I thought there was a lot of beauty in his choices of words even when describing the mundane. The details painted images in my memory and even though it was indeed a horror story, I found the writing to be calming and far from boring.
blog#10 – the traits of Womanhood —
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Bolaño’s Amulet: Some Thoughts on Temporality and Memory
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Bolano’s Amulet
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Roberto Bolaño – Amulet
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