Authors

Carmen Laforet, Nada——WEEK5

This week I read Carmen Laforet’s work Nada, and here are some of my post-reading feelings. 

Through this week’s reading of Nada, I learned about the desolate landscape of post-war Barcelona. Through the subjective and objective perspective of the protagonist, the author takes the protagonist’s family as the main object of description, creating a microcosm of the miserable post-war society at that time. The author’s expression is very delicate. The article contains a lot of reports of the scenery, which highlights the eerie atmosphere of the family and shows the protagonist’s rejection and fear of living here. The words of the article are straightforward, but the emotions revealed are meticulous and accurate. It’s easier to understand how the author feels and how things have gone.

The protagonist comes to Barcelona to complete her studies and seeks refuge from her relatives. Still, when she lives here, she gradually gets to know everyone who lives in the family and the unusual relationships between relatives. During the time she lived here, every day she spent seemed painful and unbearable, and the family members seemed to be ghosts lacking the vitality of life under her description. As a bystander, she observes the family’s disputes, the old grandmother, the terrible aunt, the grumpy uncle, and the aunt. She is entangled with her husband’s brother. The constant torture of the family makes the house’s atmosphere very depressing. Her campus life is not as good as imagined. However, she met a good friend, just the exchange on campus it difficult to dispel the loneliness in her heart. The relationship with a boy also ended without beginning because of his family conditions. Fortunately, In the end, Andrea had the opportunity to leave the city that had tormented her and embark on a new journey.

As I read this book, I also searched the context of the times. I can see that Bartholome was very depressed after the war. Most of the literary works advocated the existence of women in the family. The protagonist of Nada observes the flaws of this family model from the perspective of a bystander; she describes the involuntary nature of women living in such a family. This straightforward reality may awaken many women who have suffered in the family, making them aware of their situation. The protagonist’s courage to embark on a new path to pursue their dreams also gave people the courage to pursue their true selves.

My question for this article is: Do you think the friendship between the protagonist and his popular college classmate is equal? It looked as if she was in a state of escort.

Carmen Laforet, Nada——WEEK5

This week I read Carmen Laforet’s work Nada, and here are some of my post-reading feelings. 

Through this week’s reading of Nada, I learned about the desolate landscape of post-war Barcelona. Through the subjective and objective perspective of the protagonist, the author takes the protagonist’s family as the main object of description, creating a microcosm of the miserable post-war society at that time. The author’s expression is very delicate. The article contains a lot of reports of the scenery, which highlights the eerie atmosphere of the family and shows the protagonist’s rejection and fear of living here. The words of the article are straightforward, but the emotions revealed are meticulous and accurate. It’s easier to understand how the author feels and how things have gone.

The protagonist comes to Barcelona to complete her studies and seeks refuge from her relatives. Still, when she lives here, she gradually gets to know everyone who lives in the family and the unusual relationships between relatives. During the time she lived here, every day she spent seemed painful and unbearable, and the family members seemed to be ghosts lacking the vitality of life under her description. As a bystander, she observes the family’s disputes, the old grandmother, the terrible aunt, the grumpy uncle, and the aunt. She is entangled with her husband’s brother. The constant torture of the family makes the house’s atmosphere very depressing. Her campus life is not as good as imagined. However, she met a good friend, just the exchange on campus it difficult to dispel the loneliness in her heart. The relationship with a boy also ended without beginning because of his family conditions. Fortunately, In the end, Andrea had the opportunity to leave the city that had tormented her and embark on a new journey.

As I read this book, I also searched the context of the times. I can see that Bartholome was very depressed after the war. Most of the literary works advocated the existence of women in the family. The protagonist of Nada observes the flaws of this family model from the perspective of a bystander; she describes the involuntary nature of women living in such a family. This straightforward reality may awaken many women who have suffered in the family, making them aware of their situation. The protagonist’s courage to embark on a new path to pursue their dreams also gave people the courage to pursue their true selves.

The Shrouded Women by Maria Luisa Bombel (1938)

I really enjoyed reading The Shrouded Women (1938) by Maria Luisa Bombel mainly because it was entertaining and almost felt like a soap opera. Also because it’s interesting to read a novella where the main protagonist is already dead. The story begins with Ana Maria’s funeral where all her friends and family gather to say …

My thoughts on "The Shrouded Woman" by María Luisa Bombal

 I enjoyed reading “The Shrouded Woman” by María Luisa Bombal. I found that in this novel it was a lot easier to follow the storyline or text versus in the other novels I had read. I found it interesting how the narrator was dead. It was interesting because she was narrating important moments in her life as well as focusing on peak memories that she experienced during her lifetime.i found this interesting because I have not read a book that has been narrated or told in this format. It surprised me when the narrator described many of these moments in her life in an almost glamourized or positively descriptive way. But, while these moments seem great, the narrator was saying that she wanted to die. This was confusing to me. But, what I picture it as is the narrator speaking from regret of not living out the life she once had. The narrator seems to be feeling as though she did not appreciate the moments she had experienced in her life. In the way she states that she had wished she was dead at a point where it seemed as though she was saying it in a way of disbelief or that she had could not believe that she had wished that. It seems to show that the narrator feels a though she had not appreciated her life experiences or that she was missing or grieving her own memories, life and specific people in the narrator’s life that had a significant impact on her. The text seems to reminisce on the narrator’s past life which I found to be very interesting. My question for this novel is what was the narrator’s original reason for wanting to die? What I found really interesting in the text was the relationship between the narrator and Roberto. It felt as though Roberto had abandoned the narrator and that she really cherished having him in her life. I think this relates a lot to times now, and is something that is still a relevant factor in today’s society or life. The narrators want and craving for Roberto’s presence seemed to be a relevant memory that had stood out for her and created a lot of the emotion involved in to the storyline of the novel. I feel as though the emotion and the feelings that were involved in this novel made it an easy and beautiful read.

My thoughts on "The Shrouded Woman" by María Luisa Bombal

 I enjoyed reading “The Shrouded Woman” by María Luisa Bombal. I found that in this novel it was a lot easier to follow the storyline or text versus in the other novels I had read. I found it interesting how the narrator was dead. It was interesting because she was narrating important moments in her life as well as focusing on peak memories that she experienced during her lifetime.i found this interesting because I have not read a book that has been narrated or told in this format. It surprised me when the narrator described many of these moments in her life in an almost glamourized or positively descriptive way. But, while these moments seem great, the narrator was saying that she wanted to die. This was confusing to me. But, what I picture it as is the narrator speaking from regret of not living out the life she once had. The narrator seems to be feeling as though she did not appreciate the moments she had experienced in her life. In the way she states that she had wished she was dead at a point where it seemed as though she was saying it in a way of disbelief or that she had could not believe that she had wished that. It seems to show that the narrator feels a though she had not appreciated her life experiences or that she was missing or grieving her own memories, life and specific people in the narrator’s life that had a significant impact on her. The text seems to reminisce on the narrator’s past life which I found to be very interesting. My question for this novel is what was the narrator’s original reason for wanting to die? What I found really interesting in the text was the relationship between the narrator and Roberto. It felt as though Roberto had abandoned the narrator and that she really cherished having him in her life. I think this relates a lot to times now, and is something that is still a relevant factor in today’s society or life. The narrators want and craving for Roberto’s presence seemed to be a relevant memory that had stood out for her and created a lot of the emotion involved in to the storyline of the novel. I feel as though the emotion and the feelings that were involved in this novel made it an easy and beautiful read.