I read *Love Me Tender*, and to be honest, it’s not like a regular book. It feels a little messy, but also very real, like you’re in someone’s head instead of reading a story that has a beginning, middle, and end. Reminds me a lot of some of the other books we have read. The […]
Posted in Blogs, Debre | Tagged with freedom, Uncategorized
After reading Love Me Tender by Constance Debre, it was a very raw and unsettling story of exploring identity, freedom and the cost of going against social expectations. What struck me the most was the protagonist’s rejection of traditional ideas of love, especially within family structures. Early in the novel, she questions why relationships such […]
Posted in Blogs | Tagged with Constance Debré, freedom, identity, social expectations
I really enjoyed this novel. It felt different from a lot of the other things I’ve read so far, mostly because of how direct and stripped down it is. The writing is minimalist and straightforward, but that’s what made me like it. There’s no overexplaining or beating around the bush. Things are just said quickly and […]
Posted in Blogs, Debre | Tagged with freedom, gender, sexuality
This story is honestly more along the lines of what I was expecting based on the title than some of the others. It was also rather relatable in some ways, regarding trying to balance work, life, family, and more. The young mother tries to balance her role as an author with her own parenting obligation, […]
Posted in Blogs, Luiselli | Tagged with Another failed marriage, Faces in the Crowd, freedom, memory
A conversation with Vincent Gélinas-Lemaire
Posted in Conversation Videos, Perec videos | Tagged with constraint, detail, France, freedom, memory, order, repetition, rules, totalitarianism, utopia, war
From the start of the book of “Faces in the Crowd,” I thought I was going to emphasize with the narrator who is a mom to two children and has a husband. It seemed to be that she was struggling raising her kid, her depression during and after pregnancy, while being in a marriage that […]
Posted in Blogs | Tagged with cheating, children, freedom, identity, marriage, weird
This week’s reading really caught my attention as I’m a big fan of thriller movies and books, I was interested to check out Ricardo Piglia’s “Money to Burn” based on the real 1965 bank heist in Buenos Aires. While I expected a classic crime story, Piglia took the novel in some thought-provoking directions I didn’t […]
Posted in Blogs | Tagged with capitalism, freedom, Heist, Ricardo Piglia
Hi everyone, this is my blog post for this week’s novel “Money to Burn” by Ricardo Piglia. Firstly, I want to note how disturbing yet interesting it is that this novel is based on a true crime. Knowing this while reading, it really made me consider the real life contexts and values that existed in […]
Posted in Blogs | Tagged with Corruption, crime, freedom, Ricardo Piglia