Tag: book-review

  • The Big End of Semester Wrap Up – Goodbye:(

    The Big End of Semester Wrap Up – Goodbye:(

    It’s here! The last blog post of the semester! Thank you, dear reader, for reading all of my little blog posts. I hope you enjoyed my analysis and shared some similar thoughts, or thought differently about sections after reading my thoughts. I am honestly going to miss this blog, it was very fun to design…

  • ‘We Were Girls Together’; A Review of My Brilliant Friend

    ‘We Were Girls Together’; A Review of My Brilliant Friend

    Welcome to the last book review of the semester! This week I read My Brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante, and I am so happy this was the last book. It is a coming-of-age book (so on brand for this class) about two girls in a poor neighbourhood in Naples. The story starts with an older…

  • Life with No Death? (Or should I say death)

    Life with No Death? (Or should I say death)

    A thought experiment of a book, Jose Saramago’s Death with Interruptions was an interesting read. The book starts on New Year’s Day, just as the clock strikes twelve when no one dies anymore. The novel explores how different systems and industries deal with this problem. The novel explores the social aspect, with the government, monarchy,…

  • 12 Years Isn’t That Bad, Right? – The Lover

    12 Years Isn’t That Bad, Right? – The Lover

    By far the shortest and most uncomfortable read at this point in the semester, The Lover by Marguerite Duras is a novel about the clandestine relationship between a 27-year-old man and a 15-year-old girl. The prose in this book is beautifully written, as an autobiography with Duras recalling her time in Saigon. She captures the…

  • Suffering and Emotion in Time of the Doves

    Suffering and Emotion in Time of the Doves

    Hello everyone! Hopefully, you all had a great reading week and enjoyed reading The Time of the Doves by Mercè Rodoreda. This novel is a story full of emotion and hurt detailing the protagonist Natalia’s life through the Spanish civil war. The novel is written in a way that folds the emotion into the words…

  • What it Means to Have Nada

    What it Means to Have Nada

    Nada, or Nothing when translated from Spanish, is a heart-wrenching, dramatic novel by Carmen Laforet that details a family’s life in the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War. Laforet details the class divide, what it means to go hungry, and different kinds of love. We follow Andrea, a student, navigating her strange family and different…

  • Family Drama and Relationships: The Shrouded Woman

    Family Drama and Relationships: The Shrouded Woman

    What may come across as a mysterious book, told from the perspective of a ghost, is a beautiful exploration of a woman’s life and her relationships told in a very interesting way. The Shrouded Woman by Maria-Luisa Bombal is a modernist text that seeks to push the boundaries of what a novel is and who…

  • Combray: The Over-explained Little French Town

    Combray: The Over-explained Little French Town

    Hello! I just finished Marcel Proust’s Combray and boy oh boy do I have some thoughts. I adore reading but this book seemed like a chore while I was reading it. This may have to do with the fact I (admittedly foolishly) decided to read it all in one day. However, there is no plot…

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