MooseMom, I dips me lid to you for your finishing "Ulysses". Blowed if I could.
Currently reading "The Dogs and the Wolves" by Irene Nemirovsky (I loved Suite Francaise) which takes me back to Paris and to the early 1920's.
You guys are way above me, when it comes to literature, I think. I have a hard time with books that are someone's masterpiece, as there are usually layers upon layers of symbolism that I just don't get. I enjoy the story, even with nonfiction books, as they all tell a story of some sort, but if they're supposed to have a deeper meaning, I'm just not going to see it.I discovered this issue, and I think it's probably a reading comprehension issue of some sort, in my grade 12 English class. We read A Separate Peace, and from what I was told, it was full symbolism about choices and separation and stuff like that. All I saw in it was a story about 2 friends, one of which caused an accident which eventually killed the other, but he wasn't sure if he did it purposefully or not. Kind of sad, really. It's no real wonder why I repeated that class
Quote from: monrein on August 06, 2011, 05:17:53 AMCurrently reading "The Dogs and the Wolves" by Irene Nemirovsky (I loved Suite Francaise) which takes me back to Paris and to the early 1920's.Oh oh oh...Suite Francaise is one of my favorite books on planet Earth!. I know that it was to be a trilogy/suite, but she never got to finish it. How stupid of me to have not thought about reading her other works. How does "The Dogs and the Wolves" compare to "Suite Francaise" in tone, construction and style? Oh, I loved this book so much!
I'm reading "Larry's Kidney" A true story about this guy named Dan who takes his cousin Larry to China to buy a kidney. Good so far. A lot of humor for such a dark subject. I'm not done yet.
Maybe I liked it better because I read it as a fantasy novel!
Saw the movie "The Tin Drum" yonks ago and hated hated hated it. Oskar was so incredibly annoying, and I didn't really care that much about Germany to find any interest in the film. My feelings about Germany are complicated tinged with irrationality.