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Posts from the ‘50 Books to read before you die’ Category

11
Jul

Classic: The Sun Also Rises

 

Introduction:

  1. Hemingway was part of what is called the Lost Generation.
  2. It was a group of expatriate writers
  3. ….who found real meaning in nothing.
  4. They spent their time reveling while living in Europe.

 

Title:

  1. The title comes from the epigraph.
  2. Despite the despair this ‘lost generation’ feels….there is hope.
  3. Ecclesiastes 1:5
  4. “Also, the sun rises and the sun sets;
  5. And hastening to its place it rises there again.”

 

Publication:

  1. When published in 1926, The Sun Also Rises
  2. caused a bit of a stir
  3. among the Montparnasse expatriate crowd.
  4. Many of its characters were based on real people.
  5. Donald Ogden Stewart   (character Bill Gorton )
  6. Harold Loeb   (character Robert Cohn)
  7. Lady Duff Twysden   (character Lady Brett Ashley)

 

Alcohol:

  1. This book is held together by
  2. …the buying, mixing, having, spilling and pouring out drinks.
  3. In O. Laing’s book The Trip to Echo Spring she mentions
  4. that “Hemingway, who’d been drunk since he was fifteen
  5. …had put more faith in rum than conversation.” (pg 92)
  6. Hemingway used alcohol to
  7. …blot out feelings that are otherwise unbearable.
  8. ”A bottle of wine was good company” (pg 236)
  9. Drinking reflects the characters attitude.
  10. Brett drinks for psychological/physical pleasure.
  11. The Count is a connoisseur.
  12. Brett:  “Let’s enjoy a little more of this,”
  13. Brett pushed her glass forward (pg 66)
  14. Count: The count poured very carefully.
  15. “There, my dear. Now you enjoy that slowly,
  16. and then you can get drunk (pg 66)

 

Hemingway code:

  1. Bullfighting fascinates Hemingway.
  2. He describes in great detail Pedro Romero’s
  3. …killing of the bull.
  4. He faces danger with understanding and dignity
  5. …undaunted, grace under pressure.
  6. FEELINGS fascinate Hemingway.
  7. Everyone in that time had feelings, as they called them,
  8. just as everyone has “feelings” now.
  9. Whether Jake leaned in a cab against Georgette or
  10. leaned in a cab against Brett
  11. ….Hemingway was searching where his feelings lay!
  12. Georgette?  Brett?

 

Last thoughts:

  1. This book is considered a classic.
  2. The book didn’t interest me as a whole.
  3. Others may swear by it and Hemingway
  4. …but I just like The Old Man and the Sea. :)
  5. Advice: the book should be read
  6. …so you can form an opinion about it.
  7. It is on Modern Library’s Best 100 Novels List.
  8. Perhaps they  could have selected a book written
  9. later in Hemingway’s life….his writing matured.
  10. I can agree with Hemingway……just once!
  11. You´re always drinking my dear.
  12. Why don´t you just talk?” (pg 65)
  13. The Lost Generation–living in Paris during the 1920s
  14. …was lost on me.
  15. Finished: 11.07.2018
  16. Genre: novel
  17. Rating: D
  18. Conclusion:
    I think I’m done with Hemingway.
    I don’t care if he won the Nobel Prize or not!
    There are better classics waiting to be read.

 

9
Nov

Lord of the Flies

 

Conclusion:

  1. This is not a story that is scary because of plot twists or original characters.
  2. It is scary because it will frighten anyone in the deepest way to see
  3. what happens when man loses his sense of  civility.
  4. The plot is simple.
  5. School boys crash land on a remote island with no adults.
  6. The boys set up their own government, with Ralph in charge.
  7. But things start to fall apart very quickly.
  8. The book it provokes fear on a most basic level.

 

What was the  inspiration for the book ?

  1. Golding was tremendously affected by the WW II.
  2. The war had done something to him.
  3. Golding was involved as a marine officer.
  4. He was aboard the destroyer chasing the German battleship Bismarck.
  5. …he participated in the Normandy invasion.
  6. In Lord of the Flies  Golding had shown
  7. …how cruel authorities are able to act.
  8. There are always people who follow them,
  9. …nevertheless, obediently.
  10. Examples: Hitler in  Germany — Stalin in  Russia

 

What are the reasons for its enduring legacy ?

  1. We are still fascinated by the central theme of the book:
  2. intelligence (Ralph, democratic leader) VS
  3. irrationality (Jack, totalitarian leader)
  4. The conch and Piggy´s glasses …become damaged.
  5. They are the symbols of the collapse of a democratic society.

 

Last thoughts:

  1. I read Lord of the Flies in high-school
  2. During this re-reading  I finally understood  the allegory.
  3. It has to do with my own development.
  4. I now understand more about
  5. …the ‘powers that be’  who ruled (rule) the world.
  6. #Classic