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Days: 39.0
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- Total Entries227
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All Comments (44) Comments
Kafka is spectacular. I can't think of another author quite as good at describing self loathing, alienation, shame, and depression. He lived a very sad life, but in a short period of time he gifted the world with absolute genius! It's sad he didn't achieve greater fame in his own lifetime, but Kafka wouldn't have cared even if he did. He was convinced his writing sucked and requested to have all his works burned upon his death. Another interesting aspect of Kafka is that his brand of absurdism mixes pitch black comedy in with his portrayal of senseless cruelty. He would both laugh and cry while reading his works to friends. The trial actually has some hilarious bits. Sure, the court system is a nightmarish bureaucracy where people carry out cruel and nonsensical orders without ever bothering to question anything. However, it's also pretty funny that they meet in an attic at 6 AM in the morning and just expect the accused to know this. Also the judge's book of statutes is just poorly drawn pornography and the judge is allowed to throw lawyers down the stairs until he gets too tired to continue and only then are lawyers allowed into the court.
Murakami is very hit or miss. He gained a lot of fame outside of Japan largely for being quirky and weird, but he's not well liked by most of the literary establishment. He's certainly above Stephen King/ JK Rowling tier, but I can't imagine him ever winning the Nobel prize. My favorite Murakami book that I've read is Wind Up Bird Chronicle. I also enjoyed Hardboiled Wonderland, but not quite as much as Wind Up. Poor Murakami gets a lot of abuse on my book club Discord. Although part of it is just anger than "Normies" in America will read Murakami, yet non-Japanese almost never read Soseki, Akutagawa, Dazai, Kawabata, Mishima, etc. This of course isn't Murakami's fault.
I've not read any of Ishiguro yet, but I'm interested!
Espero estés bien.
If I could redo it, I would have been a lot more efficient with my time back then. I would have spent more time watching different series and less time discussing and arguing on forums. Not that it wasn’t fun at times, mind you. I just think I would’ve gotten more overall out of focusing more on the entertainment itself and less on discussing it. A lot of my conversations were pretty vapid anyway. Only a handful were really interesting/worthwhile in retrospect.
If you’re looking for something more detailed, I had a pretty long discussion in the thirteenth episode’s discussion page with several other people at the time. That episode was a case-in-point for me from what I recall, so it should be pretty illuminating.
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Hello Excuse me, can I ask you a question? It's about Max Weber, I just want to know if what he says is true. Please.
Igualmente, y para responder la pregunta, diría que los grandes: Quevedo, Juan de la cruz, Borges, Neruda, Vallejo, Lorca, Benedetti, Dario.
Poemas como Los heraldos negros, Poeta en New York ,Veinte poemas de amor y una canción desesperada, los recomendaría.
Perdóname por no saber tanto de poesía. Claro me enseñaron métrica, ritmo y demás pero nunca pude practicarlo y por eso no soy versado en esas cosas. Reglas como Hemistiquio, Sinalefa, Dialefa, Pareado, ritmo Trocaico y Yámbico entre otros. Son cosas que nunca los pude comprender del todo. Así que espero me perdone y yo también espero mejorar en mi conocimiento de poesia… Y mi gramática también, dicho sea de paso.
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Wow, you make it a little difficult for me. I'm honestly not very well versed in Poetry. I don't have a problem if you telling me "Uneducated" or anything, I think it's something I'd take for granted.
Likewise, and to answer the question, I would say that the great ones poets: Quevedo, Juan de la Cruz, Borges, Neruda, Vallejo, Lorca, Benedetti, Dario.
Poems like the "Heraldos Negros" (Black Heraldos), Poeta en Nueva York (Poet in New York) and "Veinte poemas de amor y una canción desesperada" (twenty love poems and a desperate song), I would recommend them.
Forgive me for not knowing so much about poetry. Of course they taught me metrics, rhythm and so on and that's why I'm not versed in those things . Rules like Hemistiquio, Sinalefa, Dialefa, Pareado, Trocaico and Yámbico rhythm among others. These are things I could never fully understand. So I hope you forgive me and I also hope to improve on my knowledge of poetry… and my grammar as well.
Dostoevsky’s best novel is Brothers Karamazov so if you were to read only 1 it would have to be that one. However, if you’re planning to read a bunch of his stuff I would start with either Notes from the Underground or Crime and Punishment.