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Borges, Labyrinths, Humor
Reading Borges I have to say was humorous in some ways. Interesting in others, but regardless of my feelings on the subject, he definitely is an excellent short story writer. The Two Kings and Labyrinths was what really struck out … Continue reading → Continue reading →
Cats, Dolls and Borges
We discussed briefly last week that a characteristic of short stories may be that they leave you with more questions at the end than you had at the start. I’d say that’s about accurate. All of these stories made me … Continue reading →Continue reading →
Borges, Cooked Cat, and Daisy Dolls
I’m writing this with a headache, so bear with me. Borges is a very good writer. He knows how to do short stories, and I enjoyed almost every assigned reading within this book as well as some that weren’t assigned. The downfall to his very cohesive and structured style, however, is that it gets predictable […]Continue reading →
What People See vs. What People Know
For now, all I have read of Borges is the 15 short stories Jon assigned. While this is enough to understand the lectures, I get the feeling that in order to fully understand Borges I would need to read all … Continue reading → Continue reading →
The Daisy Dolls
While I disliked the Borges readings (it’s true, Jon), I did like reading “The Daisy Dolls.” My initial impression of the story was that it was another feminist story, where women are depicted as daisy dolls to be used for … Continue reading →Continue reading →
Felisberto Hernández- K, What?
Metamorphosis, The Yellow Wallpaper and now Daisy Dolls. What do all these have in common? They are messed up stories that confuse and alienate their readers. As someone very close to me would say, “dafuq?” Pardon me if my reading of the story may seem blurred, but I finished it a couple weeks back in […]Continue reading →
Bugged by Kafka?
Morrissey once asked: “has the world changed or have I changed?” Were Gregor to pose this question, the answer would hardly keep us in suspense. And yet he barely notices his mutation, rather like the early scenes in Shawn of … Continue reading
Bugged by Kafka?
Morrissey once asked: “has the world changed or have I changed?” Were Gregor to pose this question, the answer would hardly keep us in suspense. And yet he barely notices his mutation, rather like the early scenes in Shawn of … Continue reading
Yellow Wallpaper & Metamorphosis
I remember when I signed up for Arts One and I saw Kafka on the reading list. I’d never read anything by him, but when I saw it I immediately thought to myself “That one’s gonna be worth reading”. It’s … Continue reading → Continue reading →
Felisberto Hernández
The Wednesday quotation, part XIX: I’ve been reading Felisberto Hernández, a very striking Uruguayan writer from the first half of the twentieth century who is practically unknown, especially in English. Some of his short stories have been translated, in a … Continue reading →