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Julia_98

Julia_98@bookwyrm.world

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Gabriel García Márquez: Of Love and Other Demons (1995)

When Innocence and Obsession Learned Each Other’s Names

It began for me not with romance, but with unease. Opening Of Love and Other Demons, I sensed immediately that this was a story where tenderness and cruelty would exist uncomfortably close. Gabriel García Márquez sets the novel in a colonial world governed by superstition, religion, and fear, and I felt those forces press in from the first pages. The discovery of Sierva María’s grave frames the narrative like a warning rather than an invitation.

The story follows Sierva María, a young girl bitten by a dog and subsequently condemned by society as possibly possessed. As I read, I felt growing anger at how quickly ignorance becomes authority. Her upbringing among enslaved Africans gives her a richness of language and spirit that the ruling class cannot interpret. Instead of curiosity, they respond with control. Watching this unfold left me unsettled. The danger she faces does not come from …

Looking at the World Until It Looked Back

When I read The Doors of Perception, I felt as though I were being asked to slow my attention to an unfamiliar degree. Aldous Huxley describes his experience under the influence of mescaline not as an escape from reality, but as an intensified encounter with it. From the opening pages, I sensed that the book was less about drugs and more about perception itself. That focus made me curious rather than skeptical.

Huxley examines how the mind usually filters the world, reducing experience to what is practical and manageable. As I followed his reflections, I felt my own habits of seeing come into question. Ordinary objects, flowers, furniture, light, suddenly become overwhelming in their presence. I was struck by how calmly Huxley narrates these moments. There is no hysteria, only careful observation. That tone made the experience feel thoughtful rather than sensational.

What affected me most was …

Émile Zola: The Conquest of Plassans (Paperback, Createspace Independent Publishing Platform, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform)

Watching Power Slip Quietly Through an Open Door

When I read The Conquest of Plassans, I felt as if I were observing a small town under a magnifying glass. The novel unfolds slowly, almost deceptively, and that pace drew me in. Zola sets the story in Plassans, where politics, religion, and private ambition begin to intertwine. As I read, I felt a growing unease, because nothing violent announces itself at first. Influence enters politely, then refuses to leave.

The arrival of Abbé Faujas is the novel’s quiet turning point. He comes as a guest, seemingly harmless, yet his presence gradually reshapes the household of François and Marthe Mouret and, through them, the town itself. Reading this, I felt the tension of manipulation that never raises its voice. Zola’s attention to detail made the process feel chillingly real. This is French Literature at its most observant, dissecting social life with clinical patience rather than drama.

What struck …

Friedrich Nietzsche: Beyond Good and Evil (Paperback, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform)

V good

Thinking Without Handrails and Learning to Stand There

When I read Beyond Good and Evil, I felt as if familiar moral ground had been deliberately pulled away beneath my feet. The book sits at the edge of what later becomes known as Existential Literature, but it does not offer comfort or guidance. Instead, it challenges the very desire for certainty. From the opening aphorisms, I sensed Nietzsche was not asking me to agree with him. He was asking me to think without relying on inherited beliefs.

Nietzsche questions morality, truth, religion, and philosophy with relentless intensity. As I moved through the fragmented structure, I felt both stimulated and unsettled. He argues that moral systems are not universal truths but expressions of power, instinct, and historical habit. Reading this, I felt resistance rise in me. Some ideas felt abrasive, even arrogant. Yet I could not ignore how sharply he exposed the assumptions I rarely question. The book …

reviewed Die Wand by Marlen Haushofer (Die Frau in der Literatur)

Marlen Haushofer: Die Wand (Paperback, Deutsch language, 1988, Ullstein)

Die Geschichte einer Frau, die sich plötzlich als einzige Überlebende in einem genau umgrenzten Stück …

Living With Silence Until It Answered Back

When I read The Wall, I felt drawn into a form of German Literature that speaks through restraint rather than explanation. The novel opens with a simple, terrifying premise: an invisible wall cuts a woman off from the rest of the world. That isolation settles in quietly, and as I followed her first days alone in the alpine landscape, I felt my own sense of time begin to slow. The absence of answers did not frustrate me. It focused me.

The narrator’s life becomes defined by survival and routine. She learns to hunt, farm, and endure long winters with only animals for company. What struck me was how calm her voice remains. I felt the weight of her solitude not through despair, but through repetition. Each task mattered. Each mistake carried consequence. Reading her careful attention to weather, food, and movement made me aware of how distant my own …

Robert M. Pirsig: Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: An Inquiry Into Values

"The real cycle you're working on is a cycle called 'yourself.'"One of the most important …

Riding Through Thought, Silence, and the Meaning of Care

When I read Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, I felt as if I were traveling along two roads at once. One was physical, a motorcycle journey across America shared by a father and his son. The other was inward, reflective, and demanding. The book stands firmly within Philosophical Literature, yet it never felt distant or abstract to me. Instead, its ideas arrived through motion, landscape, and quiet tension between people who love each other but struggle to connect.

As the journey unfolds, the narrator reflects on technology, education, sanity, and the idea of Quality, a concept that resists strict definition. I found myself slowing down while reading, almost matching the pace of the road. His reflections on maintenance felt less about machines and more about attention. Caring for something properly, whether an engine or a thought, became a moral act. That idea stayed with me. It …

Ralph Ellison: Invisible Man (Paperback, 1995, Vintage International)

Invisible Man is the story of a young black man from the South who does …

Learning What It Means to Be Seen in a World That Refuses to Look

When I read Invisible Man, I felt as though I were being pulled into a voice that spoke directly from beneath the surface of American life. From the opening scene, where the unnamed narrator declares his invisibility, I sensed that this was not a metaphor meant to stay abstract. It felt lived, painful, and sharply aware. The novel stands as a defining work of American Literature, and reading it made me confront how identity can be shaped as much by denial as by presence.

Following the narrator’s journey from the South to Harlem, I felt the steady erosion of certainty. Each institution that promises guidance, from the college to political organizations, ends up demanding obedience rather than understanding. I experienced growing frustration as I watched him adapt himself repeatedly to what others expected him to be. His intelligence and hope are never in question, yet they are constantly …

reviewed Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë

Charlotte Brontë: Jane Eyre (1991, Signet Classic)

An orphan girl who accepts employment as a governess finds herself involved in a family …

Learning How Strength Can Speak Softly

When I read Jane Eyre, I felt as though I were growing alongside the narrator, step by difficult step. Charlotte Brontë tells Jane’s story in a voice that is firm, reflective, and quietly defiant. From Jane’s harsh childhood at Gateshead and Lowood, I felt the sting of injustice and the loneliness of being unheard. Her early suffering did not break her. Instead, it shaped a moral clarity that stayed with me throughout the novel. ( More Reviews @ love-books-review.com )

As Jane matures, her struggle becomes less about survival and more about self respect. I admired her refusal to accept comfort at the cost of dignity. When she arrives at Thornfield and meets Mr. Rochester, I felt the tension immediately. Their conversations are charged with intelligence and restraint, and I found myself enjoying how Jane never diminishes herself to match his power. Their growing attachment stirred both warmth and …