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Julia_98

Julia_98@bookwyrm.world

Joined 10 months, 1 week ago

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Julia_98's books

Jane Austen: Lady Susan (2005, Dover Publications)

Lady Susan is an epistolary novella by Jane Austen, written circa 1794 but not published …

Smiling at Charm While Distrusting Every Word

It took me only a few letters to realize that Lady Susan would not offer the moral comfort I expected. Jane Austen constructs the entire narrative through correspondence, and that form immediately changed how I read. Every sentence felt deliberate, shaped not just by truth but by intention. I found myself reading between the lines, aware that what is written is rarely what is meant.

At the center of the novel stands Lady Susan Vernon, a widow whose intelligence, charm, and calculated manipulation drive the story. I felt both fascinated and uneasy while following her voice. She is witty, perceptive, and entirely self serving. Through her letters, I could see how she shapes narratives to suit her needs, especially in her pursuit of advantageous relationships for herself and her daughter, Frederica. I admired her clarity, even as I questioned her motives.

What struck me most was the contrast …

Simone de Beauvoir: The woman destroyed (Hardcover, 1984, Fontana)

One of the most influential thinkers of her generationdraws us into the lives of three …

When Identity Quietly Slips Out of Your Hands

A certain heaviness followed me while reading The Woman Destroyed. Rather than offering a single narrative, Simone de Beauvoir presents three separate stories, each centered on a woman confronting a fracture in her life. From the beginning, I sensed that these were not dramatic collapses, but gradual unravelings. That subtlety made the emotional impact stronger.

Each protagonist faces a moment when the structure she trusted begins to fail. In “The Age of Discretion,” I felt the quiet disappointment of a mother confronting distance from her son and disillusionment in her own intellectual life. In “Monologue,” the tone shifts sharply, and I experienced a raw, almost chaotic voice shaped by bitterness and loss. The final story, “The Woman Destroyed,” stayed with me most. Through diary entries, I followed a wife discovering her husband’s infidelity, and I felt the slow erosion of certainty with painful clarity.

What affected me most …

V. S. Naipaul: The suffrage of Elvira (Paperback, 1980, Penguin Books)

In this book, an old, comically timid and absent-minded man, Surujpat Harbans, runs for office, …

Ballots, Laughter, and the Uneasy Birth of Politics

What stayed with me from The Suffrage of Elvira was not a single character, but a mood of restless improvisation. The novel unfolds in colonial Trinidad during a local election, and from the outset I felt a mixture of humor and unease. V. S. Naipaul presents politics not as an organized system, but as something improvised, shaped by personalities, favors, and quick alliances. I found myself observing rather than judging, drawn into the energy of a community learning how to participate in power.

Surajpat Harbans, the central figure, moves through the campaign with ambition and calculation. As I followed him, I felt both amusement and discomfort. His strategies rely less on ideology than on influence, persuasion, and manipulation. I noticed how easily principles give way to opportunity. The villagers, in turn, respond with their own expectations and misunderstandings. Voting becomes less about policy and more about identity, loyalty, and …

William Shakespeare: Othello (Paperback, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Createspace Independent Publishing Platform)

Shakespeare's tragedy of jealousy and suspicion presented scene by scene in comic book format.

Watching Trust Turn Against Itself

I found myself unsettled almost immediately while reading Othello. The play does not build slowly toward conflict. It places tension at the center from the start and lets it grow inward. William Shakespeare tells the story of Othello, a respected general, and his wife Desdemona, whose love appears steady until it is poisoned by suspicion. As I moved through the scenes, I felt a quiet dread that never lifted.

Othello’s dignity and confidence initially drew me in. I admired his composure and the trust he places in those around him. That trust becomes the play’s vulnerability. Iago, moving with calculated calm, manipulates perception without ever forcing it. Watching him work disturbed me deeply. He does not invent emotions. He redirects them. I felt frustration as small suggestions grew into certainty inside Othello’s mind. The transformation did not feel sudden. It felt methodical.

What affected me most was the …

Hermann Hesse: The glass bead game (2002, Picador USA)

Hesse’s most highly acclaimed book, The Glass Bead Game is set in a fictional state …

Where Intellect Met Silence and Asked for More

At first glance, The Glass Bead Game appeared distant to me, almost austere. Hermann Hesse constructs a future society called Castalia, devoted entirely to intellectual pursuit and the abstract art known as the Glass Bead Game. Rather than rushing into conflict, the novel unfolds through biography, reflection, and philosophical meditation. I felt myself slowing down, adjusting to a rhythm shaped by contemplation rather than action.

The story follows Joseph Knecht, whose rise within the Castalian Order culminates in his appointment as Magister Ludi, Master of the Game. As I traced his journey from gifted student to spiritual authority, I sensed both admiration and doubt. The Game itself symbolizes the unification of music, mathematics, and culture into a single harmonious system. Intellect here is refined, disciplined, and almost sacred. Yet as Knecht matures, he begins to question whether such purity comes at a cost.

What moved me most was …

Françoise Sagan: A Certain Smile (1960, Penguin Books Canada, Limited)

When Youth Learned How Gently It Could Hurt

What surprised me most while reading A Certain Smile was how quietly it unsettles. The novel opens without drama, almost casually, and that calm tone drew me in. Sagan tells the story through Dominique, a young woman studying law in Paris who drifts into an affair with Luc, an older man connected to her life in a way that complicates everything. From the start, I felt the subtle imbalance beneath their ease.

Dominique’s voice is reflective but not defensive. She does not dramatize her choices, and that restraint made me pay closer attention. As her relationship with Luc deepens, I sensed her confidence growing alongside her blindness. She believes she is in control, and I understood why. The affair offers intensity without responsibility, admiration without demand. Yet the emotional cost reveals itself slowly, and I felt an unease build with each calm confession.

What affected me most was …

Less Than Zero is the debut novel of Bret Easton Ellis, published in 1985. It …

Walking Through Emptiness That Refused to Announce Itself

What unsettled me first in Less Than Zero was how little it tried to persuade me. Bret Easton Ellis does not guide the reader toward outrage or pity. He simply places us inside a world drained of reaction and lets it speak for itself. The novel follows Clay, a college student returning to Los Angeles for winter break, moving through a landscape of wealth, drugs, parties, and emotional absence. From the opening pages, I felt a cold flatness that was impossible to ignore.

As Clay drifts between friends, relationships, and excess, I noticed how little anyone seems anchored to consequence. Violence, exploitation, and cruelty appear without commentary. That silence disturbed me more than explicit judgment would have. I felt myself waiting for someone to care deeply about what was happening, and that waiting became part of the experience. Clay observes everything, but rarely intervenes. His passivity made me uneasy, …

Trying to Hold Meaning While Time Refused to Stand Still

What struck me first in The Flanders Road was not the war itself, but the way it fractured thought. The novel does not present events in a clean sequence. Instead, it moves through memory, repetition, and interruption, and I had to adjust my reading habits almost immediately. Rather than following a story, I felt I was entering a mind struggling to assemble experience after it has already broken apart.

Claude Simon centers the novel on Georges, a French cavalry officer during the collapse of France in World War II. As I read, I felt disoriented in a deliberate way. Scenes of retreat, capture, and waiting return again and again, altered slightly each time. Horses fall, soldiers hesitate, commands dissolve. The repetition did not bore me. It unsettled me. It made the chaos of war feel internal rather than external. I sensed how memory circles trauma instead of moving past …