User Profile

Julia_98

Julia_98@bookwyrm.world

Joined 11 months, 1 week ago

This link opens in a pop-up window

Canto General is Pablo Neruda's tenth book of poems. It was first published in Mexico …

Hearing a Continent Speak in a Thousand Voices

Rather than feeling like a single book, Canto General felt to me like an immense landscape unfolding page after page. Pablo Neruda gathers history, politics, nature, and memory into a sweeping poetic vision of Latin America. As I read, I often felt less like a reader and more like a traveler moving across mountains, forests, ancient civilizations, and centuries of struggle. The scale of the work impressed me immediately. The collection traces the story of the continent from its natural origins through conquest, oppression, resistance, and renewal. What struck me most was Neruda’s ability to make geography feel alive. Rivers, stones, trees, and mountains are not simply described. They seem to carry memory. Reading these passages, I felt a deep sense of connection between people and place. The land itself becomes a witness to history. At the same time, the poems confront injustice directly. Neruda writes about exploitation, colonial violence, …

George Orwell: Animal Farm / Burmese Days / A Clergyman's Daughter / Coming Up for Air / Keep the Aspidistra Flying / Nineteen Eighty-Four (1976)

Breathing the Heavy Air of a Failing Empire

Heat seemed to rise from every page of Burmese Days. Rather than presenting colonial Burma as an exotic setting, George Orwell reveals it as a place weighed down by prejudice, loneliness, and moral compromise. As I moved through the novel, I felt a persistent discomfort, not because the story is sensational, but because its honesty leaves very little room for escape.

At the center stands John Flory, a British timber merchant who privately rejects the racism and arrogance of the colonial system while continuing to live within it. I found him both sympathetic and frustrating. His awareness of injustice gives him depth, yet his inability to act decisively often left me uneasy. Watching him navigate the social rituals of the European Club, I sensed the exhausting pressure of belonging to a world he no longer respected. His internal conflict became one of the novel’s strongest emotional forces for …

Sophocles: Sophocles, The Oedipus Cycle: Oedipus Rex, Oedipus at Colonus, Antigone (2002)

The Day Knowledge Became a Wound

A feeling of relentless momentum carried me through Oedipus Rex. From the opening scene, I sensed that the tragedy was already in motion long before I arrived. Sophocles does not build suspense by hiding danger. Instead, he creates tension through revelation. The city of Thebes suffers under a plague, and King Oedipus commits himself to discovering its cause. As I followed his investigation, I felt admiration for his determination, even while suspecting that every answer would bring him closer to catastrophe. (More interesting book reviews at Love Books Review)

Oedipus initially appears as the ideal ruler. He is intelligent, decisive, and deeply committed to his people. I respected his refusal to ignore suffering or accept uncertainty. Yet that same determination gradually became the source of my unease. The more passionately he pursued the truth, the more I sensed that truth itself was turning against him. Reading these scenes …

reviewed The sweet cheat gone by Marcel Proust (The modern library of the worlds best books)

Marcel Proust: The sweet cheat gone (1948, Modern Library)

Loving Someone Through Memory After They Are Already Gone

A feeling of emotional exhaustion settled over me while reading The Sweet Cheat Gone. Marcel Proust does not present grief as a sudden wound. He shows it spreading slowly through memory, jealousy, and habit until love itself becomes difficult to separate from obsession. The novel follows the narrator after Albertine’s departure and eventual death, and I felt immediately that absence would dominate every page more strongly than presence ever could.

What moved me most was the narrator’s inability to let Albertine become fixed in memory. He searches through recollections, rumors, letters, and imagined scenes, trying to understand whether she truly loved him and whether he ever truly knew her. As I followed these reflections, I felt trapped alongside him inside an endless process of reinterpretation. Every memory changes shape under scrutiny. Affection becomes suspicion, then longing, then guilt. Proust captures the instability of emotion with remarkable precision, and at …

Samuel Beckett: Waiting for Godot (1994)

Waiting for Godot is a play by Irish author Samuel Beckett. It was written (1948–1949), …

Standing Beside an Empty Road and Feeling Time Breathe

Silence reached me before meaning did when I began reading Waiting for Godot. I entered the play expecting movement and resolution, but Samuel Beckett offered something far more unsettling. Two men, Vladimir and Estragon, stand beside a tree and wait for someone named Godot, who never arrives. At first, I felt almost impatient. I kept expecting a decisive event, a revelation, or at least a clear destination. Instead, I found myself entering a space where waiting itself becomes the central experience.

The play stands as one of the defining works of Existential Literature because it confronts uncertainty without trying to disguise it. As I followed the repeated conversations and circular exchanges, I began to feel that the absence of progress was not a flaw but the point itself. Vladimir and Estragon speak about leaving, remembering, suffering, and hoping, yet they remain where they are. I felt both amusement and …

Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra: The History of Don Quixote de la Mancha (2000, Adamant Media Corporation)

Don Quijote de la Mancha es una novela escrita por el español Miguel de Cervantes …

Riding Beside a Dream That Refused to Wake Up

A strange warmth accompanied me as I entered The History of Don Quixote de la Mancha Part 1. I expected a comic adventure, but I quickly discovered something richer and more human beneath the humor. Miguel de Cervantes follows Alonso Quixano, a man so consumed by books of chivalry that he reinvents himself as Don Quixote, a wandering knight determined to revive honor and justice. From the beginning, I felt amusement, but I also sensed a quiet sadness moving underneath his grand ambitions.

As Don Quixote sets out with Sancho Panza, his practical and loyal companion, I found myself increasingly attached to both men. Their journeys are filled with confusion, mistaken identities, and encounters where imagination collides violently with reality. I laughed at Don Quixote’s battles against windmills and his heroic interpretations of ordinary events, yet I could not simply dismiss him as foolish. His faith in goodness and …

Egmont is a drama by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, which he completed in 1788. Its …

Hearing Freedom Speak Before the Fall

The first impression Egmont gave me was one of noble confidence moving toward danger. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe presents Count Egmont as a charismatic leader in the Netherlands during Spanish rule, admired by the people and trusted for his courage. As I followed him, I felt both admiration and anxiety, because his openness seemed powerful but dangerously unguarded.

Egmont believes in freedom, honor, and the loyalty of his people. Yet the political world around him is colder than he imagines. The Duke of Alba enters as the force of repression, bringing suspicion, control, and calculated authority. I felt the tension sharpen as Egmont refused to act with caution. His idealism moved me, but it also frustrated me. He sees tyranny clearly, yet he underestimates its patience.

The love story with Clärchen added tenderness to the drama. Her devotion felt sincere and brave, and I was touched by how …

Intrigue and Love, sometimes Love and Intrigue, Love and Politics, or Luise Miller (German: Kabale …

When Love Walked Into the Machinery of Power

From the first conflict in Intrigue and Love, I sensed a world where private feeling had little protection against public ambition. Friedrich Schiller’s drama follows Ferdinand, the son of a powerful president, and Luise Miller, the daughter of a humble musician. Their love appears sincere, but it stands directly against class hierarchy, political calculation, and parental control. I felt the tenderness between them, yet I also felt how exposed it was.

The pressure around the lovers grows through manipulation. Ferdinand’s father wants him to marry Lady Milford for political advantage, while court officials weave lies to break his attachment to Luise. As I read, I felt anger at how easily innocence could be cornered by authority. Luise’s honesty moved me most. She is not weak, but she is trapped between love, duty, and fear for her family. Her suffering felt painfully human.

Schiller’s language gives the play emotional …