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Julia_98

Julia_98@bookwyrm.world

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James Joyce: Ulysses (2022)

Ulysses is a modernist novel by the Irish writer James Joyce. Partially serialized in the …

Getting Lost in a Single Day and Finding an Entire World

My experience with Ulysses felt less like reading a novel and more like wandering through a city of thoughts. As one of the defining achievements of modernism, the book transforms an ordinary day in Dublin into an immense exploration of consciousness, language, memory, and identity. From the first pages, I realized that James Joyce was not interested in guiding me comfortably. Instead, he invited me into a world where meaning often had to be discovered rather than received.

The novel follows Leopold Bloom, Stephen Dedalus, and several other characters during a single day, June 16, 1904. On the surface, very little happens. People walk, eat, talk, remember, and move through the city. Yet beneath these ordinary activities, I found an astonishing depth. Joyce turns everyday life into something epic. As I followed Bloom through Dublin, I felt both close to him and occasionally overwhelmed by the flood of …

Gabriel García Márquez: Chronicle of a Death Foretold (2003)

The Morning Everyone Knew and No One Stopped

A strange sense of inevitability followed me through Chronicle of a Death Foretold. Before the story truly begins, the reader already knows that Santiago Nasar will be killed. Under normal circumstances, that knowledge might weaken suspense. Instead, Gabriel García Márquez transforms certainty into tension. As I read, I felt myself pulled toward an outcome that seemed preventable at every moment and unavoidable at the same time.

The novel reconstructs the events leading to Santiago’s death years after the crime occurred. Through interviews, memories, and conflicting testimonies, the narrator attempts to understand how an entire community failed to stop a murder that had been publicly announced. I found this structure fascinating. Rather than searching for the identity of a killer, I was searching for the point at which responsibility dissolved. Every new account seemed to reveal another missed opportunity.

What affected me most was the role of collective …

Mario Vargas Llosa: Conversation in the cathedral (1993)

Conversation in The Cathedral (original title: Conversación en La catedral) is a 1969 novel by …

Searching for the Moment Everything Went Wrong

A question lingered in my mind throughout Conversation in the Cathedral: when does a society begin to lose itself? Mario Vargas Llosa builds the novel around a conversation between Santiago Zavala and Ambrosio, a former chauffeur, but that conversation expands into a vast portrait of Peru during the dictatorship of Manuel Odría. As I read, I felt as though I were piecing together a broken mirror, each fragment revealing another aspect of corruption, disappointment, and power.

The narrative moves across different times, perspectives, and social classes with remarkable complexity. At first, I felt disoriented by the shifting voices and timelines. Gradually, that confusion became part of the experience. The fragmented structure mirrors a society where truth is scattered and difficult to recover. Santiago’s attempt to understand both his country and his own life gave the novel its emotional center for me.

What affected me most was the …

reviewed Kassandra by Christa Wolf (Luchterhand Bibliothek)

Novel retells the story of the fall of Troy from Cassandra's point of view. The …

Knowing the Truth and Watching No One Listen

A feeling of quiet sorrow accompanied me through Cassandra. Christa Wolf retells the Trojan myth through the voice of Cassandra, who reflects on her life while awaiting death. Rather than focusing on battles and heroes, the novel explores power, memory, and the loneliness of seeing clearly in a world determined to ignore uncomfortable truths.

As I followed Cassandra’s thoughts, I felt deeply connected to her isolation. She understands the forces leading Troy toward destruction, yet her warnings are dismissed or manipulated. What moved me most was her struggle to remain honest while surrounded by political ambition, fear, and deception. Her insight becomes a burden rather than a gift.

Wolf’s prose is reflective and intimate, drawing attention to the inner cost of knowledge. I felt admiration for Cassandra’s courage, but also sadness at her helplessness. The novel transforms an ancient legend into a meditation on responsibility and truth.

reviewed Buddenbrooks by Thomas Mann (Everyman's library ;)

Thomas Mann: Buddenbrooks (1994, Knopf, Distributed by Random House)

This epic, sub-titled ‘The Decline of a Family’, was Mann’s first novel, published in 1901. …

Watching a Family Fade One Generation at a Time

Few novels have made me feel the passage of time as vividly as Buddenbrooks. Rather than focusing on a single dramatic event, Thomas Mann traces the gradual rise and decline of a prosperous merchant family across several generations. As I moved through the lives of the Buddenbrooks, I felt as though I were watching a grand house slowly lose its foundations. Nothing collapses overnight. The change arrives through countless small decisions, disappointments, and shifts in character.

The novel begins with confidence and stability. The family enjoys wealth, social respect, and a strong sense of identity. Yet as generations pass, cracks begin to appear. I felt particularly drawn to Thomas Buddenbrook, whose dedication to duty and family reputation carries both strength and burden. His determination impressed me, but it also made me uneasy. The more he sacrifices himself to preserve the family legacy, the more isolated he becomes.

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 …