Saturday, February 16, 2019

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

From Goodreads

The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Robert Louis Stevenson

This book gets an extra star for its importance and status. Honestly, the story is great and the psychological tension is intriguing in it. My problem with it was that it sort of rambles on and not in the way I like to ramble on. It's a very good book and deserves its place among the classics of Western Literature. It just wasn't my favorite.

Monday, February 11, 2019

Ethan Frome

From Goodreads

This short, little novel grew on me as it unfolded. I was a little underwhelmed at first with its pondering pace. While it never really sped up it did get deeper and more interesting as the psychological profiles unwound and were laid bare.

On a side note, I did not picture Liam Neeson as Ethan. In my head he looked much more like Ichabod Crane or the bicyclist from The Triplets of Belleville. Mattie looked nothing like Patricia Arquette in my head either. Even books I don't love tend to create better mental images than their cinematic counterparts.

Friday, February 8, 2019

Siddhartha

From Goodreads

As far as Siddhartha is a story the work is simple and beautiful. hesse does a great job of developing characters through the book in a unique way. In a sense he reveals them in the way that Siddhartha learns, by pulling back the bits of otherness to get to the oneness.

My only issue with the book is not so much with the book as with its modern devotees. The theology or philosophy or whatever you may call it that is built on this work is often wileded recklessly, clumsily and haphazardly by those same seekers that eternally never find anything. There may be wisdom in this book but it may be just as ineffable as the ferryman says it is.

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

The Transformation and Other Stories - Kafka

From Goodreads

I thought I had read Metamorphosis before, but if I had it made no lasting impression on me. The same cannot be said this time round. Metamorphosis is, above everything else, very sad. It has a bleakness that is palpable. While this may be the best and most well known story in this anthology there are other very good ones as well.

In particular I enjoyed The Stoker, The Judgment and A Report to the Academy. In The Penal Colony and A country Doctor were interesting as well. The latter two had some great bizarre moments. This anthology ended with Josephine, the Songstress. It somehow combines a weariness with strength in the face of futile existence. I don't know if it was intended as a surveying of the political atmosphere of his time, but it could be read as such by today's readers, who have resigned themselves to ineffectual governance.

Monday, February 4, 2019

Robinson Crusoe

From Goodreads

The story of Robinson Crusoe is interesting enough, but some of the minutiae of details in his survival drag on and for me, make it a rather boring read. I used a few reviews that decried Crusoe's morals and use of religion as a weapon and his language (savages, etc.). I was going to comment on these; but, I realized that arguing against somebody's post here on Goodreads would have had the same effect that their scourging of this novel has on Defoe.

SOme of the psychological aspects of this book and Crusoe's inner struggles are more interesting than how to build a hedge, but these became tedious at times. Overall this isn't a bad book - it just ain't great, neither.