A biased account of life in Northern Ireland/my often very foggy views on literature.
Thursday, 19 August 2010
I've Gotten Over My Fear of Woolf Quite Completely
I Forgot To Give It A Title Again - Oh Wait That's Not Very Interesting So I Suppose I'll have to Call It 'BA BA BAH PROGRESSSSS'
Thursday, 8 July 2010
I Like Your Mom's Books
- 'My Antonia' my Willa Cather
- 'Mrs Dalloway' by Virginia Woolf
- 'To The Lighthouse' by Virginia Woolf'
- 'A Farewell to Arms' by Ernest Hemingway'
- A book of short stories by Chekov
- 'The English Patient' by Michael Ondaatje
- 'The Glass Menagerie', 'Sweet Bird of Youth', 'A Streetcar Named Desire' by Tennessee Williams
- 'A Raisin in the Sun' by Lorraine Hansbury
- The Gormenghast Trilogy by Mervyn Peake
Thursday, 1 July 2010
I always forget to give posts a title
- It's ENORMOUS. There are just so many pages to this book. It requires such immense willpower to just consider reading it.
- No writer that has ever lived will digress quite as prosaically as Victor Hugo. Les Mis is absolutely excellent when he's directing the plot, themes or character. However, every few hundred pages Hugo just launches into a rant about something not entirely irrelevant, but so insignificant that one could easily grasp the scene without a sixty-page rant about a convent. This just makes the former point even more difficult. Just keep to the actual point and we'll get along fine, Monsieur Hugo.
Friday, 21 May 2010
Deeper Understanding
Monday, 17 May 2010
Boring Update
Since my last post I have finished ‘Tess of the d’Urbervilles’ by Thomas Hardy, and ‘The Catcher in the
I suppose this is just a quick little post to make sure everything’s up to date. I went shopping in the capital of
I’m dong the GCSEs (uh…General Certificate of Standard Education) at the moment. They’re the first serious exams I’ve ever done in my life. It means that I don’t have to go to school unless I’m sitting an exam! It’s wonderful – lots of reading, sleeping and laptop-ing.