Harp
I'll Lock Up
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- Chicago, IL US
Orgetorix said:A devil of a confusing read in the Latin, though.
Exegit monumentum aere perennius.
And Augie was a devil of a fellow....
Orgetorix said:A devil of a confusing read in the Latin, though.
JazzBaby said:Just starting Hayden Harerra's bio of Frida Kahlo now, because I love the movie and it's mostly based on this book...
Harp said:Peer beneath Hemingway's simple declarative prose; lift off his crisp,
tight construct, and therein lies a certain nihilism that neither France nor Spain
fully expunged; also an evident narcissism reflected in his personal life.
The Sun Also Rises speaks of a man crippled by war and seeking to
live a dignified life. A man capable of love but incapacitated from physical
intimacy. One suspects that Hemingway perhaps suffered an innate
deformity, capable of expessing Eros physically but somehow denied her
innate possession. Toward the end of his dissolute life; after his youth
and talent had fled, his narcissism remained, and Hemingway seems to
have collapsed within himself. I believe The Sun Also Rises to
be the best of Hemingway, and his most revealing work.
Harp said:I stayed away from the flick since Selma H. reminds me of a past
mistake , but Frida herself is interesting. May read this.
Technonut said:rebel: The life and Legend of James Dean... Donald Spoto
JazzBaby said:Read Spoto's bio of Liz Taylor. It was a bit sketchy, but I enjoyed it.
Polka Dot said:I'm reading some Zola, myself.