Robert Evans

Robert Evans
@RobertEvns
Architecture
Durham Universty
Liverpool
Москва
117 okur puanı
Nisan 2020 tarihinde katıldı
67 syf.
8/10 puan verdi
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7 günde okudu
I remember my childhood when I read White Nights. Maybe it's one of the mistakes many of us make as children: to make one friend superior to another. Pretend to play with the other when one is gone and leave him alone when the other comes. In fact, two people are one and humiliate our other friend. And finally need our friend, whom we have
White Nights
White NightsFyodor Dostoyevski · Karbon Kitaplar · 201775,2bin okunma
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133 syf.
9/10 puan verdi
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35 saatte okudu
It is said that man represents a confused, difficult-to-cross passage, losing himself on winding paths. In this book, Dostoevsky, in a similar language to us, exposes the dark and complex aspects of the human soul to us, inviting us to think and question it together. If you have accepted the invitation, go to the review... In Franz Kafka's"
Notes From Underground
Notes From UndergroundFyodor Dostoyevski · Karbon Kitaplar · 2016129,5bin okunma
216 syf.
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5 günde okudu
Black and Poor..
Toni Morrison tells The Story Of All Blacks in this work through being black and poor; she interweaves the stories to show that the characters we were angry with in the previous episode were also victims of others, and that all victims were victims of everything that happened to blacks. When we reach the end of the book, we do not know who we are going to be angry at, because injustice and evil have reached so deep, and black people have been so gripped that we cannot even be angry at those who kill each other and exploit each other. As we grieve for someone to become a victim, the next part is the story of the person who exploited that victim, this time our grasp is growing.So the writer expands our perception in each episode, allowing us to look at what was actually done to the All Blacks through a few people. The terrible story of little black Pecola, who wants to be blue-eyed by praying to God every day; it is added and expanded with the stories of those who have been victims of their own oppression, their own victimhood, putting an incredibly impressive truth of exploitation before us: neither being angry nor angry can destroy such a terrible, tangible evil, the living. That's why all that's left is words...literature stays...the incredible power of literature remains. I read Toni Morrison's book twice at different times years ago. I'm thinking of reading it again. This work is one of the best examples of the power of literature to tell, Show, and disclose. Katmer katmer is a magnificent work where pain grows before our eyes. So, surely, I suggest to every reader whose heart cannot do without literature.
The Bluest Eye
The Bluest EyeToni Morrison · Vintage London · 20072,006 okunma

Okur Takip Önerileri

Tümünü Gör
190 syf.
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6 günde okudu
Knowledge is power..
The brains of people living in houses covered with screens are bathed in published advertisements, sequences, rubbish culture. Those who don't read, those who don't learn. the ignorant will not burn the books.But after all, a handful of people who defy this order will carry the culture by memorizing the books. "Knowledge is power.” Too many times too much information can have vital consequences. He tells me that he realized something was missing in his life. Everyone believes life would be better if they spent an hour or two reading books. He points out that reading books is not enough; he states that the trick is not to read books dry, but to discover the details in them. The books” show the pores on the face of life, " meaning that life is not out of powdery dreams it strikes people in the face. Every man is a book. Every book is in one man. Even when the heat is rising and the pressure is intensifying, the strength of human resistance is sufficient to preserve the heritage in the books. The work appeals to everyone, not just book lovers. It's an easy-to-read, suggestive book.
Fahrenheit 451
Fahrenheit 451Ray Bradbury · Ballantine Books · 199190bin okunma
324 syf.
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34 saatte okudu
İnner-Dystopian
I don't know how to describe a book that is both open and symbolic. I think that's the power of the dystopian genre: being able to live without telling. The story that is being created on the grounds of depopulation is based on the use of women as tools, just like a commodity, for the purpose of increasing the population. The fiction is extraordinary, terrifying and detailed. That was the first thing that accelerated my reading and connected me to the book. But that's not what I found most impressive. What caught my attention, he insisted, were the stages of transition. It can never be easy to put a society into a different configuration, a different order at once. This is like Ember, for it is, something that happens over time. I think those words sum up enough.. "Nothing changes at once: you'll be scalded to death in a hot tub before you know it. There were stories in the newspapers, of course, bodies found in ditches or in forests, beaten to death or mutilated, attacked as they used to say; but these were about other women, and the men who did them were other men. None of them were men we knew. Newspaper stories were like dreams for us, bad dreams for others. We used to say, ' how terrible they were, but they were terrible, beyond belief.' They were overly melodramatic, they had a dimension that didn't belong in our lives." In this "wonderful" life, where everything is gradually manipulated, free and free, we are most often in a time and order that allows one to live their own self-dystopian lives with tyrannical, unwelcome responsibilities. The book I read
The Handmaid's Tale
The Handmaid's TaleMargaret Atwood · Vintage Classics · 201711,1bin okunma
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