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Author Archives: susan
LITERATURE: Phaedrus – Equality in Love
One of the things I’d noticed in Symposium, and that Phaedrus elaborates upon in his opening statements to Socrates in Phaedrus, is a further separation of form of love into lover and beloved. This notion has become foreign to us … Continue reading Continue reading
LITERATURE: As I Lay Dying – Faulkner Faces Time & Space
Faulkner obviously loved to play with the question of time and space, effectively seen in The Sound and the Fury. But I love this passage in As I Lay Dying, where Addie’s youngest boy, Vardaman, runs from the room just … Continue reading Continue reading
LITERATURE & WRITING: Good Reading Intimidates
Ah, just when the muses had returned, poked me with their golden staffs and had me hopping, hoping; I read Faulkner: Pa stands over the bed, dangle-armed, humped, motionless. He raises his hand to his head, scouring his hair, listening … Continue reading Continue reading
LITERATURE: As I Lay Dying – Character Empathy
Part of character development is to establish reader identification with the characters, especially the protagonist. In Faulkner’s novels, with the multiple points of view, we’re never sure exactly who that is. What’s more, we have to learn to separate good … Continue reading Continue reading
LITERATURE: As I Lay Dying – Character by Character
Faulkner’s novel is told by the characters, mainly the members of the Bundren family; a similar technique that he employed in The Sound and the Fury. The immediate tension is the knowledge that Addie Bundren is lying very ill in … Continue reading Continue reading
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Tagged Faulkner
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LITERATURE: Symposium
Finished Plato’s Symposium and will be moving on to Phaedrus, but I know that I would like to eventually get the book form (I’ve been reading it online) as it seems to be wanting of a more continual thinking on … Continue reading Continue reading
LITERATURE: As I Lay Dying
While it was my best intention to hold off on the reading except for Plato, Macromedia learning and catching up on the lit journals, I couldn’t help it. Honest, I just walked near the lineup of books and Faulkner slid … Continue reading
LITERATURE: Symposium – On Love and Hiccups
In the midst of a deep dinner discussion about the forms of love, I find this amusing bit: "Pausanias came to a pause-this is the balanced way in which I have been taught by the wise to speak; and Aristodemus … Continue reading Continue reading
POETRY: Dependence
For he who finds his friend within the shallow shades of darkness is more completely bound to him to follow in blind faith, to walk in days lit scorching bright by human conflagration and hiss the flames that lick and … Continue reading Continue reading
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LITERATURE: Child of God – Finale
Just finished McCarthy’s Child of God and honestly don’t know what to say. I truly wish some day to continue my formal study of literature so that I can offer a more insightful review than Whew! I seem to base … Continue reading Continue reading
LITERATURE: Child of God – Foreshadowing
Lester’s first murder of a woman is born of the egg of rejection with the sperm he’s left inside a woman he found dead in a car (boy, that’s a whole psychological story right there that I won’t go into … Continue reading Continue reading
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Tagged Cormac McCarthy
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LITERATURE: Child of God More on Character
There is no doubt about it, Lester Ballard is one of the worst characters that McCarthy’s come up with so far in my readings. Worst as far as evil, that is, and maybe, just maybe the Judge is more evil, … Continue reading Continue reading
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Tagged Cormac McCarthy
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LITERATURE: Child of God – Character Empathy and Writing Technique
The storekeeper looked at Ballard. Ballard, he said, how old are you? Twenty-seven, if it’s any of your business. Twenty-seven. And in twenty-seven years you’ve managed to accumulate four dollars and nineteen cents? (p. 126) This was a shocker. In … Continue reading Continue reading
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Tagged Cormac McCarthy
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LITERATURE: Child of God -Evil
While McCarthy’s characters are a major force in the direction of his stories, reacting to a strongly built environment that produces more common but no less traumatic conflicts, they seem to me to be vague as individuals. What I mean … Continue reading Continue reading
LITERATURE: Child of God – Ahem, Character
Oh my. McCarthy’s outdone himself. Harrogate’s love of watermelons seems positively normal. Continue reading
Posted in LITERATURE
Tagged Cormac McCarthy
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The Lost Children: A Charity Anthology