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2011 me: Thus continues my 1920s-1940s British fiction obsession (Wodehouse, Waugh, Woolf, Christie . . . )
The font on this book is old-fashioned and my brain doesn't like it. It looks like typesetting as opposed to word processed.
2022 me: turns out Evelyn himself didn't care for wartime typesetting, either. I passed through many copies — one bought secondhand in a fashionable district of Mexico City, a library copy borrowed from a local branch that was flooded in 2017, originally built in the ...more
The font on this book is old-fashioned and my brain doesn't like it. It looks like typesetting as opposed to word processed.
2022 me: turns out Evelyn himself didn't care for wartime typesetting, either. I passed through many copies — one bought secondhand in a fashionable district of Mexico City, a library copy borrowed from a local branch that was flooded in 2017, originally built in the ...more
An interesting whirlwind through a lifetime in England. I guess this book points out how much money does NOT buy happiness. Nor does religion, really. It was interesting to see Waugh's take on religion and family relations, particularly on the institution of marriage. I just still feel kind of stunned (despite how long it took me to read), like: wow, it's already over? It seemed so suddenly complete. But it told the story it had to tell, and thoroughly at that. I did also really enjoy how it was
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"The chapel showed no ill effects of its long neglect. The paint was as fresh and bright as ever. And the lamp burned once more before the altar. I knelt and said a prayer - an ancient, newly-learned form of words. I thought that the builders did not know the uses to which their work would descend. They made a new house with the stones of the old castle. Year by year the great harvest of timber in the park grew to ripeness, until, in sudden frost, came the Age of Hooper. The place was desolate a
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Only three stars because I found it a bit exhausting...all these characters broken, bad, talking but never really saying anything. But that could be the genius here, the movement of the novel is like an iceburg, the bulk of it moving under the surface. All of the escaping these characters go through is too much like real life...Julia's character is brilliant-at the end. She would be the subject of endless delicious sessions of analysis. I wanted this book to end and when it did I was left deflat
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I really enjoyed this book although it is certainly a tragedy in the end. However it embodies everything I love about British literature and tells a wonderfully vivid story. It's interesting too because I don't really find Charles Ryder particularly likable, yet I still feel a deep sense of sadness for him.
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This book was not at all what I expected (not sure what I expected).
I am still really deciding whether I liked it or not, so the rating is likely to change (and if not the rating, the review.
I am still really deciding whether I liked it or not, so the rating is likely to change (and if not the rating, the review.
Jun 23, 2008
Chanda
marked it as to-read
Aug 21, 2008
María
marked it as to-read
Jun 26, 2009
Todd
marked it as to-read
Jul 02, 2009
Heather
marked it as to-read
Mar 19, 2010
Lara Abdallah
marked it as 1001-books-to-read
Dec 01, 2010
Rachel
marked it as to-read
Oct 07, 2011
Juniper
marked it as to-read
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review of another edition
Shelves:
to-acquire,
literature
Mar 05, 2012
Nancy
marked it as to-read


















