500 Great Books By Women discussion

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The Hour of the Star
Trials and Adversity
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The Hour of the Star - Clarice Lispector
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For sure! Any and all reviews are welcome, Zanna. Posting on the discussion devoted to the books speeds up the process as well.

I heard Lispector wasn't into reading... Certainly, I can't think of any author whose work shows up as an influence here!

Here is the link: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Zanna, I'm not surprised to hear she didn't like reading much. Her sentence structure is so unique. I had heard previously that she was self-taught as a writer, so I guess that can mean that she didn't like reading much too. I guess. Regardless, this work is marvelous. I've got three other works (thank you, New Dimensions Press) and I plan on reading them soon. Actually, one is approaching the top of my To Be Read pile.


Thank you for your review, Neal. It has been inputted above.

Great point. I don't read Portuguese, but it strikes me as a language worth learning for the sake of reading. There are a great many great writers who have used it.

"...Stream-of-consciousness writing filled with Rodrigo's personal anguish is interspersed with the telling of Macabea's story. "Born with a legacy of misfortune, a creature from nowhere with the expression of someone who apologizes for occupying too much space," Macabea is an ugly, undernourished native of rural northeast Brazil who loves Coca-Cola and Marilyn Monroe, lives on a steady diet of hot dogs, and believes that "to be well educated was the same as knowing how to tell lies."..."
(J.L., p. 294)
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