Reading is primarily a love, no rain. Love stories, love of words. Love of books. It may also be many other things of course. An escape, of course. Escape from reality, re-course. E 'but a specific reality that I think about. When the bus (or train) begin to fly, "my lady", or we have enough foresight to bring with us a book or inevitably begin to develop ingenious methods of murder (or suicide, depending on inclinations personal). Be prepared, in short, be with you the readings appropriate to the task. I mean not suitable for the points, if all those who choose them, but just right for the location and conditions of reading. Whatever our biases, it becomes difficult to take the bus to read Stephen King's It or Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace: best left for the train. On the bus you may be forced to close the book quickly because he arrived at the bus stop without knowing it. And then the routes - in general - are shorter. The dimensions do not count only for short Rocco Siffredi.
Here I throw down a first strip of small tips needs. And since I spoke of ingenuity in the development of methods to get rid of molesters, the best way to start is definitely with ...
Crimes specimens. Max Aub. Aub is most famous for his novel Jusepe Campalans Torres, a brilliant "fictional biography" of a painter ever. But at least this small book is no less genius. I imagined and imaginary crimes that populate its pages are narrated with a little joy this release, with cheerful innocence and cruel as to be admired. In a few lines every time Aub describes a character, a person, a human story with lightning precision. And the joy ... the joy of giving everyone what they deserve! ;-)
The Procurator of Judea . Anatole France. The story is not just that. A senior Pilate discusses with his friend, Lamia, an outer box a strong anti-Jewish resentment. And Christ? Vague memories. Beyond reflections on the history of France and the significance of this and of historical studies, as well as on anti-Semitism (as old as modern), the interest in this story is primarily literary. Written with elegance and sobriety that leave admired over the reader a human portrait of the most fascinating and successful.
The sea and its shores . Elizabeth Bishop. In this tiny little book, there are two more short stories of this great American poet. And the visionary, the rigorous style, the strict and precise choice of narrative images and figures are undoubtedly those of poetic language. The one other story, the one on the sea beach and the man who thrills to be locked up in prison, talk about books and stories. And fantasy. The great power that our creative imagination and creative.
A panel of female . Susan Glaspell. Yellow pure classical canon, too. The elements of the yellow we are all - the crime, investigation, psychology of motive, the termination of the case. In addition, there is much more: the eternal dichotomy / antithesis Law / Justice vi trova una rappresentazione esemplare e compiutamente esplicativa. E questa storia di donne che commettono e coprono delitti – nella beata ignoranza e insipienza degli uomini – spinge a interrogarsi sul senso della locuzione “giuria di propri pari”. Forse ha ragione proprio Susan Glaspell…
Capitalismo totale . Di Jean Peyrelevade. Non di sola letteratura dovrebbe vivere il lettore sano. Questo breve libretto non è freschissimo visto che il suo autore l’ha scritto ormai nel 2005, ma sulla crisi economica in atto dice molto e meglio di tante analisi che ancora now be read. Jean Peyrelevade was president and chief executive of Credit Lyonnais, then was one of the great bankers of Europe. It is a short kommune angry, even in the vaguest form (unless you're the survivors of Chicago monetarists with calcified brain for too many years of finance and gay crap sauce Friedmanites ;-)). E 'for this, that this admirable synthesis of the economic structure of global financial capitalism that has formed in recent decades is particularly illuminating and despairing.
Max Aub (1903-1972)
Anatole France (1844-1924)
Elizabeth Bishop (1911-1979)
Susan Glaspell (1876-1948)
Jean Peyrelevade (n.1939)
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