what i've been reading.
As always, I'm reading many books at the same time.
The Kreutzer Sonata
I thought I'd breeze through this book in an hour or two, but it's taking me much longer. I forgot that none of Tolstoy's books are easy reading, heh. So no matter how short the story is, it's not going to be a quick read. (Doesn't help that I'm a slow reader.)
I'm not sure how I feel about the book so far. While I can't help but agree with the main character's narrative at times, there are a lot of things that just make me go 'huh..?', and in a rather angry way at that. I've a poor choice of words here, but he seems to be a feminist and a sexist at the same time, and it's a befuddling combination.
Flight of a Butterfly; Various
A small collection of hokku, read for JLC2. I had thought in vain, once more, that I'm going to go through this one fast, because seriously, how long can a 300+ page book with only three lines on each page take you? :P But it turns out that I stop after nearly every poem to contemplate on it for an hour. The biggest part of the book is taken up by Basho (works of whom I've finished reading already), and now there are just small "trial versions" for many other poets.
Maria Fedorovna's Diaries
It's one of the very painful books to read, at least for me. Truly, it's just a simple narrative of her days (1915 and beyond), and truly, I know what's about to happen most of the time (I'm not the best History student, but not knowing that would've put me to grave shame), but it doesn't make it any easier. Though, reading Nikolai's diary two years ago was much worse.
Labels: books, history, japanese literature challenge 2, memoirs, poetry, russia, russian







2 Comments:
It's interesting that you like Russian literature (I'm assuming) like I do. I never can get enough Tolstoy so I'll have to look at this. As well as the Diary one. It often happens to me that a book takes longer than I'd originally anticipated.
Bellezza - thank you for your comment!
I'm still going through KS, about one smallish chapter at a time...
I've only recently started liking RusLit. Before that it was required reading material, and while I appreciated the greatness and splendour and all, I couldn't bring myself to really like it. Now that I read it for myself, it's much better somehow.
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