up all night
Bluelight Crew
Yay. Finally.
I'm reading Disgrace by J. M. Coetzee and it's holding my attention. More than that, I'm really liking it. For a few reasons I've been struggling recently with dedicating my time and energy to a book but I think I've found exactly what I need.
I'd read a bit about Disgrace before I bought it. It's won a Booker and a Nobel prize, so I guess that was unavoidable, but in a lot of ways I wish I hadn't. It's set in South Africa and is about a university professor who makes a seemingly stupid choice and what happens to him after that catalyst.
I'm only halfway through, and I know I haven't read the most dramatic parts yet, but so far I feel like I completely understand him. He's a twice divorced university lecturer whose internal monologue is sometimes scarily similar to mine (you know, because of my two divorces and university education...) but the initial mistake he makes is so fundamental, so ridiculous, that I can absolutely relate to this restrained lashing out at society.
Coetzee's writing is really beautiful. He seems to have such an empathetic view of humanity as well as a really honest understanding of our biggest flaws and weaknesses. I love when a writer writes like that. It's the reason I keep reading.
So thanks for getting me back in the game, J. M.
I'm reading Disgrace by J. M. Coetzee and it's holding my attention. More than that, I'm really liking it. For a few reasons I've been struggling recently with dedicating my time and energy to a book but I think I've found exactly what I need.
I'd read a bit about Disgrace before I bought it. It's won a Booker and a Nobel prize, so I guess that was unavoidable, but in a lot of ways I wish I hadn't. It's set in South Africa and is about a university professor who makes a seemingly stupid choice and what happens to him after that catalyst.
I'm only halfway through, and I know I haven't read the most dramatic parts yet, but so far I feel like I completely understand him. He's a twice divorced university lecturer whose internal monologue is sometimes scarily similar to mine (you know, because of my two divorces and university education...) but the initial mistake he makes is so fundamental, so ridiculous, that I can absolutely relate to this restrained lashing out at society.
Coetzee's writing is really beautiful. He seems to have such an empathetic view of humanity as well as a really honest understanding of our biggest flaws and weaknesses. I love when a writer writes like that. It's the reason I keep reading.
So thanks for getting me back in the game, J. M.