oh the joy of the misery of the uncovering of the story of the girl who never knew she was what she was
i sink deep into comfort of this prose when there are so many grips to hold onto. Woe is she Macabéa and woe am I for reading this tale. How delisious.
n.b. A âno starâ rating for books I review does not imply criticismâI rarely give ratings, as giving stars is an unhelpfully blunt instrument and all too often involves comparing apples with oranges.returnreturnThis is Lispectorâs last book (she died the same year that it was published). In his essay, 'A Passion for the Void', Colm TóibÃn describes the novella as the book in which âall her talents and eccentricities merged and foldedâ, and, although it is not autobiographical, he suggests it is âan exploration of a self that is sometimes glimpsed but never known.âreturnreturnI did not immediately love the bookâthough it was kind of touch and goâstimulating and intriguing though it is. I am more at home with irreal or absurdist writing that in a way riffs on an idea, gives the reader a thread to cling to regardless of how unpredictable the story that follows and stays with the …