Stefano Costa finished reading Un mal nombre by Elena Ferrante (Dos amigas -- segundo volumen)
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I'm an archaeologist, I love to read speculative fiction and feminist works (and why not both?), particularly from Africa.
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I want to read Romanian authors since many years. Many authors live abroad and do not write in Romanian, but it's a good start.
Care lettrici, cari lettori, provate a leggere questo libro e vorrete che non finisca mai. Elena Ferrante, con il suo …
Care lettrici, cari lettori, provate a leggere questo libro e vorrete che non finisca mai. Elena Ferrante, con il suo …
Rather embarrassing nostalgic and sexist account of Hannibal's story and current memory in Italy and beyond.
Paolo Rumiz: Annibale (Italian language, 2008, Feltrinelli)
A breathtakingly ambitious retelling of the earliest human societies offers a new understanding of world history
For generations, our remote …
No one’s ever told Eleanor that life should be better than fine.
Meet Eleanor Oliphant: She struggles with appropriate social …
Content warning some spoilers about the end
This book was both heartbreaking and heartwarming. It was heartbreaking because there is a constant violence against the poor little girl, and she seems to suffer so much. But then things turn to a positive outcome at the end, and she speaks to Kalessin and calls Ged and Tenar her father and mother (when there where just hints of Tenar thinking of her as "adoptive daughter"). I was feeling joy while reading those pages. At the fourth book in the series, I think I see a kind of tidal cycle between male- and female-focused stories. Books 1 and 3 were pretty much male-focused and books 2 and 4 are strongly female-focused. It's explicit, the Place of the Tombs of Atuan has no men, only eunuchs. In "Tehanu" the female perspective is weaved in almost every page, both in the grand scheme of things and the everyday life. I couldn't help noticing a Christian analogy for the final scene when Kalessin says that Tehanu is their daughter, given to Ged and Tenar who should care for her - but it's Tehanu who chooses to stay and help them. So it's actually a radically different approach than the Christian God.
Ursula K. Le Guin: The Other Wind (2001, Harcourt)
The Other Wind is a fantasy novel by the American author Ursula K. Le Guin, published by Harcourt in 2001. …
In this final episode of "The Earthsea Cycle", the widowed Tenar finds and nurses her aging friend, Sparrowhawk, a magician …