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6+ oeuvres 322 utilisateurs 5 critiques

Œuvres de John Paul Riquelme

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The Cambridge Companion to American Gothic (2017) — Contributeur — 10 exemplaires

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2.5? I mean, it's a nice takedown of obnoxious privileged men who prey as a society on women, but man am I tired of that story. Chapter after chapter of exasperating cruelty and hypocrisy. I applaud Hardy for pissing me off so much - because it was intended. But here's where I get into trouble with the classics - I've already learned that I don't like Victorian morals. If I were, say, making an impossible list of 1,000 books I think others need to read, this wouldn't be my choice for how the patriarchy screws over women. I'd choose something by a woman that captures the current era.… (plus d'informations)
 
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Kiramke | Jun 27, 2023 |
Astoundingly, I'd never read Dracula before now. I don't think I've even experienced any adaptations all the way through. I knew some things, but didn't even realize that the majority of the novel takes place in England-- I always figured it was all Transylvanian castles.

Anyway, it's great. Dracula is a great villain, especially in the beginning when he's all suave. The characters claim that Dracula acts like an irrational animal, but his plan is actually founded on very rational principles. Even though Dracula isn't really science fiction, it is good speculative fiction in the sense that it starts from the premise of What if vampires were real and had x properties? and then follows through on that with complete rigor. Of course they were undertake this exact plan.

The book is also scarier than any story that depends on you not knowing what a vampire is has any right to be. For every scene where you can't help being amused that a character is astounded Dracula doesn't have a reflection, there's a whole sequence like the crew of the cargo ship being slowly picked off by a hungry Dracula. The The Woman in White-esque epistolary format really helps in this regard, even if it seems a little contrived that Jonathan Harker has so many opportunities to record his thoughts while fleeing for his life. Also great: the whole Transylvanian segment, the use of the phonograph and typewriter, the fact that Mina Harker is the smartest character in the book, and creepy old Renfield. Given how good this reads now, it must have been fantastic to an audience unfamiliar with vampires.
… (plus d'informations)
 
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Stevil2001 | 3 autres critiques | Jun 4, 2011 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
6
Aussi par
1
Membres
322
Popularité
#73,505
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
5
ISBN
14
Langues
1

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