☆romanticising life to the point of delusion
☆I like reading classics, poetry, YA, romance, philosophy & fantasy
☆coffee, reading, music & Gilmore Girls stan
☆songwriter and artist
Location:Australia
This book is at its essence a whole bunch of people's seemingly unrelated, messy stories woven into one story. It points out that people are much more connected than they realise, a beautiful thing about life on earth: we tend to run into everyone else every so often. Many of the stories were heartbreaking, and left my mind full of the sweet, poignant rhythm that is life. It was very interesting to read a book that doesn't stick to one perspective, but leaps all over the place from first-person, to third-person, to a chapter entirely composed of digital slides. This book is extremely relatable and all the characters are very real- I would recommend it to any person who is alive.
“Wow.” That was my first thought after finishing this novel. First of all, how the heck does one write a book thicker than a dictionary with 628 pages that is only eight chapters? Some of those chapters could be books in and of themselves. But aside from that, I love Donna Tartt's writing. Her words for me, float beyond the page- they are truly made of that magical quality Stephen King was referring to when he said “books are magic”. I was impressed by how realistic and honestly horrible the characters were. There was a lot of beauty to be found in the darkness and despair. It certainly wasn't what I was expecting. Tartt does not shy away from harsh and real topics such as addiction, depression, suicide, racism and homophobia. Her characters are impeccably flawed and exceptionally interesting. All the events in ‘The Secret History' could happen in real life, yet the story has a big element of the world beyond, of ghosts, and gods from the classics. Truly a reflection on real life. On one hand we have matter, what we can touch and see and explain. And on the other hand we have emotions, visions and dreams that can convince even adults that magic exists, and is within all of us.
These poems were great to think upon and read. Shakespeare had some serious life problems.