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Mr Palomar
Nobody looks at the moon in the afternoonAnd this is the moment when it would most require our attentionSince its existence is still in doubtThe moon is the most changeable body in the visible universeAnd the most regular in its complicated habitsWho fear it is too beautiful to be truePerhaps the first rule I must impose on myself is this: Stick to what I see[Jupiter] Effects of immense atmospheric storms are translated into a calm, orderly patternWhat can be more stable than nothingnessThis
I wanted to give this book one star as I "did not like it", but out of respect for many admiring readers of it here, give it two stars instead. I am now finished with my subjection of Italo Calvino. He just does not do it for me. Sorry.
Though he believes that "the world can very well do without him," the res cogitans that inhabits this text (not much of a narrative and accordingly not properly a narrator) investigates the world available to him ("the surface of things is inexhaustible" or so), loathing to waste those surfaces that the world sets before him and attempting to reduce complexity to simplicity, as he asserts.Plenty of amusing observations and philosophical interest. Perhaps however not entirely successful.
I finally finished reading Calvino's Our Ancestors the other month and enjoyed that quite a bit- all three pieces contained in that volume had their own merits, particularly The Baron in the Trees. That was very much a book about classic storytelling with a modern day fairy tale vibe going on, whereas Mr Palomar is totally different. This little sliver of a book is not really a novel or even a novella at all and is rather a solitary man's varied musings, collected together and linked up almost
I'm not one of your starry-eyed prose-droolers who appreciates beautiful writing on its own terms. I need formal innovation or structural complexity or dazzling dialogue or knee-snapping humour to keep me amused amid the lexical contortionism. This makes Calvino an infuriating bedfellow: his Oulipo-era prose is constructed with tight mathematical rigidity, yet what comes through in this work is the shiny artifice of his prose, the sparkly poetics of the Cosmicomics. Not good. Well . . . I don't
I had to read this for university and I must say I quite enjoyed it. The book is composed by a variety of observations and reflections made by the protagonist Palomar. Some of them definitely offered me some insightful and interesting topics to think about.Even though I prefer other works by Calvino, I still recommend this book.
Italo Calvino
Paperback | Pages: 128 pages Rating: 3.9 | 5439 Users | 378 Reviews
Identify Epithetical Books Mr Palomar
Title | : | Mr Palomar |
Author | : | Italo Calvino |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 128 pages |
Published | : | July 11th 1994 by Vintage Classics (first published November 1983) |
Categories | : | Fiction. European Literature. Italian Literature. Literature. Short Stories. Cultural. Italy |
Narration During Books Mr Palomar
Mr Palomar is a delightful eccentric whose chief activity is looking at things. He is simply seeking knowledge; 'it is only after you have come to know the surface of things that you can venture to seek what is underneath'. Whether contemplating a fine cheese, a hungry gecko, a woman sunbathing topless or a flight of migrant starlings, Mr Palomar's observations render the world afresh.Define Books To Mr Palomar
Original Title: | Palomar |
ISBN: | 0099430878 (ISBN13: 9780099430872) |
Edition Language: | English |
Rating Epithetical Books Mr Palomar
Ratings: 3.9 From 5439 Users | 378 ReviewsArticle Epithetical Books Mr Palomar
I came to Calvino late. As a curious/voracious young adult I read If on a winters night a traveller, thought it pointless, and aside from fragments didnt try him again for twenty years. The density, the language, the playful intellectualness none of that was the problem. But I was a Borges fan and I demanded some heartshock with my mindgames some dizzying vertigo or glimpse of the abyss. Whether, in other works, Calvino offers this I cant say: since my two-decades hiatus Ive read only MrNobody looks at the moon in the afternoonAnd this is the moment when it would most require our attentionSince its existence is still in doubtThe moon is the most changeable body in the visible universeAnd the most regular in its complicated habitsWho fear it is too beautiful to be truePerhaps the first rule I must impose on myself is this: Stick to what I see[Jupiter] Effects of immense atmospheric storms are translated into a calm, orderly patternWhat can be more stable than nothingnessThis
I wanted to give this book one star as I "did not like it", but out of respect for many admiring readers of it here, give it two stars instead. I am now finished with my subjection of Italo Calvino. He just does not do it for me. Sorry.
Though he believes that "the world can very well do without him," the res cogitans that inhabits this text (not much of a narrative and accordingly not properly a narrator) investigates the world available to him ("the surface of things is inexhaustible" or so), loathing to waste those surfaces that the world sets before him and attempting to reduce complexity to simplicity, as he asserts.Plenty of amusing observations and philosophical interest. Perhaps however not entirely successful.
I finally finished reading Calvino's Our Ancestors the other month and enjoyed that quite a bit- all three pieces contained in that volume had their own merits, particularly The Baron in the Trees. That was very much a book about classic storytelling with a modern day fairy tale vibe going on, whereas Mr Palomar is totally different. This little sliver of a book is not really a novel or even a novella at all and is rather a solitary man's varied musings, collected together and linked up almost
I'm not one of your starry-eyed prose-droolers who appreciates beautiful writing on its own terms. I need formal innovation or structural complexity or dazzling dialogue or knee-snapping humour to keep me amused amid the lexical contortionism. This makes Calvino an infuriating bedfellow: his Oulipo-era prose is constructed with tight mathematical rigidity, yet what comes through in this work is the shiny artifice of his prose, the sparkly poetics of the Cosmicomics. Not good. Well . . . I don't
I had to read this for university and I must say I quite enjoyed it. The book is composed by a variety of observations and reflections made by the protagonist Palomar. Some of them definitely offered me some insightful and interesting topics to think about.Even though I prefer other works by Calvino, I still recommend this book.
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