Tuesday, April 14, 2009

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Madero other / Ignacio Solares

Repeatedly, Ignacio Solares has demonstrated a great pen. At least I think so. Columbus , his novel about the Villa attack the American population is certainly a novel enjoyable, clear, concise. Has its great moments of joy and action and above all as a historical novel, the reader sheds light on the facts hidden in the storyline which, when combined with fiction not only recreate a historical period, but closer to the people of the time. In
, Madero, the other , however, the solar boom is a great atorón. More than novel, could pass as a great historical essay by the number of sources and events that populate the work. Without doubt, the life of a native of San Pedro de las Colonias is a matter of literature: his eagerness to mysticism, his confrontation against Diaz, the passion that men born in Villa and discontent that resulted in men other men like Zapata.
But the novel progresses. The author tried counting backwards, as in Journey to the seed, Carpentier, but the narrator used in second person, who used to detonate the narrative, in most cases, questions, rhetorical tone, slows down the narrative.
This data dotted. of appointments, and cuantitavos leaps in building the character, reading back Madero, the other , a little tired. Ignacio Solares is a good storyteller, at least compared with the same Solar Columbus, imagine that you know Madero went to another course. Yes, I think he knows. Still, it's a work that is a reference for understanding history. Unfortunately only a reference and nothing more.
Editorial: Punto de Lectura
top of the 232 pages.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Ontario Ambulance Cost

The death of the whales

In thinking about this title, Luis Zavaleta, Colombian writer, has left me thinking a bit on the possible death of the whales. On a beach of an island paradise, one morning, guests of a five star hotel discovered that more than twenty whales have ran aground. Alibérico rush but soon realize that it is impossible. Their strengths are few but their intentions are as monumental as cetaceans. However, all this leads to a profound reflection on suicide (which a character was thinking about exercise, go, your right) and the strange but always related to all that is dying at our side every day and those who did not pay any attention. This novel is a dialogue with all that. In the end, one by one, the cetaceans are dying in a prolonged and exhaustive race to death. The character, a man of forty-five, divorced, childless, with a theater career destroyed because of plagiarism, is confronted with the whales, with death and how almost everything we do is really agonizing over sand. Ah, very good novel.
Publisher: Bonanza
Country: Colombia.
pp. 143

Friday, April 11, 2008

How To Connect Headset To Landline Phone

The Glass Castle, Jeannette Walls.

One night, en route to a party and in the interior of a taxi, discovers his mother Jeanette rummaging through a dumpster in New York. This is the beginning of this terribly funny and compelling novel of American writer Jeannette Walls.
Through the pages of the novel know the story of the Walls family, white trash, but with a high proficiency in self-esteem, pleasure to live and madness. "My mother would read Faulkner, Hemingway and apologized to us saying that he knew that this was not good literature." An alcoholic parent but with a great sense of rebellion and science, a mother more concerned about herself, but at the same time instilling their children to be independent, is the framework which develops sentimental education, moral and more of the novel.
Rex Walls see how your child is stolen from the hospital after it is burned with hot water, how they live in an abandoned train station, how to become heirs to a huge house in Phoenix and leave everything to go to Walch, a poor mining town in Virginia, where they become the poorest of the poor. And with economic poverty, and sometimes spiritual, there is always the excitement of building a castle of glass to take him out of all their problems.
not know what else to say about this excellent novel. It made me laugh, made me feel a stab in the heart, were intrigued me, as in the chapter where Jeannette has not had to eat and she stole food from the trash and when I got home, finds her hiding, eating a huge bar of chocolate and excuse is: forgive son, but as her father is addicted to alcohol, I'm on sugars.
Wow, excellent novel. Mexico has not yet reached, but in June may be achieved in all the libraries released under the seal of SUM of letters, editorial Santillana.