Be sure your sins will find you out, especially if you're married and her name's Bertha-- This made me laugh. And then I was almost immediately sobered up and grossed out by the following: So he was pleased, and very tender with his daughter, as if the unborn child were his child. This was my f...
Book Club Read for November for Sit in Book Club.I finished this book only because it was a bookclub read and in order to discuss a book at meetings I really feel I need the full story. I thought this book was crap and I will explain why I thought so.The Novel was banned and I do think that if it h...
Really, a very tender and beautiful love story. I'm not a subscriber to its philosophy, but I think that it is very true to itself and quite interesting. There is nothing overtly lurid in its sexuality; compared to today's use of sex in stories, it is extremely tasteful - even soulful. My one issue ...
- Quand un homme est stupide, on dit qu'il n'a pas de cervelle; quand il est mesquin, qu'il n'a pas de cœur; quand il est trouillard, qu'il n'a pas d'estomac. Et quand il est incapable du moindre sursaut de virilité, on dit qu'il n'a pas de couilles.
I knew, before reading this book, that Lady Chatterley's Lover had a scandalous history, so I figured it must get pretty hot and heavy. But I didn't expect the eloquent, elegant authorship of this book, even including those scandalous sex scenes that caused so much trouble for Lawrence. I was a litt...
WARNING: This review contains a discussion of the c-word, and I plan to use it. Please don't read this if you do not want to see the word spelled out. Thanks.This is less a review than an homage to my crazy mother (now I have you really intrigued, don't I?)It was 1983, and I was in my first Catholic...
Opens with pessimistic neo-spenglerian “ours is essentially a tragic age” (1), and only gets more misanthropically rightwing as it goes.Perspective is lesser gentry with a “forlorn home” and “inadequate income” (1). There’s no doubt that they’re assholes. Protagonist Ms. Chatterly objects to “the ...
Seems like an anticonservative book. It contradictates everything about marriage traditions, pure capitalism, romantic ilusions... Appreciated it for it.
When I first started to read "Lady Chatterley's Lover" I was reminded of Flaubert's classic tale of the unsatisfied Madame Bovary, as both novels seemed to examine the women's hungry need for something more than the provincial and trivial rituals their marriages provided them with. However the novel...
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