Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

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3 years, 5 months ago

rationality is frayed in every moment

So, life is mostly rational, with occasional bursts of absurdity.

Or, maybe: an assumption of rationality holds under normal conditions but frays under duress.

Some stories show us the process of rationality fraying under duress (Kolyma Tales, set in a Siberian work camp; The Handmaid’s Tale,…

—p.299 A Swim in a Pond in the Rain: In Which Four Russians Give a Master Class on Writing, Reading, and Life The Door to the Truth Might Be Strangeness: Thoughts on “The Nose” (276) by George Saunders
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3 years, 5 months ago

a machine for conveying bonus meaning topic/literary-theory

Every soul is vast and wants to express itself fully. If it’s denied an adequate instrument (and we’re all denied that, at birth, some more than others), out comes…poetry, i.e., truth forced out through a restricted opening.

That’s all poetry is, really: something odd, coming out. Normal speech,…

—p.287 The Door to the Truth Might Be Strangeness: Thoughts on “The Nose” (276) by George Saunders
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3 years, 5 months ago

sexism as inequitable narration

Once, I was teaching a flawed but considerable Gogol story called “Nevsky Prospect” and a student said she didn’t like it because it was sexist. I responded with a rare bit of teacherly wisdom by asking, “Where?” And she showed us exactly where, by offering two examples of places where a character …

—p.246 And Yet They Drove On: Thoughts on "Master and Man" (217) by George Saunders
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3 years, 5 months ago

he was not Caius

Death is coming for Vasili, and it’s nothing personal. This is just what Death does. But now, Vasili, of the charmed life, finds himself in its path. Although he knows and accepts that everything must, in time, pass from the earth, he finds himself having trouble accepting that he’s included in tha…

—p.237 And Yet They Drove On: Thoughts on "Master and Man" (217) by George Saunders
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3 years, 5 months ago

what kind of master reverses himself?

Now, the Vasili we’ve come to know is a blusterer and a bully. To be happy, he has to be in control, correct, victorious, obeyed. We imagine him at home, a petty tyrant, not loved much, not feared much either; avoided when possible, probably; laughed at behind his back for his incompetence and ego.…

—p.232 And Yet They Drove On: Thoughts on "Master and Man" (217) by George Saunders