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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You added a note
2 months, 3 weeks ago

the cultural structure we’ve worked on all our lives

Jensen: What is the theme that you were interested in investigating through Olga’s story?

Ferrante: I wanted to tell a story of disintegration. Someone who takes love away from us devastates the cultural structure we’ve worked on all our lives, deprives us of that sort of Eden that until that …

—p.86 Frantumaglia: A Writer's Journey PAPERS: 1991-2003 (1) by Elena Ferrante
You added a note
2 months, 3 weeks ago

the feeling that the writer has about life

Ferrante: There is no story that doesn’t have roots in the feeling that the writer has about life. The more that feeling filters into the story, into the characters, the more distinctly the page gives form to an incisive effect of truth. But what counts, in the end, is what I would call the graphic…

—p.86 PAPERS: 1991-2003 (1) by Elena Ferrante
You added a note
2 months, 3 weeks ago

how she fights against the wish to die

[...] Olga is a woman of today who knows that she can’t react to abandonment by breaking down. In life, as in writing, the effect of this new knowledge interests me: how she acts, what resistance she offers, how she fights against the wish to die and gains the time necessary to learn to bear her su…

—p.83 PAPERS: 1991-2003 (1) by Elena Ferrante
You added a note
2 months, 3 weeks ago

finding the energy to dig deeply into the story

Scateni: Your writing does not seem to be written for readers; rather, it seems to have originated as private writing, without any interlocutor but the page (or the computer) or yourself. Is that true?

Ferrante: No, I don’t think so. I write so that my books will be read. But while I’m writing…

—p.81 PAPERS: 1991-2003 (1) by Elena Ferrante
You added a note
2 months, 3 weeks ago

you suffer the emptiness of the pages

Ferrante: I don’t know. I’ve always had a tendency to separate everyday life from writing. To tolerate existence, we lie, and we lie above all to ourselves. Sometimes we tell ourselves lovely tales, sometimes petty lies. Falsehoods protect us, mitigate suffering, allow us to avoid the terrifying mo…

—p.80 PAPERS: 1991-2003 (1) by Elena Ferrante