Some people think that stay at home parents have tedious lives. I don't think I do. At least, it is not tedious to me. Sure, there is laundry, and there are poop diapers and dirty dishes, but there are also amazing, interesting, fun things that I get to do.
Every once in a while though I get the most mundane dreams. I'm talking a whole dream where I carry a basket of dirty clothing to the basement, put each item in the washing machine, measure out the soap, etc. The worst part about it is that I don't end up with actual clean laundry in real life from it.
Summary: happy, interesting life. Tedious dreams.
You know what was really, really tedious? The Castle. I did not like this book one bit and it became such a drudge to get through. I held out hope that it would be interesting (hey, it's about a castle after all!) but it's a story about how this guy got summoned to be a land surveyor at the castle, but can't go inside the castle because of mountains of bureaucracy. Everyone in the village accepts the bureaucracy and makes excuses for the officials, but the main character is just baffled by the whole situation.
I read a summary of it on Wikipedia because I wanted to figure out how much I missed and the suggestion was made that it had religious overtones. If that was indeed Kafka's intent, I think Kafka was wrong. Perhaps it's just my own religious viewpoint, but I don't think the path to salvation is tedious or fraught with bureaucracy.
In any case, I'm glad to be done with this one and moving on!
Showing posts with label franz kafka. Show all posts
Showing posts with label franz kafka. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Thursday, July 1, 2010
From the outside looking in.
I just finished Amerika by Franz Kafka. I was in a rush to finish this and get it back to the library before we go away on vacation, and I did get through it. Kafka did not finish the novel so there is a huge leap in the book - it's like about 8 or 9 middle chapters are missing, and the last chapter is not finished either. (And I'm pretty sure that the gaps are real, it wasn't just me skimming.)
I read in the introduction that Kafka never visited the United States, so the book is an interesting perspective on this country from someone who had not been here. The Statute of Liberty holding a sword is probably the best illustration of that.
This was a decent book, I didn't mind the characters and the plot seemed to move along okay (except for the big jump and the unfinished ending obviously). I don't really know how memorable it will be though when compared to some of the other ones I have been reading recently.
I didn't know what Kafkaesque meant until I started this book. I think I was supposed to have read The Metamorphosis at some point in my educational career, but I don't know if I ever actually did. I think this might be the first book I've ever read by Kafka.
Looking forward to seeing Marissa for a few days starting tomorrow!
I read in the introduction that Kafka never visited the United States, so the book is an interesting perspective on this country from someone who had not been here. The Statute of Liberty holding a sword is probably the best illustration of that.
This was a decent book, I didn't mind the characters and the plot seemed to move along okay (except for the big jump and the unfinished ending obviously). I don't really know how memorable it will be though when compared to some of the other ones I have been reading recently.
I didn't know what Kafkaesque meant until I started this book. I think I was supposed to have read The Metamorphosis at some point in my educational career, but I don't know if I ever actually did. I think this might be the first book I've ever read by Kafka.
Looking forward to seeing Marissa for a few days starting tomorrow!
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